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The 1891 Hilversum phone book

The Dutch language section of my genealogy website contains several source transcriptions. I added a new transcription today: The 1891 Hilversum phone book. This is by far the smallest source transcription I have done: A mere four connections were listed.

To save you the trouble of wrestling through the Dutch information on my website I will repeat the phone book here (this is probably the first time the entire phone book of a Dutch city is published in a single blog post). Note that the phone numbers were only one digit long.

name            phone
Brandsma, E.    3
Town hall       4
Ledeboer, R.    6
Wassenaar, K.A. 2

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My own Dutch roots: Hilversum

In an earlier post, I told you how we could see the tower of the St. Vitus church from my grandparents house, and showed you the house seen from this tower.

I also have a picture from the St. Vitus tower seen from my grandparents' house, probably taken in the 1940s.

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My own Dutch roots: Hilversum

The annual Open Monumentendagen (Heritage Days) took place this weekend. During these days many historical sites (some 4000 in total) can be visited free of charge. A lot of these sites are usually not accessible to the public. This year I decided to use the Open Monumentendagen to trace my own Dutch roots and visited Hilversum, the town of my ancestors.

When I was a child, my grandparents lived some 100 meter from the Catholic St Vitus' church. In their house we heard the church bells every 15 minutes, and from the front room upstairs we had a good view of the tower and could read the time on the church clocks.

During my Hilversum trip I visited this church and climbed the tower, to search for my ancestors house (on my photo album, my grandparents' home is the house with the balcony on the Veerstraat; on the photo on the left it's one of the buildings at the top of the photo, behind the white buildings). And I saw the church bells I remember hearing so well (apparently there were five church bells, but a sixth has been added since).

Of course, I walked through the Veerstraat to have a look at my grandparents' former home. I haven't been inside since they sold it, nearly 30 years ago, but I walked past it once or twice before. It is now an office building, deserted in the weekend, so there was no chance to go inside. Other sites visited included the Dutch Reformed church, that I haven't visited since my grandfather's funeral in 1997 (he left Hilversum in the 1970s, but returned a year before his death).

The last part of my Hilversum trip was a guided tour through the town hall, an architectural masterpiece by W.M. Dudok.

Links: Open monumentendagen, photo album of my Hilversum trip, official website of Hilversum, ancestors of Hendrik van Kampen, Dudok on Wikipedia.

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