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In praise of Dutch women

Monday, February 27, 2012
Lynn Rosendale

Once, while attending a conference on early immigration history, Janet Sheeres  heard that Jewish women who immigrated to America were out in the community doing good for society while the Dutch women were home reading the Bible and praying.

鈥淚 never forgot that,鈥 said Sheeres, who herself is a Dutch immigrant. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that it wasn鈥檛 true,鈥 she added. 鈥淭here are just so many reasons why the Dutch women didn鈥檛 get out in the community much.鈥

Sheeres, a volunteer in the 17c起草社区 archives and a skilled genealogist, shared some of those reasons with attendees of a CALL ()-sponsored lecture, 鈥淒utch Immigrant Women and their Work in Grand Rapids, 1880-1900,鈥 earlier this month as a precursor to Women鈥檚 History Month, celebrated in March.

Forgotten heritage

The history of first-generation Dutch women immigrants is not well known, according to Sheeres. 鈥淥f the 10,640 people who emigrated from the province of Groningen in the last two decades of the 19th century, 791 were single women,鈥 she said, 鈥渂ut we don鈥檛 know much about them.鈥

What is known is that most of the immigrants during these years were looking for financial improvement.  鈥淚t was the poor people who emigrated,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he rich people didn鈥檛 need to leave.鈥

By the 1880s, The Netherlands was in utter economic decline, Sheeres said. 鈥淎merican farmers were flooding the market with grain, and the industrial revolution was passing Holland by,鈥 she said.

America鈥檚 perception of the Dutch, though, was distorted by idyllic photos and paintings of windmills and tulips that were being widely used as artwork in calendars and in books.

鈥淒uring this time (1889), a Dutchman (Edward Bok) became editor of Ladies Home Journal and plastered the magazine with cute pictures of Dutch little boys and girls in costume,鈥 Sheeres said.

In reality, the women who came to America were not educated; they were extremely poor and worked as domestics or field laborers.  So what kept them from engaging in American society?

Sheeres said there were at least six factors that limited their participation. Language was one. 鈥淭hey had only learned basic English, but many still spoke only Dutch in their homes,鈥 she said.

A second factor was the church. 鈥淭he motto of the Christian Reformed Church (CRC) at the time was 鈥榠n our isolation is our strength,鈥欌 said Sheeres. 鈥淭hey weren鈥檛 encouraged to mix with American society.鈥

Other factors were education, finances and women鈥檚 suffrage and, finally, the hierarchical system that was their heritage. In fact, the CRC Synod proclaimed, 鈥淲hen women come to the foreground in public life, the result is digression.鈥

Lowest status

The hierarchy in The Netherlands was firmly established, and working women were clearly at the lowest rung.

鈥淒utch women going into the greater culture of Grand Rapids was not encouraged, and they were not free to do it,鈥 said Sheeres.

Sheeres believes this message is important because, overall, the Dutch, who by 1900 accounted for 40 percent of the West Michigan population, had a positive influence on the area. 鈥淭he Dutch had strong family values and very little crime,鈥 she said. 鈥淗erbert Hoover once said, 鈥楾he Dutch descendants over here are never in prison and never in the poorhouse.鈥欌

In history, Sheeres finds reason to salute these women for their hard work and not to condemn them. Even among her only family line鈥擲jaarda鈥擲heeres has discovered strong Christian women. 鈥淚n tracing my own genealogy, I鈥檝e discovered stories about my great-grandmother. She had two root cellars: one was full of food for her family; the other was full of food that she gave away to poorer people.鈥

And her grandmother, who is buried in a Dutch municipal cemetery with no headstone, because in the Bible it says, 鈥淢an is like grass, whose place is not to be remembered,鈥 said Sheeres.

Sheeres has photos of both of these women in her bedroom. 鈥淢y great-grandmother is holding a book, like she鈥檚 saying to me, 鈥楾ell these stories.鈥 They鈥檙e encouraging me.鈥