Difference between revisions of "Boekenoogen family"

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Boekenoogen was a family which originally lived in West Flanders in [[Belgium|Belgium]]. Joos Bouckenoghe (Boekenoogen), head chaplain at [[Bruges (West-Vlaanderen, Belgium)|Bruges]] and priest of the Roman Catholic Church at Ledeghem, was converted to the Mennonites and settled at [[Haarlem (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Haarlem]] in the [[Netherlands|Netherlands]] as a weaver about 1580. His son Willem was also a Mennonite, but most of Willem's children became Quakers; one of them, Jan, emigrated to [[Pennsylvania (USA)|Pennsylvania]] in 1684 and was one of the first settlers of [[Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA)|Philadelphia]]. Five of the children of Tanneken Symons B. (d. 1670 at Haarlem) were Quakers though she herself was apparently a Mennonite. The children of Jan B., a son of Willem and a velvet weaver, were, however, Mennonites about 1731, first in [[Amsterdam (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Amsterdam]] and afterward in Haarlem.
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Boekenoogen was a family which originally lived in West Flanders in [[Belgium|Belgium]]. Joos Bouckenoghe (Boekenoogen), head chaplain at [[Bruges (West-Vlaanderen, Belgium)|Bruges]] and priest of the Roman Catholic Church at Ledeghem, was converted to the Mennonites and settled at [[Haarlem (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Haarlem]] in the [[Netherlands|Netherlands]] as a weaver about 1580. His son Willem was also a Mennonite, but most of Willem's children became Quakers; one of them, Jan, immigrated to [[Pennsylvania (USA)|Pennsylvania]] in 1684 and was one of the first settlers of [[Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA)|Philadelphia]]. Five of the children of Tanneken Symons B. (d. 1670 at Haarlem) were Quakers though she herself was apparently a Mennonite. The children of Jan B., a son of Willem and a velvet weaver, were, however, Mennonites about 1731, first in [[Amsterdam (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Amsterdam]] and afterward in Haarlem.
  
 
A grandson of this Jan Boekenoogen, called Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen, b. at Haarlem 1802 and d. at Beverwijk 1877, married to Johanna Overbeek, studied at the [[Amsterdam Mennonite Theological Seminary (Kweekschool)|Mennonite Theological Seminary]] at Amsterdam and became a ministerial candidate in 1826; he served the Mennonite congregations of [[Ouddorp (Zuid-Holland, Netherlands)|Ouddorp]] 1826-1827 and [[Wormerveer (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Wormerveer-Zuid]] 1827-1863. His son Lucas Fredrik Boekenoogen (1830-1909) was a manufacturer of vegetable oils at Wormerveer and became very well-to-do. He was married to Agatha Maria van Gelder. [[Boekenoogen, Jan Gerrit (1856-1933)|Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen]] and [[Boekenoogen, Gerrit Jacob (1868-1930)|Gerrit Jacob Boekenoogen]] were their sons.
 
A grandson of this Jan Boekenoogen, called Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen, b. at Haarlem 1802 and d. at Beverwijk 1877, married to Johanna Overbeek, studied at the [[Amsterdam Mennonite Theological Seminary (Kweekschool)|Mennonite Theological Seminary]] at Amsterdam and became a ministerial candidate in 1826; he served the Mennonite congregations of [[Ouddorp (Zuid-Holland, Netherlands)|Ouddorp]] 1826-1827 and [[Wormerveer (Noord-Holland, Netherlands)|Wormerveer-Zuid]] 1827-1863. His son Lucas Fredrik Boekenoogen (1830-1909) was a manufacturer of vegetable oils at Wormerveer and became very well-to-do. He was married to Agatha Maria van Gelder. [[Boekenoogen, Jan Gerrit (1856-1933)|Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen]] and [[Boekenoogen, Gerrit Jacob (1868-1930)|Gerrit Jacob Boekenoogen]] were their sons.
 
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Latest revision as of 07:30, 20 November 2016

Boekenoogen was a family which originally lived in West Flanders in Belgium. Joos Bouckenoghe (Boekenoogen), head chaplain at Bruges and priest of the Roman Catholic Church at Ledeghem, was converted to the Mennonites and settled at Haarlem in the Netherlands as a weaver about 1580. His son Willem was also a Mennonite, but most of Willem's children became Quakers; one of them, Jan, immigrated to Pennsylvania in 1684 and was one of the first settlers of Philadelphia. Five of the children of Tanneken Symons B. (d. 1670 at Haarlem) were Quakers though she herself was apparently a Mennonite. The children of Jan B., a son of Willem and a velvet weaver, were, however, Mennonites about 1731, first in Amsterdam and afterward in Haarlem.

A grandson of this Jan Boekenoogen, called Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen, b. at Haarlem 1802 and d. at Beverwijk 1877, married to Johanna Overbeek, studied at the Mennonite Theological Seminary at Amsterdam and became a ministerial candidate in 1826; he served the Mennonite congregations of Ouddorp 1826-1827 and Wormerveer-Zuid 1827-1863. His son Lucas Fredrik Boekenoogen (1830-1909) was a manufacturer of vegetable oils at Wormerveer and became very well-to-do. He was married to Agatha Maria van Gelder. Jan Gerrit Boekenoogen and Gerrit Jacob Boekenoogen were their sons.


Author(s) Nanne van der Zijpp
Date Published 1953

Cite This Article

MLA style

Zijpp, Nanne van der. "Boekenoogen family." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1953. Web. 16 Apr 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Boekenoogen_family&oldid=141047.

APA style

Zijpp, Nanne van der. (1953). Boekenoogen family. Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 16 April 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Boekenoogen_family&oldid=141047.




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Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 1, p. 379. All rights reserved.


©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.