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Hendrik Walvoort
(1802-1865)
Hendrik Walvoord (originally spelled "Walvoort") was born in the Gelderland Province of the Netherlands on March 21, 1802.
Hendrik’s father, Salomon Walvoort, was born April 21, 1778 in Winterswijk, in the Gelderland Province, Netherlands. His mother, Maria Elisabeth Klumpenhouwer,
was born June 21, 1781 in Dinxperlo, Gelderland, Netherlands.
Salomon and Maria were married May 31, 1801 in Aalten,
Gelderland. Salomon and Maria had 10 children of which Hendrik
was the oldest.
Hendrik's brothers and sisters were:
Jan Walvoort, born 25 Oct 1804; Derk Willem Walvoort, born 28 Dec 1806; Derk Antoni Walvoort, born 24 Jan 1810; Jan Hendrik Walvoort, born 04 May 1811; Jenneken Walvoort, born 16 Dec 1813; Dora Johanna Walvoort, born 10 Dec 1816; Gerrit Jan Walvoort, born 31 Mar 1819; Aleida Dina Walvoord, born on or about 01 Nov 1823; and Janna Dina Walvoord, the youngest who was born 27 Jun 1825 and emigrated to America with Hendrik in 1849.
As
was the custom, Hendrik, the oldest son, received all the inheritance
from his parents and was beholden to support them, which he did. His
youngest sister Janna Dina and son Gerrit Jan were born while Hendrik
lived with his parents in Holland.
Hendrik lived in Aalten,
Holland a poor country which was a peat land (people burned peat
instead of more expensive coal). Peat was usually cut out of a bog by
hand into blocks, which were spread out to dry. Drying could take as
long as six weeks. Dried peat burned easily, and would give off a dense
black smoke, and left much ash. It had about two-thirds the heating
value of coal.
As a young man, Hendrik was tall, dark and
slender. During his time in Holland, he had married three times.
Twice to sisters of the name Doornink.
Hendrik's first marriage was to one of these sisters named Teunisken Doornink.
Teunisken was born in Lichtenvoorde, Gelderland on February 15, 1800.
Hendrik Walvoord and Teunisken Doornink were married December 11, 1824.
Teunisken was the mother of Gerrit Jan
who was born January 22, 1826 in Aalten. Teunisken died somewhere
between 1826 - 1829. It is asssumed that she died in 1826 during
childbirth.
After Teunisken's death, Hendrik married her sister, Johanna Berendina Doornink.
Johanna was born about 1806. Hendrik and Johanna were married
July 24, 1829 in Lichtenvoorde, Gelderland, Netherlands.
Together they had a little boy by the name of Tonie Walvoort.
Tonie was born in 1831 but died on January 23, 1833 at the age of
two. His mother died somewhere around the same time between 1829
and 1833.
Teunisken and Johanna were the daughters of Garrit Doornink and Derksken Wesselink. Garrit and Derksken were married sometime before 1800. Nothing else is currently known about them.
Hendrik married a third time to Johanna Berendina Walvoord in Lichtenvoorde, Gelderland, Netherlands on May 4, 1833. Joahanna was born about 1813 and was the daughter of Antoni Walvoord and Willemine Geertruide Kampe. Johanna died sometime between 1833 and 1847. It is believed that Hendrik and Johanna had no children together.
Hendrik's youngest sister Janna Dina Walvoord was born January 27, 1825. Both Janna "Jane" and Hendrik's son (her nephew) Gerrit were rocked in the same cradle.
Hendrik
Walvoord was a farmer in the Achterhoekse (back corner) region of
Gelderland. He had a farm in the small village of Vragender, which is
north of Aalten between Lichtenvoorde and Winterswijk.
Hendrik's mother, Maria, died January 6, 1840 at the age
of 58. Hendrik was 37 years old at the time. At the age of
70, his father Saloman died on Thursday, June 8, 1848.
After the
death of his mother and father, Hendrik, three times a
widower, left Holland in 1849 en route to America. He had made some
investments with his inheritance before traveling across the Atlantic
and had six-thousand dollars with him.
He departed with
his 24 year-old youngest sister on the sailing vessel Hektor from
Rotterdam to New York arriving on September 16th. Hendrik came to
America and joined his son Gerrit in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania who had preceded his father a couple of years before.
Immediately, the entire family emigrated to the township of Holland,
Wisconsin where Hendrik Walvoord purchased 160 acres of timbered land,
and began the development of a farm, to which he added from time to
time. Soon after coming to this country he acquired forty-nine shares
in the Holland Trading Company, which was engaged in merchandising and
in the transportation of cord-wood from the Amsterdam Pier that they
had constructed. He arrived in Wisconsin and sold parcels of land to
new immigrants in a region he called Amsterdam. It would take a while
before the authorities officially recognized this name. Each parcel he
sold had a view on Lake Michigan. Hendrik also became known as a trader
in cordwood. He needed a landing stage for boats, which came to
retrieve the wood. He hired a dredger from the government and scooped
out a little harbor of eight feet deep. Piles of cordwood were waiting
there for boats.
Two or three vessels loaded with cord-wood
left the pier each day. Four or five vessels would lie in the bay at a
time. Seven or eight teams of men would haul the wood to the pier. (Tony Walvoord, at age eighty or more, told Louise Walvoord all this. He knew the family).
One century later, visitors of "Amsterdam" still saw the deep bottom driven wooden poles of Walvoord’s landing stage.
Hendrik
not only owned shares in the cord wood company and pier, he owned a
store and had bought large tracts of land near Amsterdam.
Back home in the old country, Hendrik’s cousin, Gerrit Jan Walvoord
(not to be confused with Hendrik’s son of the same name), took over the
family farm in Vragender when Hendrik left for America. Later on in
1870, Gerrit Jan Walvoord also emigrated with his
family to America where he joined his own son William in Nebraska who
had preceded his father and sent back glowing reports of abundant
prairie land.
The Presbyterian church in Cedar Grove was
organized in 1853 and was the first Presbyterian church in the Township
of Holland. Hendrik Walvoord was a charter member and an elder in that
church for many years.
On March 17, 1855, Hendrik became an American citizen. Two days later his son Gerrit did the same.
On
July 11, 1856, Hendrik lost his only son Gerrit who at age thirty,
drowned in Lake Michigan. Hendrik bought one acre of land for a
cemetery which is now located in the village of Cedar Grove, Wisconsin
(the Walvoord Cemetery) and buried his son there.
In the
aftermath of the War Between the States and the assassination of
President Lincoln, President Andrew Johnson began the process of
national healing as Reconstruction commenced. In December of 1865, the
thirty-ninth Congress convened. It was the first since Lincoln’s death.
All Confederate states with the exception of Mississippi, accepted
terms for readmission to the Union that month. Hendrik Walvoord died
that same month on December 21, 1865.
After his death, his land was inherited by Gerrit Jan’s children (Henry, Jane, Mary, Tonia and Delia).
Henry, his grandson, inherited eighty acres and the granddaughters each
inherited forty. In addition, Henry received all of his grandfather's
movable property namely: horses, cattle, wagons, and furniture. The
four granddaughters each received $15 for a cow and an additional $300
when they turned twenty-one. When he turned twenty-one, Henry received
the rest of his grandfather's property (mortgages, notes, effects,
credits and moneys). When Tonia died, her brother Henry bought her land.
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