History of Westchester County, New York — Passage 391
[J. Thomas Scharf (1886)] not easily disposed of in the market for from seven to thirteen dollars, while at the present it is held for from one hundred and ninety to two hundred dollars. Kahly Settlements. — Stephanus Yan Cortlaudt, by will dated April 14, 1700, devised Cortlaudt Manor to his eleven children. In 1734 a partition deed was executed, and in this division lot No. 8, embracing part of North Salem, Somers and Lewis boro', fell to Andrew Miller; lot No. 9, lying to the east, to Colonel John Schuyler, and later to Stephen De Lancey; lot No. 10, still farther east, to Stephen De Lancey, who married Anne Yan Cortlandt, a daughter of Stephanus Van Cortlaudt. By will Ste-phen De Lancey devised all his estate in the town (now North Salem) to his eldest son, James, who, on the 29th of December, 1744, conveyed lots 9 and 10 to his second son, Stephen. These two great lots were divided into thirty-six lots, which were leased NORTH to settlers who began to emigrate to this region from