We all know about the Pilgrims who sailed from England and
landed at Plymouth Rock in 1620. In grade school, we made Pilgrim hats and Indian
headdresses and performed skits about the First Thanksgiving when the Indians saved the early settlers from starving.
But there was more colonization during the early 1600’s that
we (at least in Michigan) didn’t learn about in school. The influx of Dutch into New
York and along the East Coast—then known as New Netherlands.
A story that has been passed down through my dad’s family
shows a connection to those early settlers—a royal connection. According to the
family story, Dad’s mother was a direct descendent of a woman named Anneke Jans
who was the daughter of the King of Holland and that, for reasons unknown (or
she disobeyed him), he disinherited her through seven generations. Since my
grandmother’s generation was the seventh, her cousins decided they would all
inherit money. To that end they hired a genealogist to research the connection.
What Dad remembers is the genealogist continually coming to his mom and her
cousins for more money for the research. The cousins paid him because, by
golly, they had to prove they were due an inheritance.
Well, sorry to tell you, I’m not royalty and Anneke probably
wasn’t either. Her story is one of the legends that persisted through time. Now
there really was a woman named Anneke Jans. She and her husband Roeloff Jansen immigrated
to America in 1630 and settled in New Amsterdam (New York). He died and she married Everardus Bogardus, a minister. It is through her children with Bogardus that my family is descended. To me, being able to claim that my family has been in America for over 500 years is better than being royal. Okay, maybe not.
I often
wondered if the story about Anneke being the daughter of a king was one she
perpetuated. I mean, who would know? In those days, they didn’t exactly have
the means to check her credentials. No Google. No Bing. No Wikipedia. It took months to
travel from The Netherlands (then part of Norway) to New York. People could
change their names, their life histories, start over. Maybe I malign her, but
it makes sense to me.
In the late 1970s, Hubs and I decided to research our family
history and we're still doing it. What fun we've had discovering where our families originated. We reached
dead ends very quickly on some lines and were able to make connections much
further back on others. Along the way, we learned more about the history of the
United States and Canada. And I learned more about my Dutch
connection. Too bad the royalty thing didn’t pan out.
I blog here on the 8th and 30th of each month and Mondays on
my own blogsite http://dianeburton.blogspot.com
The early
immigrants to our country are the basis for my Outer Rim series, where people could start a new life with new names
and new life histories out on the frontier of space.
5 comments:
Great story, Diane. My husband is Dutch. You two may be cousins! Seriously, though, his family has done extensive genealogy research. What a great gift for my kids and grandkids.
I agree about the genealogy. Terrific gift. I live in the "right" part of the state now since the Dutch settled in West Michigan.
I'm also a genealogy nut. My dad's mother's family goes way back to the early 1600's. For about 2 days I thought I had found a Mayflower connection, but some previous researcher had been rearranging the facts. LOL Oh well. There's still a lot of colorful characters on our family tree. Enjoy your research!
Thanks, Jannine. It is fun!
Very interesting story! I think there's a book in there somewhere... I have a cousin who has traced our family on my mother's side. He's offered to share what he's found. I need to take him up on it. I would love to also know about my dad's side. What is the best way to go about the genealogy thing?
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