| Van der Heiden family history and photo album Joseph and Hendrina (van den Bogaard) van der Heijden Their ancestors and descendants
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Table of Contents Maps:
Excerpts from records of St. Mary's Catholic Church, Buffalo, New York
"The First Dutch Catholics in Brown County" by Willem Keeris (PDF file)
St. Mary's Catholic Church, De Pere, Wisconsin, parish history
Index Search - search for your known Van der Heiden ancestors.
Our Dutch ancestors and their children:
Visit the Dutch website http://members.home.nl/mvanasseldonk/ to learn more about the Van Asseldonk family history. Thank you to Martien van Asseldonk for letting us know about this website.
The immigrant ancestors and their descendants:
Judocus and Theodora (van Eckendonk) Manders Hermanus and ________ (________) Vinenvleugel
First generation in America:
In addition to all those who took the time to fill out my questionnaires and answer my letters, these are to be especially commended because of their assistance:
Mrs. Therese Diederich Van Horne McNeil Mrs. Leona Van Derhyden Horne Audrey and Willie Means of Stilwell, Oklahoma aemeans@intellex.com Mrs. Jean Reese mreese@flash.net Mr. Loek van der Heijden pstraat@worldonline.nl Mrs. Peggy White MissPeggy@aol.com Jeannene (Jacques) Evans I have been working on and off for more than 35 years on this history of the Van der Heiden family.. Over the years, we've gathered information from uncles, aunt and cousins. My aunt, Therese Diederich Van Horne O'Niell and my cousin Leona Van Derhyden Horne have been particularly helpful. We've researched the vital records and land deeds at the courthouse in Brown County, Wisconsin. We've examined the old parish registers of De Pere, Wisconsin and Nistelrode and Mierlo in the Province of North Brabant in the Netherlands. We've transcribed gravestone inscriptions in cemeteries at De Pere. We've searched census records, newspaper files, microfilm and other sources at the Wisconsin State Historical Society at Madison. We've spent many days at the National Archives in Washington, D.C. This family history is the result of all that effort. And there's more to come. This is a preliminary edition. It is by no means complete. Please send us your corrections, changes and suggestions. If you have any information, newspaper clippings or old pictures which should be included in subsequent editions, please let us know. I promise you we will handle your old records and pictures with care and return them to you. In the Dutch language, the surname "Van der Heyde" means "from the heath." A heath is an uncultivated marshy wasteland or moor, overgrown with heather and other shrubs. Perhaps our Van der Heyde ancestors were living in or had recently moved from such an area about the time that surnames came to be adopted in the Netherlands. Since the surname is of topographical origin, it is likely that many unrelated Dutch families adopted the same surname. Hence, it cannot be said that all Van der Heydes are related. The name is not spelled consistently in the records we consulted. In the old records, particularly those of North Brabant, the name is spelled "van der Heyde", "van der Heijde", "van der Heide", "van der Heyden", "van der Heijden", and "van der Heiden". One branch of the family spells the name Van Derhyden. They claim that in the early days in Wisconsin the post office frequently got the mail mixed up because so many had the same names. So, Joseph changed his name from Van der Heiden to Van Derhyden. Van den Bogaard means "of the orchard." Van den Asseldonk probably means "of Asdonck." "Asdonck" is a the name of a former feudal manor house. It is also the name of a hamlet between Aarle and Rikstel. Van Nistelroy means "of Nistelroy," an ancient name for Nistelrode. These surnames are not spelled consistently in the records we consulted. Variations include "Van den Bogaerd" as well as "Van den Bogaard" and "Van Asdonk", "Van Asdonck", "Van den Asdonk", as well as Van den Asseldonk".
Our Van der Heiden ancestors came from the Province of North Brabant in the Netherlands. The Province of North Brabant was originally part of the Duchy of Brabant which also included much of what is now northern Belgium. Brabant derived its name from the Carolingian pagus by the same name, between the rivers Schelde (Scheldt) and Dijle. This historical discussion is largely taken from an article by John Stienen that is part of the Brabant website: http://www.tue.nl/aegee/brabant/brab1.html The province lies in the South of the Netherlands, bounded by Belgium on the south, Zeeland and Zuid-Holland provinces on the west, the Maas River and Gelderland Province on the north, and Limburg Province on the east. The countryside is flat, low-lying and in some places, marshy. The soil near the Maas River is fertile, but all other areas are mostly sandy heathland. Wood is rare. The province is drained by the Mark and Dommel rivers, and the Zuid-Willamsvaart and Wilhelmina canals. There is some farming, dairying, and sheep-raising, but today the economic base of the province is industrial: wool, cotton, and linen textiles at Tilburg, Helmond, and Boxtel, electrical industry at Einhoven, leather tanning and shoe manufacturing at Waalwijk and Gisterwijk, pharmaceuticals at Oss, and jute spinning at Goirke. Brabant came under the rule of the Counts of Leuven (Louvain), who enlarged their domain considerably between the 10th and 12th centuries, with the county of Ukkel-Brussel (Uccle-Brussels), the abbeys of Nijvel and Gembloers, and the domains of Antwerpen and Orthen, later 's-Hertogenbosch (Bois-le-Duc). From about 1100 AD onwards, they called themselves Dukes of Brabant.
At the Treaty of Westphalia, which concluded the war in 1648, the Duchy lost most of
its estates north of Antwerpen to the Republic of the Netherlands. These estates are now
called the Dutch province of Noord-Brabant (North Brabant). The remainder of the
Duchy, now part of Belgium, stayed under Habsburg rule. The province was not one of the original seven United Provinces, although the Town of Breda played a part in the uprising against Spain in 1571. It was ceded by Spain in 1637 and directly administered thereafter by the States-General. It joined the United Provinces in 1684.
According to Nistelrode records, Joseph (or Jozef) Van der Heyden was a merchant. Nistelrode is a small agricultural village, 11 miles east of 's Hertogenbosch, capital of the South Netherlands' Province of North Brabant. As of 1950, it had a population of only 1,742, according to the 1952 edition of The Columbia Lippincott Gazatteer of the World. Morningside Heights, N.Y.: Columbia University Press. According to family tradition, the Van der Heyden (Van der Heiden) family arrived in the United States in 1850 or 1851, but a search of passenger lists at the National Archives of ships which arrived at the ports of Buffalo and New York during those years does not confirm this. Joseph and Hendrina Van der Heyden would have been about 60 years old then. We do not know whether or not she was still alive at that time. Nor do we do know how many of Joseph's children accompanied him and eventually settled in Buffalo, or near Green Bay, Wisconsin, or elsewhere. The family lived at Buffalo until 1854 when some of the family moved to Wisconsin. When the 1860 Census was conducted, Joseph's son John, age 38, was listed as a laborer, residing at Town of Stiles, Oconto County, Wisconsin, with his wife Josephine, age 30, and daughters Henrietta, age 7; Theodora, age 5; Youza, age 4; Allena, age 2; and Jane, age 7 months. Joseph, age 72, lived with them, as did 38 other men listed as "boarders at the old boarding house of Elded & Balcom" and listed as "laborers in and about the mills of Eldred & Balcom." John and his wife may have been the keepers of this boarding house. According to the census report, John owned no real estate, and his personal property was worth only $75. See 1860 Census of Wisconsin, v 13, p 299R. Joseph and his son John's family resided in the Stiles' area for six years. During the early 1860s, they moved to a farm in the Town of Rockland, Brown County, Wisconsin. Joseph died there in 1867, and the following year the John Van der Heiden family moved to West De Pere, Brown County.
Our Dutch ancestors and their children Johannes Van der Heyde (17__ - 1790) Johannes Van der Heyde2 (Arnoldus1) was born ___________, at ____________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Arnoldus and ___________ (_______________) Van der Heyde. We have not found his birth record. He died 29 April 1790, age _____, at Nistelrode, Province of North Brabant, and is buried in __________ cemetery at _____________. His death is recorded in the death records of _____________ church at Nistelrode, p. ____. A microfilm copy (no. 112184) of the church records is held by The Genealogical Society of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc., Salt Lake City , Utah. He married Adriana Van den Broek __________ c1786 at ___________________ church, _____________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The marriage is recorded in the marriage register of the church. The Rev. _________________ presided. Witnesses were __________________ and ________________. She was born _____________, at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of Jacobus and _____________ (________) Van den Broek. We have not found her birth record. She died ________________, age _______, at _____________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, and is buried in ____________ cemetery at ____________. We have not found her death record. Johannes and Adriana Van der Heyde had at least two children whose baptisms are recorded in the records of St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. Vorstenbosch is a small agricultural village, 11 miles southeast of _____________'s Hertogenbosch, capital of the South Netherlands' Province of North Brabant. It is about four miles south of Nistelrode. Known children of Johannes and Adriana (Van den Broek) Van der Heyde:
Johannes Van der Heyde (1787 - 18__) Johannes3 Van der Heyde (Johannes2, Arnoldus1) was born ____________ 1787 at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Johannes and Adriana (Van den Broek) Van der Heyde. He was baptized 11 February 1787 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. His sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. He died ________________, age ___, of _________________, at _______________, _____________ , ___________ and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ________________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____. See ___________ death certificates, v. ______, no. ________. He married ___________________ ____________ _______________, at ____________ church at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. ______________________ presided. The witnesses were _____________________ and _________________. See the marriage records of ____________ church, p. ____. She was born ____________________, at ___________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. the daughter of __________ and _____________ (___________) _____________. Her birth is recorded in ______________ birth records, v. ______, no. _______. She died _________________, age ___, of ___________________________, at _________________, __________________, ________________ and is buried in the _________________________ cemetery at _________________. See ____________ County death certificates, v. ______, no. ______. The Van der Hydes had ____ children:
Martin Van den Bogaard (1755 - 1812) Martin2 Van den Bogaard (Lambert1) was born ______________ c1755 at Nistlerode, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Lambert and Hendrina (_______________) Van den Bogaard. We have not found his birth record. He died 27 May 1812, age about 57, at Uden, Province of North Brabant, and is buried in __________ cemetery at ________. His death is recorded in Uden death records. A microfilm copy (no. 112736 - 112738) of the Uden vital records is held by The Genealogical Society of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah. He married, first, Wilhelmina Van den Asseldonk _________________, at _____________ church at ____________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. Their marriage is recorded in the marriage register of the church. The Rev. _________________ presided. The witnesses were ________________ and ________________. Wilhelmina Van den Asseldonk was born _____________, at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of ______________ and _____________ (________) Van den Asseldonk. We have not found her birth record. She died 22 March 1806, age ___, of __________________, at _____________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands and is buried in ____________ cemetery at ____________. Her death is recorded in the church records of ___________ church at __________________________________. The Van den Bogaards had at least six children whose baptisms are recorded in the records of St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. A microfilm copy (no. 112184) of the St. Anthonius baptism records is held by The Genealogical Society of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah. He married, second, Hendrina Van Nistelroy _______________________, at ______________ church at ____________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. Their marriage is recorded in the marriage register of the church. The Rev. _________________ presided. The witnesses were ________________ and ________________. Hendrina Van Nistelroy was born _____________, at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of ______________ and _____________ (______________) Van Nistelroy. She died _____________, age ____, of ______________, at _____________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, and is buried in ____________ cemetery at ____________. We have not found a record of her birth or death. This is the record of Martin Van den Bogaard's death, translated from the French:
Known children of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard:
Henricus Van den Bogaard (1785 - 18__) Henricus3 Van den Bogaard (Martin2, Lambert1) was born ____________ 1785 at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard. He was baptized 6 October 1785 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. His sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. He died ________________, age ___, of _________________, at _______________, _____________ ___________________ and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ________________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____. He married __________________ ________________ _______________, at ____________ church at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. ____________________ presided. The witnesses were _______________ and _________________. See the marriage records of ____________ church, p. ____. She was born ____________________, at ___________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of __________ and __________ (____________) _______________. Her birth is recorded in _______________ birth records, v. ____, no. _____. She died _________________, age ____, of _____________________, at ________________, _____________________, ________________ and is buried in the _________________________ cemetery at ______________. See _____________ death certificates, v. ______, no. ________. The Van den Bogaards had ___ children:
Lambert Van den Bogaard (1787 - 18__) Lambert3 Van den Bogaard (Martin2, Lambert1) was born ____________ 1787 at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard. He was baptized 29 January 1787 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. His sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. He died ________________, age ___, of _________________, at _______________, _____________ ___________________ and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ________________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____. He married __________________ ________________ _______________, at ____________ church at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. ____________________ presided. The witnesses were _______________ and _________________. See the marriage records of ____________ church, p. ____. She was born ____________________, at ___________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of __________ and __________ (____________) _______________. Her birth is recorded in _______________ birth records, v. ____, no. _____. She died _________________, at ________________, ___________________, ________________ and is buried in the _________________________ cemetery at ______________. See _____________ death certificates, v. ______, no. ________. The Van den Bogaards had ___ children:
Theodorus Van den Bogaard (1788 - 18__) Theodorus3 Van den Bogaard (Martin2, Lambert1) was born ____________ 1788, at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard. He was baptized 12 August 1788 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. His sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. He died ________________, age ___, of _________________, at _______________, _____________ ___________________ and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ________________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____. He married __________________ ________________ _______________, at ____________ church at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. ____________________ presided. The witnesses were _______________ and _________________. See the marriage records of ____________ church, p. ____. She was born ____________________, at ___________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of __________ and __________ (____________) _______________. Her birth is recorded in _______________ birth records, v. ____, no. _____. She died _________________, at ________________, ____________________, ________________ and is buried in the _________________________ cemetery at ______________. See _____________ death certificates, v. ______, no. ________. The Van den Bogaards had ___ children:
Joseph Van der Heyden (1789 - 1867)
Joanna Van den Bogaard (1792 - 1792) Joanna3 Van den Bogaard (Martin2, Lambert1) was born ____________ 1792, at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard. She was baptized 29 January 1792 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. Her sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. She never married. She died ___________c1792, age ____, of __________ at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ______________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____.
_______ _______ ________ (17__ - 18__)
Joanna Van den Bogaard (1793 - 18__) __________ 2 _________ (___________1) was born ____________________, at ___________________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of ______________ and _____________ (______________________) ___________________. His birth is recorded in _______________ County birth records, v. ____, no. _______. He died __ ____ ____, age __, of ________________________, at ____________, __________ County, _________ and is buried in __________ cemetery at ___________. See _______ County death records, v. __, no. ___. He married Joanna Van den Bogaard _______________, at ____________ church at ______________, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. _________________ presided. The witnesses were _______________ and _________________. See the marriage records of ____________ church, p. ____. Joanna Van den Bogaard was born ____________ 1793 at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the daughter of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Bogaard. She was baptized 10 November 1793 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. Her sponsors were ______________ and ____________. See the baptism records of the church, p. ____. She died ________________, age ____, of __________________, at _______________, _____________ ___________________ and is buried in ____________________ cemetery at ________________________. See the death records of ___________ church, p. _____. The _____________s had ______ children:
Joseph Van der Heyden (1789 - 1867) Joseph Van der Heyden3 (Johannes2, Arnoldus1) was born _____________ 1789, at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands, the son of Johannes and Adriana (Van den Broek) Van der Heyde. He was baptized 7 August 1789 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. His baptism is recorded in the baptism records of the chapel at Vorstenbosch. A microfilm copy (no. 15882) of these records is held by The Genealogical Society of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc., Salt Lake City, Utah. He died 2 February 1867, age 77, at Town of Rockland, Brown County, Wisconsin. He probably is buried in Mt. Olivet cemetery at De Pere, Brown County, but if so, his grave is unmarked. His death is recorded in the records of St. Mary Catholic church at De Pere, p 6, but not in Brown County death records. He married Hendrina Van den Boogard 27 April 1820 at _______________ Catholic church at Nistelrode, Province of North Brabant, Netherlands. The Rev. ________ presided. The witnesses were _______ _______ and _______ _______. Their marriage is recorded in the marriage records of the church. A microfilm copy (no. 15882) of these records is held by The Genealogical Society of The church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc. She was born ___________ 1790 at or near Vorstenbosch, Province of North Brabant, the daughter of Martin and Wilhelmina (Van den Asseldonk) Van den Boogard. She was baptized 19 February 1790 at St. Anthonius Chapel at Vorstenbosch. Her baptism is recorded in the baptism records of the church. A microfilm copy (no. 15882) of the church records is held by The Genealogical Society of the church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Inc. She died __ ____ 18__, at _______________, ______________, ___________ and is buried in __________ cemetery at ___________, __________________. We have not found a record of her death and burial. She may have died before her husband and children migrated to the United States. The Van der Heyden's had at least seven children whose baptisms are recorded in the records of _______________ church at Nistelrode. It is possible that they had at least two others. According to Nistelrode records, Joseph (or Jozef) Van der Heyden was a merchant. Nistelrode is a small agricultural village, 11 miles east of 's Hertogenbosch, capital of the South Netherlands' Province of North Brabant. As of 1950, it had a population of only 1,742, according to the 1952 edition of The Columbia Lippincott Gazatteer of the World. Morningside Heights, N.Y.: Columbia University Press. According to family tradition, the Van der Heyden (Van der Heiden) family arrived in the United States in 1850 or 1851, but a search of passenger lists at the National Archives of ships which arrived at the ports of Buffalo and New York during those years does not confirm this. Joseph and Hendrina Van der Heyden would have been about 60 years old then. We do not know whether or not she was still alive at that time. Nor do we do know how many of Joseph's children accompanied him and eventually settled in Buffalo, or near Green Bay, Wisconsin, or elsewhere. The family lived at Buffalo until 1854 when some of the family moved to Wisconsin. When the 1860 Census was conducted, Joseph's son John, age 38, was listed as a laborer, residing at Town of Stiles, Oconto County, Wisconsin, with his wife Josephine, age 30, and daughters Henrietta, age 7; Theodora, age 5; Youza, age 4; Allena, age 2; and Jane, age 7 months. Joseph, age 72, lived with them, as did 38 other men listed as "boarders at the old boarding house of Eldred & Balcom" and listed as "laborers in and about the mills of Eldred & Balcom." John and his wife may have been the keepers of this boarding house. According to the census report, John owned no real estate, and his personal property was worth only $75. See 1860 Census of Wisconsin, v 13, p 299R. Joseph and his son John's family resided in the Stiles' area for six years. During the early 1860s, they moved to a farm in the Town of Rockland, Brown County, Wisconsin. Joseph died there in 1867, and the following year the John Van der Heiden family moved to West De Pere, Brown County. Joseph's death is recorded in the Liber Matrimonii et Defunctorum (Marriage and Death Book) of St. Mary Catholic church at De Pere, p 6, as follows:
According to this record, Joseph's father was named Henry, but the baptism records of ___________ church at Nistelrode say he was the son of Johannes Van der Heyde. Known children of Joseph and Hendrina (Van den Boogard) Van der Heyden:
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