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Dutch archive news, August 2010

August means summer, and summer means vacation season: Many archive visitors and archive staff were on vacation. The result was limited opening hours, fewer visitors, and hardly any news.

  • New in genlias: Marriage records from Curaçao and death records from Flevoland (Noordoostpolder, Urk, Zuidelijke IJsselmeerpolders) and Noord-Holland (Anna Paulowna, Beemster, Oostzaandam, Sijbekarspel, Spanbroek, Westzaandam, Zaandam).
  • Three archives used the quiet summer months to launch a page on facebook: the provincial archives BHIC (Noord-Brabant) and Tresoar (Friesland), and the regional archive Markiezenhof (Bergen op Zoom). Markiezenhof is also new on Twitter (@hetmarkiezenhof). See the complete list of Dutch archives on facebook and twitter.

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12 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Please advise whether the sir name "Post" is of Dutch orgin. My father said he was dutch and this was his last name. Thank you

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Yes, Post can be a Dutch surname.

 
Blogger Hans Zijlstra, blogger, sneuper, ondernemer said...

The name Post was, like Postma, Posthuma, Postema and Posthumus, in 1811 taken mostly by people whose father had recently died or whose father died before their own birth. So nothing to do with mail etc., but postume.

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I'm trying to find information on the name "Knyfd". My grandfather was from Friesland, around Grouw, I think. He came to the US as a young boy; and says that the name was misspelled by the US immigration official. Any insights into it's possible origin would be greatly appreciated.

 
Blogger Politikus said...

I'm putting together a family tree and am stuck won my paternal grandmother's family. Her last names were Obediente Robero (or Roberts). Other names that come up persistently are Maal, Petit, and Lopes. I've found some information in Genlis from Curazao, but hardly anything on how they got there. Any advice on where to look?
Thank you.

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

Comment on Anonymus asking name Knyfd.
Perhaps the real name is Knijff or
Knijf. Search for these two Genlias
in Friesland.

 
Blogger Steve said...

My own surname of Postma traces name back to early 1620. Family records indicate a trade where horses and travel to Germany and Poland were common.

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

A quick search on Tresoar proves the name Postma existed well before 1700.

According to the Meertens surname database, the prefix -post- in the name Postma, can either mean posthumous, post/mail, or post/base/station.

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

KNYFD

To Anonymous: I have information on the Knyfd family. Contact me at void580@yahoo.com

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

My ancestor Jacob Spriggs was born in 1836 in Holland, Reusel-de Mierden, Noord Brabant Netherlands. Dies in Virginia. How can I find what boat he came to America on and who do I contact to see if there are spriggs still in that area?
Thank you!
Rebecca

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Spriggs is not a Dutch name, maybe he changed his name after immigration into the USA. What else do you know about Jacob Spriggs?

 
Blogger Made in the Moon said...

My grandgrandfather came from Curazao to Panama. His last name was Obediente. I know he and his family were before in Holland.

 

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Dutch archive news April-May 2010

  • Genlias added birth and death records from the Netherlands Antilles (birth records from Aruba, death records from Saba), marriage records from Drenthe (Anloo), birth records from Flevoland (Urk), and death records from Noord-Brabant (a major update).

Digitized newspaper

  • The National Library of the Netherlands is digitizing Dutch newspapers from 1618 to the late 20th century (as I announced before). The first batch of one million pages is available now, the other seven million pages will be added over the next 18 months. The newspapers are in Dutch, of course, and so is the search page.
  • The National Library, together with the National Archive of Suriname, will digitize newspapers from Suriname from 1774-1995. This includes papers from the collections of the National Archive of Suriname and papers from the collections of the National Library of the Netherlands.
  • More newspapers: Tresoar announced several digitized regional newspapers from the northern part of the country (Groningen, Friesland, Drenthe) are now available on a new website. In the future they will add more (northern) newspapers.
  • The Zeeland archive has a new website. There is no English interface, only an English summary.
  • The Overijssel archive opened a flickr account. Currently there is only an album about football (soccer) in Zwolle, hopefully other albums will follow soon.
  • The Utrecht archive opened a new website section about Utrecht in WWII, but only in Dutch.
  • The Dutch National Archive, which is also the provincial archive of Zuid-Holland, has copies of the church books of the province Zuid-Holland (the originals are scattered throughout the province). Over the next few months these copies will be digitized and from November they should be available on the website of the National Archive. In the meantime these copies cannot be consulted by archive visitors. (link)

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11 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

My ancestor was an Englishman, John Hilton Jackson, born in Holland who went out to Surinam to manage a coffee planation in 1840s. He married (and died) there after becoming a District Commissioner in Paramaribo. I cannot find him on Genlias, where are these records?

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

If he's born in Holland after 1811 there should be a birth record somewhere. It will end up in Genlias (or its successor, http://wiewaswie.nl/) eventually. Do you know when/where he was born?

Surinam related records are either in Surinam, or in the Dutch national archives. Some of them are online, at http://www.gahetna.nl/. In a database of freed slaves I found a Magdalena Maatje Hilton, former owner E. van Emden, surety J.H. Jackson - is this surety your ancestor?

 
Blogger Unknown said...

I'm trying to find out about my heritage but on my dad's side it gets a lil fuzzy so I wanted to know how I would be able to find out about my opa Jacobus Pool and his family I know he was born in 1897 in suriname and his father was born a slave also in suriname but don't know his name just that he ran a plantation after he was freed. How would I go about finding this information. I really want to find my opas birthdate for my father before he passes away because he was only 8yrs old when my opa passed away. Plz help direct me to where I can find this info.

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Try the databases of freed slaves, http://www.gahetna.nl/collectie/index/nt00341 or http://www.gahetna.nl/collectie/index/nt00340. The Surinam Genealogy Foundation may be able to help you further. The newspaper database at http://www.delpher.nl/ may also be helpful.

 
Blogger Unknown said...

Is there a way to look into adoption papers? My great great grandfather was adopted in the Netherlands, we have his birth and death, but I am not sure where to look to find his parents. Any suggestions?

 
Blogger Unknown said...

My great great grandfather was born in the Netherlands. All we know about him is where he was born and the year. He was adopted and are trying to find his parents. Do you have suggestions on where to start this process?

 
Blogger Henk van Kampen said...

Do you have a birth, marriage or death certificate, Shelby? They could provide some clues. Also check out the population register of the town that your ancestor lived in.

 
Blogger L.A. Music said...

I am related to a Jan Roos who was born in 1610 in The Netherlands and died in Nieu Amsterdam in 1632. That same year he and his wife Maria de la Vigne gave birth to Gerrit Jansen Roosa. Since records were not kept in the DRC until after he died, I can’t tell who his parents are. Can you point a direction to learn more about his parents?

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would like to trace any descendants of my grand mother was born on Saba but moved to St. Kitts British West Indies in the early 1900's please. Her name was Arabella Hill. Many thanks.

 
Blogger Temreguy said...

I made the extraordinary discovery of the newspaper ad for auctioning my (Weersing, Jacob) family farm on April 22, 1870 in Peelo. If these sales were taxed or recorded I'd like to track down the tax record indicating the gross/taxable amount received from the auction. I'm assuming the farm land was sold separately. Where to find that? Ideas?

 
Anonymous Anonymous said...

My ancestor, Wijnant Gerritsz van Meppelen, married 20 October 1640 to Trijntie Rooscholt in Amsterdam. Banns entry states he is 23 years of age, but no other information about him. He "has his parents permission", but does give their names. Trijntie's mother Neeltie Cornelis is present. Is there a way to locate Wijnant's baptism record? I have searched WieWasWie and StadsArchief. I am unsure as to whether he was born in Meppel, or had simply lived there before getting married. Later, he began to use the surname "van der Poel".

 

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Dutch archive news Q1 2010

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1 Comments:

Blogger Miriam Robbins said...

You are the recipient of the Ancestor Approved Award!

 

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Dutch archive news, September 2009

  • Genlias added birth records from Limburg and death records from Gelderland and Limburg.
  • As part of Images for the Future, the Netherlands Institute for Sound and Vision and Knowledgeland launched Open Images. Open Images is an open media platform that offers online access to a selection of audiovisual archive material to stimulate creative reuse. Access to the content will be based on the Creative Commons model.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy in The Hague presented Roots Karibense, a research guide for people with Netherlands Antillean roots. It is the fourth book in the series Voorouders van verre (Ancestors from far away). The books are only available in Dutch.
  • Over 60 documents from the Dutch National Archive, including the famous Schaghen letter, are on display in the South Street Seaport Museum in New York, where the exhibition New Amsterdam. The Island at the Center of the World opened on 12 September.
  • Several documents from the Amsterdam city archive are on display in the Museum of American Finance in New York, where the exhibition Actiën Handel: Early Dutch Finance and the Founding of America opened on 8 September. One of the highlights of the exhibition is the testament of Peter Stuyvesant.
  • The Rotterdam city archive started the blog Dochters van Kaat Mossel (Daughters of Kaat Mossel), a genealogy blog about the female descendants of famous Rotterdam inhabitant Kaat Mossel (1723-1798). The blog aims to show what is available on their Digitale Stamboom (Digital Family Tree) website. Unfortunately the blog is only available in Dutch.
  • Anne Frank now has her own channel on YouTube, with, among others, the only existing film images of Anne. The channel is created and maintained by the Anne Frank museum.

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The slave revolt and the long road to freedom

Today in history: The slave revolt of 1795

Slave revolt

The long road to freedom for slaves in the Dutch West Indies started on 17 August 1795. A group of almost 50 slaves, led by a slave named Tula, revolted at the Knip plantation of Caspar Lodewijk van Uytrecht at Bandabou, Curaçao. The slaves went from farm to farm, and many slaves joined the uprising.

The revolt lasted a month. The revolting slaves lost the first battle, but many slaves fled and started a guerrilla-style warfare. The authorities offered a reward for the capture of Tula, and with success: Tula was betrayed, and arrested on 19 September together with other leaders of the revolt. Tula was publicly tortured and beheaded, and the revolt petered out.

August 17 is still celebrated in Curaçao, as the start of the fight for freedom.

End of slavery

None of the revolting slaves would see the abolition of slavery. After a long discussion, The Netherlands finally abolished slavery on 1 July 1863. To compensate, slave owners received 300 guilders per freed slave from the Dutch government. Moreover, freed slaves in Suriname were required to work for their former owner for ten years (so effectively they remained slaves until 1873).

A monument

On 1 July 2002, H.M. Queen Beatrix unveiled a national slavery monument in Amsterdam. It was supposed to be a festive occasion, but for many slave descendants the unveiling was a disappointment. Because of the Queen's presence, security was tight and the general public was kept at a distance, and most could not watch the event. The many people with Suriname, Aruba or Curaçao roots who came to watch the unveiling of (what they considered to be) "their" monument were frustrated they were kept away.

The unveiling may have been a disappointment for many, but at least we do now have a national monument. The monument is the location of the annual slavery commemoration.

Tracing your roots

The Dutch National Archive publishes several important databases on their website. Unfortunately, they are only available in Dutch.

  • Vrij in Suriname (Free in Suriname) contains two databases: One of 6,364 slaves freed before 1863, and one of the 34,441 slaves that were freed in 1863 at the slavery abolition.
  • Arbeid op contract (contract labour) contains databases of contract labourers from China and the East Indies that were hired in the late 19th and early 20th century.
  • Koloniaal Suriname (Colonial Suriname) contains databases of free (mostly European) inhabitants of Suriname before 1863.
  • Vrij van slavernij (Free from slavery) contains a database of slaves freed before 1863 (and their owners) on Curaçao.

Links

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Dutch archive news: July 2009

It's summer, and that means holiday season here in Holland. Archives have fewer visitors (visitors are on holiday), limited service and limited opening hours (staff are also on holiday). Summer also means there is hardly any news to report.

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Archive news roundup October 2008

  • The Royal Dutch Library published 1.5 million typescripts of radio news bulletins (1937-1984) on their website, many of them with handwritten notes from the news readers. They are scanned and can be browsed or searched on ANP Radiobulletins Digitaal - only in Dutch, of course.
  • Genlias added birth acts from Curaçao, Limburg and Zuid-Holland, marriage acts from Zuid-Holland, and death acts from Limburg and Zuid-Holland.
  • The Dutch National Archive published on Flickr The Commons - see my earlier announcement.

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Online records: Nationaal Archief

The website

Next in our series of online records is the website of het Nationaal Archief, the Dutch National Archive in The Hague.

What do they have?

The website has everything you can expect from a national archive: Practical information about the archive, summaries of their collections, research guides, etc. They also publish several databases, including:

Is there an English interface?

Parts of the website are available in English, German, French and Spanish. The Emigrants to Australia database has an English interface, all other databases we look at today are only available in Dutch. Click English at the top of the page for an English interface (where available).

How do I use it?

That depends on the database.

Emigrants to Australia 1946-1991

The easiest way is to enter a surname in the Quick Search field at the top, followed by the Enter key on your keyboard. There is also an advanced search option. When you have a list of search results, click on the name you are interested in. You will need to agree to a disclaimer, stating you will only use the data for historical research.

You can order copies of the original cards, but only if you can prove the person on the card is deceased, or if you have permission from that person.

An example: I searched for Pardoen and found three results, including:

Pardoen, B., born on 01 april 1917, made the journey on ship Skaubryn, arrival in Australia on februari 1952, emigration card in card-tray Brisbane

Freed slaves in Curaçao

Curaçao is one of the Netherlands Antilles, once a Dutch colony and still part of the Kingdom of The Netherlands. Click on Raadplegen van database (Consult database). Fill in your search terms in the box on the left, choose your search options on the right (Alle Woorden, all words, Eén Van De Woorden, any word, or Exacte Zin, exact phrase) and click Zoek. An example of what you may find:

Negerin Anna op 23 augustus 1782 door Joseph Obediente jr voor 200 peso, betaald door de neger Mattheeuw de Vries. Met kwitantie in termijnen, waarvan laatste datum 16 september 1785.

Search results are in Dutch. A translation of the example: Negress Anna on 23 August 1782 by Joseph Obediente Jr for 200 pesos, paid by the negro Mattheeuw de Vries, with quittance in instalments, the last on 16 September 1785.

Freed slaves in Surinam

Freed slaves in former Dutch colony Surinam really consists of two databases. First you have to choose between Surinaamse manumissies 1832-1863, the database of slaves that became free between 1832 and 1863, and Emancipatie 1863, slaves that were freed when slavery was abolished by The Netherlands in 1863. Click Raadplegen database on the top of the page. Searching works the same as in the Curaçao database, but you have extra options: You can search for Naam Vrijgelatene (name of the freed slave), Naam Eigenaar (name of the owner), Naam Borgen (name of the sureties), or Aanmerkingen (remarks) for the first database, Slaven en eigenaren (slaves and owners), Slaven (slaves only), Eigenaren (owners only) or Opmerkingen (remarks) for the second.

Surinam Dutch Reformed church books 1688-1792

Fill in a search term, check if you want to search Memotekst (memo text) and Datum (date) fields, choose between Geboorten/dopen (births and baptisms), Lidmaten (church membership lists), Kerkgerechtigheden (church taxes) or (Onder)trouw (marriage and marriage registration), and press Zoek. In the list of search results, click detail.

An example: A baptism on 20 January 1704. The text is in Dutch again.

gedoopt het kint waar van vader was Pieter de Jonge en moeder een indiaaninne genaamt Catharina. Getuijge M: de Jonge d' oude. [transl. baptized the child of which the father was Pieter de Jonge and mother an indian named Catharina. Witness M. de Jonge the elder]

VOC employees leaving for the East Indies 1700-1794

The database of the VOC (Dutch East Indies company) is a large, ongoing project. It lists employees of the VOC sailing to the East. They are taken from the scheepssoldijboeken (ship payrolls), part of the VOC's salary administration. These payrolls are amazingly complete and consistent.

The easiest way to search is to enter a surname in the Snel zoeken (quick search) field at the top, and press the enter key. There is also an advanced search option (Uitgebreid zoeken, in the navigation menu on the left). Fields in the advanced search include Achternaam (surname), Voornaam (first name), Herkomstplaats (place of origin), and Schip (Ship). Fill in the fields and press Zoek.

When you get the list of search results, click on a name for details. On the detail page you will find gegevens (data) about the person you selected, and about his journey. Data include Datum indiensttreding (date of start of employment), Datum uit dienst (date of end of employment), Reden uit dienst (reason for ending the employment, often overleden, deceased), Schip (name of ship), Vertrek (departure), and Aankomst (arrival).

Image database

Enter your search phrase in the zoek (search) field on the left and press enter. There is also an advanced search option (Uitgebreid zoeken), with fields like Beschrijving (description), Dag/Maand/Jaar (day/month/year), Periode vanaf/tot en met (year from/to), Trefwoord (keyword), and Fotograaf (photographer).

Search all databases at once

There is also a single search interface for all databases. Fill in a search phrase (most likely, a surname) at Zoekwoorden (search terms), make sure Alles (everything) is checked, and click Zoek. The result page is in Dutch, search for (and click) Toon resultaten in de thema databases (show search results in the themed databases), next click on a database name, and then click on a search result.

How much does it cost?

Use of the databases is free. There are (often hefty) fees for ordering copies.

You may make prints of the images in the image database for personal use, for any other use there will be charges (source: Auteursrechten). Please contact the national archive for details.

Future plans

Some of the databases are finished projects, others are far from complete. The VOC database, for instance, will probably be complete in 2012 (data entry started in 2000). I expect that new projects will be added from time to time.

Conclusion

The databases featured above are only the tip of the iceberg. The website of the Dutch National Archive hosts many exciting projects and databases. Navigating the website can be a challenge, though. It is a pity that so few databases are available in English.

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Dutch archive news roundup: Q4 2007

  • Genlias has added new acts from the Netherlands Antilles (Aruba, Curaçao, Saba, Sint Maarten) and from the Dutch provinces Overijssel, Noord-Brabant and Limburg.
  • The National Archives published a guide to the sources relating to Ghana in the Dutch archives: Sources for the Mutual History of Ghana and the Netherlands.
  • Tresoar and Internationaal Menno Simons Centrum (IMSC, a baptist research institute) announced a joint project to digitize their baptist sources.
  • The Central Bureau for Genealogy revamped their website and announced the publication of parts of their collection on their website, starting mid to late January (charges will apply).
  • Several archives announced new opening times for 2008.

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Almost half the records of the Netherlands Antilles available in Genlias

Please note: This article refers to the Genlias project. This project was discontinued at the end of 2012. Its successor is WieWasWie.nl. You can read more here.

Records of the Netherlands Antilles, the Caribbean island group that are part of the Kingdom of The Netherlands, are now available in Genlias:

Almost half the records from the Civil Registration of the period 1828-1950 of the Netherlands Antilles have been added to Genlias. That is good news for the population of the Antilles and for Dutch people with ancestors from the Antilles.

All records of Sint Eustatius, Sint Maarten and Bonaire, and some records of Aruba and Saba, are now available. The records of Curaçao, and the remaining records of Aruba and Saba, will follow soon.

Links: Genlias - National Archives of the Netherlands Antilles, National Archives of the Netherlands Antilles.

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