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Wikipedia

Dutch Americans

Dutch Americans (Dutch: Nederlandse Amerikanen) are Americans of Dutch descent whose ancestors came from the Netherlands in the recent or distant past. Dutch settlement in the Americas started in 1613 with New Amsterdam, which was exchanged with the English for Suriname at the Treaty of Breda (1667) and renamed New York City. The English split the Dutch colony of New Netherland into two pieces and named them New York and New Jersey. Further waves of immigration occurred in the 19th and 20th centuries.

Dutch Americans
Nederlandse Amerikanen
Total population
3,103,648 (0.9%) in combination

916,096 (0.3%) Dutch alone

2021 estimates, self-reported[1]
Regions with significant populations
California; Mountain states, especially in Montana, Wyoming, and Colorado; Northeast, especially in Pennsylvania, New York, and New Jersey; Midwest, especially in Iowa, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, and Wisconsin
Languages
English, Dutch
Religion
74% Protestant, 10% Roman Catholic, 15% other[2]
Related ethnic groups
Dutch people, Dutch Brazilians, Dutch Canadians, Dutch Surinamese, Afrikaners, Pennsylvania Dutch, Belgian Americans, Dutch West Indian Americans, Surinamese Americans

Prominent (partial) Dutch American political figures include Presidents Martin Van Buren, Warren G. Harding, and Theodore and Franklin D. Roosevelt and U.S. Senators Philip Schuyler, Nicholas Van Dyke, Hamilton Fish, John C. Ten Eyck, Daniel W. Voorhees, Arthur Vandenberg, Peter G. Van Winkle, Alan Simpson, Fred Thompson, John Hoeven, and Christopher Van Hollen. Two of the Founding Fathers of the United States, Egbert Benson and John Jay, were also of Dutch descent. Governors John Hickenlooper of Colorado, Harold G. Hoffman and Thomas Kean of New Jersey, William Henry Vanderbilt III of Rhode Island, George Bell Timmerman Jr. of South Carolina, and Cornelius P. Van Ness of Vermont were also born to Dutch American families.

According to the 2020 American Community Survey, an estimated 3.7 million Americans claim total or partial Dutch heritage.[3] Today the majority of the Dutch Americans live in Michigan, California, Montana, Minnesota, Illinois, Wyoming, Colorado, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, New York, New Jersey, Wisconsin, Idaho, Utah, Iowa, Ohio, West Virginia, and Pennsylvania.

Dutch presence in the present-day territory of the United States

Early exploration

 
Main areas in which Dutch Americans can be found

In 1602, the Dutch government chartered the Dutch East India Company (Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, VOC). It sent explorers under the command of Henry Hudson, who arrived in 1609 and mapped what is now known as the Hudson River. Their initial goal was to find an alternative route to Asia, but they found good farmland and plenty of wildlife instead.

Oldest Dutch settlement

 
Principal Dutch colonies in North America

The earliest Dutch settlement was built around 1613; it consisted of a number of small huts built by the crew of the Tijger (Tiger), a Dutch ship under the command of Captain Adriaen Block which had caught fire while sailing on the Hudson in the winter of 1613. The ship was lost and Block and his crew established a camp ashore. In the spring, Block and his men did some explorations along the coast of Long Island. Block Island still bears his name. Finally, they were sighted and rescued by another Dutch ship and the settlement was abandoned.[4]

17th century migration

Dutch trade in the New York area led to the establishment of trade posts as early as 1613. Permanent settlers arrived in 1617 at what is now Albany, New York. New Amsterdam was settled in 1625. In 1629, Dutch officials tried to expand the northern colony through a plan that promised "Liberties and Exemptions" to anyone who would ship fifty colonists to America at his own expense. Anyone who did so would be allowed to buy a stretch of land along the Hudson River from the Dutch West India Company of about twelve miles, extending as far inland as the owner wanted. The landowners were called patroons and had complete jurisdiction over their domains as well as extensive trading privileges. They also received these rights in perpetuity. That was a form of feudalism, which had vanished in the Dutch Republic but was introduced in North America. The Patroonships were not a success; by 1635, the Dutch West India Company had bought back four of the five patroonships originally registered in Amsterdam.[citation needed]

The Native Americans were no longer consulted or offered/asked to sell their lands. The Dutch were confronted with a new phenomenon, Native American raids, since the local tribes had now realized that the Dutch were not simply visitors but people set to settle their land.[citation needed]

The Dutch realized that they had gone with the wrong approach as they offered great privileges to wealthy, not poor, citizens. It was not until 1656 that the Dutch state abandoned its passivity and decided to actively support New Netherland. The Dutch state issued a proclamation, which stated that "all mechanics and farmers who can prove their ability to earn a living here shall receive free passage for themselves, their wives and children".[citation needed]

Although the Dutch were in control, only about half the settlers were ethnically Dutch (the other half consisted mainly of Walloons, Germans, and French Huguenots as well as New England Yankees). Manhattan grew increasingly multicultural. In 1664, the English seized the colony and renamed it New York. The Dutch briefly recaptured the colony in 1673, but during peace talks with the English, they decided to trade it in 1674 for Suriname in South America, which was more profitable.[citation needed]

18th century

 
The Van Bergen farm, 1733, near Albany, New York—distinctively Dutch[5]

In the hundred years of British rule that followed the change of ownership of New Netherland, Dutch immigration to America came to an almost complete standstill.[citation needed]

While the Netherlands was a small country, the Dutch Empire was quite large so emigrants leaving the mother country had a wide variety of choices. New Amsterdam was not high on their list, especially because of the Native American risk. The major Dutch cities were centers of high culture, but they still sent immigrants. Most new arrivals were farmers from remote villages who, on arrival, in America scattered into widely separated villages with little contact with one another. Even inside a settlement, different Dutch groups had minimal interaction. With very few new arrivals, the result was an increasingly traditional system cut off from the forces for change. The people maintained their popular culture, revolving around their language and their Calvinist religion. The Dutch brought along their own folklore, most famously Sinterklaas (the foundation of the modern-day Santa Claus) and created their own as in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow. They maintained their distinctive clothing, and food preferences and introduced some new foods to America, including beets, endive, spinach, parsley, and cookies.

After the British takeover, the rich Dutch families in Albany and New York City emulated the English elite and purchased English furniture, silverware, crystal, and jewelry. They were proud of their language, which was strongly reinforced by the church, but they were much slower than the Yankees in setting up schools for their children. They finally set up Queens College (now Rutgers University) in New Jersey, but it quickly became anglicized. They never attempted to start newspapers; they published no books and only a handful of religious tracts annually. Pietist leader Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen (1691–1747) launched a series of revivals that challenge the mainstream church's emphasis on sacraments. Church buildings increasingly followed English rather than historic Dutch models.[6] Politically, however, there was a strong anti-British sentiment that led most of the Dutch to support the American Revolution. One famous Dutch folk hero was Rip Van Winkle, characterized by being absurdly old-fashioned and out of date, which aimed to instill the establishment of an American culture distinct from British culture.[7][8] Most farmers focused on providing subsistence for their families; about a third were chiefly oriented to market prices.[9]

Dutch Quakers came to the Philadelphia area in response to the appeal of William Penn. Penn, himself a Dutch Briton (his mother being from Rotterdam), had paid three visits to the Netherlands, where he published several pamphlets.[citation needed]

Colonial Dutch American population in 1790

The Census Bureau produced estimates of the colonial American population with roots in the Netherlands, in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies, by scholarly classification of the names of all White heads of families recorded in the first U.S. census of 1790. The government required accurate estimates of the origins of the colonial stock population as basis for computing National Origins Formula immigration quotas in the 1920s; for this task scholars estimated the proportion of names in each state determined to be of Dutch derivation. The final report estimated about 3.1% of the U.S. population in 1790 was of Dutch origin, heavily concentrated in the Middle Colonies of historic New Netherland which became the British American Colonial Province of New York, Province of New Jersey, Province of Pennsylvania, and Delaware Colony—ultimately forming the U.S. states of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware.

 Estimated Dutch American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census [10]

State or Territory   Dutch
# %
  Connecticut 600 0.26%
  Delaware 2,000 4.32%
  Georgia 100 0.19%
  Kentucky &  Tenn. 1,200 1.29%
  Maine 100 0.10%
  Maryland 1,000 0.48%
  Massachusetts 600 0.16%
  New Hampshire 100 0.07%
  New Jersey 28,250 16.62%
  New York 55,000 17.50%
  North Carolina 800 0.28%
  Pennsylvania 7,500 1.77%
  Rhode Island 250 0.39%
  South Carolina 500 0.36%
  Vermont 500 0.59%
  Virginia 1,500 0.34%
  1790 Census Area 100,000 3.10%
  Northwest Territory -
  French America -
  Spanish America -
  United States 100,000 3.10%

19th century

 
Typical Dutch homestead in Northeast Wisconsin, circa 1855

During the early nineteenth century, large numbers of Dutch farmers, forced by high taxes and low wages, started immigrating to America. They mainly settled down in the Midwest, especially Michigan, Illinois and Iowa. In the 1840s, Calvinist immigrants desiring more religious freedom immigrated. West Michigan in particular has become associated with Dutch American culture, and the highly conservative influence of the Dutch Reformed Church, centering on the cities of Holland and (to a lesser extent) Grand Rapids.

Waves of Catholic emigrants, initially encouraged in the 1840s by Father Theodore J. van den Broek, emigrated from southern Netherlands to form communities in Wisconsin, primarily to Little Chute, Hollandtown, and the outlying farming communities. Whole families and even neighborhoods left for America. Most of these early emigrants were from villages near Uden, including Zeeland, Boekel, Mill, Oploo and Gemert. By contrast, many Protestant agrarian emigrants to Michigan and Iowa were drawn from Groningen, Friesland, and Zeeland; areas known for their clay soils.[11]

The Dutch economy of the 1840s was stagnant and much of the motivation to emigrate was economic rather than political or religious. The emigrants were not poor, as the cost of passage, expenses and land purchase in America would have been substantial. They were not, however, affluent and many would have been risking most of their wealth on the chance of economic improvement. There were also political pressures at the time that favored mass emigrations of Catholics.[11][12][13][14]

20th century migration

A significant number of Dutchmen emigrating to the United States after World War II arrived from Indonesia via the Netherlands. After Indonesia, formerly known as the Dutch East Indies, gained independence its Indo-European (Eurasian) population known as Indies Dutchmen (Dutch: Indische Nederlanders) repatriated to the Netherlands. Around 60,000 continued their diaspora to the United States. This particular group is also known as Dutch-Indonesians, Indonesian-Dutch, or Amerindos.[15]

"Nine tenths of the so called Europeans (in the Dutch East Indies) are the offspring of whites married to native women. These mixed people are called Indo-Europeans... They have formed the backbone of officialdom. In general they feel the same loyalty to Holland as do the white Netherlanders. They have full rights as Dutch citizens and they are Christians and follow Dutch customs. This group has suffered more than any other during the Japanese occupation." Official U.S. Army publication for the benefit of G.I.'s, 1944.[16]

These Dutch Indos mainly entered the United States under legislative refugee measures and were sponsored by Christian organizations such as the Church World Service and the Catholic Relief Services. An accurate count of Indo immigrants is not available, as the U.S. Census classified people according to their self-determined ethnic affiliation. The Indos could have therefore been included in overlapping categories of "country of origin", "other Asians," "total foreign", "mixed parentage", "total foreign-born" and "foreign mother tongue". However the Indos that settled in the United States via the legislative refugee measures number at least 25,000 people.[17]

The original post-war refugee legislation of 1948, already adhering to a strict "affidavit of support" policy, was still maintaining a color bar making it difficult for Indos to emigrate to the USA. By 1951 American consulates in the Netherlands registered 33,500 requests and had waiting times of 3 to 5 years. Also the Walter-McCarren Act of 1953 adhered to the traditional American policy of minimizing immigrants from Asia. The yearly quota for Indonesia was limited to a 100 visas, even though Dutch foreign affairs attempted to profile Indos as refugees from the alleged pro-communist Sukarno administration.[18]

The 1953 flood disaster in the Netherlands resulted in the Refugee Relief Act including a slot for 15,000 ethnic Dutch that had at least 50% European blood (one year later loosened to Dutch citizens with at least two Dutch grandparents) and an immaculate legal and political track record. In 1954 only 187 visas were actually granted. Partly influenced by the anti-Western rhetoric and policies of the Sukarno administration the anti-communist senator Francis E. Walter pleaded for a second term of the Refugee Relief Act in 1957 and an additional slot of 15,000 visas in 1958.[19]

In 1958, the Pastore–Walter Immigration Act for the relief of certain distressed aliens was passed allowing for a one-off acceptance of 10,000 Dutchmen from Indonesia (excluding the regular annual quota of 3,136 visas). It was hoped however that only 10% of these Dutch refugees would in fact be racially mixed Indos and the American embassy in The Hague was frustrated with the fact that Canada, where ethnic profiling was even stricter, was getting the full-blooded Dutch and the United States was getting Dutch "all rather heavily dark". Still in 1960 senators Pastore and Walter managed to get a second two-year term for their act which was used by a great number of Dutch Indos.[20]

Dutch influence on the United States

Several American Presidents had Dutch ancestry:

  • Martin Van Buren, 8th President. He was a key organizer of the Democratic Party and the first president who was not of English, Irish, Scottish, or Welsh descent. He is also the only president not to have spoken English as his first language, but rather grew up speaking Dutch.[22]
  • Theodore Roosevelt, 26th President. Roosevelt is most famous for his personality, his energy, his vast range of interests and achievements, his model of masculinity, and his "cowboy" persona. In 1901, he became president after the assassination of President William McKinley. Roosevelt was a Progressive reformer who sought to move the Republican Party into the Progressive camp.
  • Warren G. Harding, 29th President. His mother's ancestors were Dutch, including the well known Van Kirk family.[23]
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President. Elected to four terms in office, he served from 1933 to 1945, and is the only U.S. president to have served more than two terms. A central figure of the twentieth century, he has consistently been ranked as one of the three greatest U.S. presidents in scholarly surveys.
  • George H. W. Bush and George W. Bush, 41st and 43rd Presidents, respectively. They count members of the Schuyler family and the related Beekman family among their ancestors.[24]

Dutch language and Dutch names in North America

Foreign-born Dutch speakers in the U.S.[25]
Year Population
1910 126,045
1920 136,540
1930 133,142
1940 102,700
1960 130,482
1970 127,834

The first Dutch settlers lived in small isolated communities, and as a consequence were barely exposed to English. As the Dutch lost their own colonies in North America to the British, the Dutch settlers increasingly were exposed to other immigrants and their languages and the Dutch language gradually started to disappear.

In 1764, Archibald Laidlie preached the first English sermon to the Dutch Reformed congregation in New York City. Ten years later English was introduced in the schools. In Kingston, Dutch was used in church as late as 1808. A few years before, a traveler had reported that on Long Island and along the North River in Albany, Dutch was still the lingua franca of the elderly.[citation needed]

Francis Adrian van der Kemp, who came to the United States as a refugee in 1788, wrote that his wife was able to converse in Dutch with the wives of Alexander Hamilton and General George Clinton. In 1847, immigrants from the Netherlands were welcomed in Dutch by the Reverend Isaac Wyckoff upon their arrival in New York. Wyckoff himself was a descendant of one of the first settlers in Rensselaerswyck, who had learned to speak English at school.

Until recently many communities in New Jersey adhered to the tradition of a monthly church service in Dutch. As late as 1905, Dutch was still heard among the old people in the Ramapo Valley of that state. Dutch is still spoken by the elderly and their children in Western Michigan. It was not until 1910 that Roseland Christian School in Chicago switched to an English curriculum from Dutch.[citation needed]

In the first half of the twentieth century, the Dutch language was hardly spoken in North America, with the exception of first generation Dutch immigrants. The marks of the Dutch heritage - in language, in reference to historical Dutch people (for example Stuyvesant) and in reference to Dutch places (for example Brooklyn which stems from Breukelen) - can still be seen. There are about 35 Dutch restaurants and bakeries in the United States, most of them founded in the 20th century.[26]

New York City for example has many originally Dutch street and place names which range from Coney Island and Brooklyn to Wall Street and Broadway. And up the river in New York State Piermont, Orangeburg, Blauvelt and Haverstraw, just to name a few places. In the Hudson Valley region there are many places and waterways whose names incorporate the word -kill, Dutch for "stream" or "riverbed", including the Catskill Mountains, Peekskill, and the Kill van Kull.

There are also some words in American-English that are of Dutch origin, like "cookie" (koekje) and "boss" (baas). And in some family names a couple of Dutch characteristics still remain. Like (a) the prefix "van" (as in Martin Van Buren), (b) the prefix "de"(/"der"/"des"/"den") (as in Jared DeVries), (c) a combination of the two "van de ..." (as in Robert J. Van de Graaff), or (d) "ter"/"te"("ten"), which mean respectively (a) "of" (possessive or locative), (b) "the" (definite article), (c) "of the..." and (d) "at the" ("of the"/"in the") (locative).

Similarities between Dutch and English are abundant. Examples include the article "the" (de in Dutch), the words "book" (boek), "house" (huis), "pen" (pen), and, "street" (straat), among others. Dutch and English are both part of the West Germanic language group and share several aspects. Adaptation of place names between the languages is common, as was the case of New York, where several landmarks like Conyne Eylandt (Rabbit Island) became more suitable to Anglophones (Coney Island).

Contact between other languages also created various creoles with Dutch as the base language. Two examples, Jersey Dutch and Mohawk Dutch, are now extinct. This is possibly due to the ease of transition from Dutch to English, stemming from a shared linguistic genealogy.

Little Chute, Wisconsin, remained a Dutch-speaking community—known locally as "speaking Hollander"—into the twentieth century. As late as 1898, church sermons and event announcements were in Dutch.[27] Dutch newspapers continued in the area—mainly in De Pere by Catholic clergymen—were published up until World War I.[28] The only remaining publication that is written exclusively in Dutch is Maandblad de Krant, which is published monthly in Penticton, British Columbia, Canada, and mailed to subscribers throughout the United States from Oroville, Washington.[29]

The American state of Rhode Island is a surviving example of Dutch influence in Colonial America. In 1614, was christened as Roodt Eylandt (Rood Eiland in modern Dutch), meaning "Red Island", referring to the red clay found on the island.[citation needed]

Dutch-American Heritage Day

As of 1990, November 16 is "Dutch-American Heritage Day". On November 16, 1776, a small American warship, the Andrew Doria, sailed into the harbor of the Dutch island of Sint Eustatius in the West Indies. Only four months before, the United States had declared its independence from Great Britain. The American crew was delighted when the governor of the island ordered that his fort's cannons be fired in a friendly salute. The first ever given by a foreign power to the flag of the United States, it was a risky and courageous act. Indeed, angered by Dutch trading and contraband with the rebellious colonies, the British seized the island a few years later. The Dutch recaptured the island in 1784.[30]

Dutch-American Friendship Day

April 19th is Dutch-American Friendship Day, which remembers the day in 1782 when John Adams, later to become the second president of the United States, was received by the States General in The Hague and recognized as Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States of America. It was also the day that the house he had purchased at Fluwelen Burgwal 18 in The Hague was to become the first American Embassy in the world.[30]

Dutch Heritage Festivals

Many of the Dutch heritage festivals that take place around the United States coincide with the blooming of tulips in a particular region. The Tulip Time Festival in Holland, Michigan is the largest such festival with other notable gatherings such as the Pella Tulip Time in Pella, Iowa; Tulip Festival in Orange City, Iowa and Albany, New York; Dutch Days in Fulton, Illinois; Let's Go Dutch Days in Baldwin, Wisconsin; Holland Days in Lynden, Washington; Holland Happening in Oak Harbor, Washington; Holland Fest in Cedar Grove, Wisconsin, and the Wooden Shoe Tulip Fest in Woodburn, Oregon. Often Dutch heritage festivals coincide with the blooming of the tulip. See Tulip Festival for additional explanations of some of these festivals. A Dutch Festival is also held at Hofstra University in Hempstead, New York; and a Holland Festival[31] in Long Beach, California. A traditional Dutch Kermis Festival is celebrated in October in Little Chute, WI. During late November and early December a Dutch Winterfest is held in Holland, MI, to coincide with the traditional arrival of Sinterklaas; the cultural ancestor of the American Santa Claus."[32] There is an annual Sinterklass festival held in Rhinebeck and Kingston, New York where Sinterklaas crosses the Hudson River and a parade is held in recognition of the Greater New York Area's Dutch cultural heritage. [33]

Lately many of the larger cities in the US have a King's Day (Koningsdag) festival that is celebrated in the Netherlands on April 27 to celebrate the birthday of King Willem Alexander. The Portland Dutch Society[34] started this annual Dutch Holiday celebration in Portland, OR in 2013 and will have one again in 2015 on April 26. It is celebrated by people of Dutch heritage dressed in their Orange clothes and enjoying the sounds of Dutch music and eating typical Dutch foods like kroketten, patat met mayonnaise, zoute haring and other Dutch delicacies.

Religion

The beginnings of the Reformed Church in America date to 1628. By 1740, it had 65 congregations in New York and New Jersey, served by ministers trained in Europe. Schools were few but to obtain their own ministers they formed "Queens College" (now Rutgers University) in 1766. In 1771, there were 34 ministers for over 100 churches. Until 1764, in at least three Dutch churches in New York City, all sermons were in Dutch; Theodore Roosevelt reports his grandfather's church used Dutch as late as 1810. Other churches with roots in Dutch immigration to the United States include the Christian Reformed Church, the Protestant Reformed Churches, the United Reformed Churches, the Netherlands Reformed Congregations, the Heritage Netherlands Reformed Congregations and the Free Reformed Churches. Along with the Reformed churches, Roman Catholicism is the other major religion of Dutch Americans. Beginning in 1848, a significant number of Roman Catholics from the Dutch provinces of North Brabant, Limburg and southern Gelderland went to create many settlements in northeastern Wisconsin. But even today, Dutch Americans remain majority Protestant.

Numbers

Between 1820 and 1900, 340,000 Dutch emigrated from the Netherlands to the United States of America. In the aftermath of World War II, several tens of thousands of Dutch immigrants joined them, mainly moving to California and Washington. In several counties in Michigan and Iowa, Dutch Americans remain the largest ethnic group. Nowadays, most Dutch Americans (27%) live in California, followed by New York, Michigan and Pennsylvania.[according to whom?]

According to the 2000 United States Census, more than 5 million Americans claim total or partial Dutch heritage. They are particularly concentrated around Grand Rapids, Michigan; Rock Rapids, Iowa; Sioux City, Iowa; Des Moines, Iowa; Fulton, Illinois, Celeryville, Ohio, and Little Chute, Wisconsin. These areas are surrounded with towns and villages that were founded by Dutch settlers in the 19th century, such as Holland, Michigan and Zeeland, Michigan; Pella, Iowa, and Orange City, Iowa. Other Dutch enclaves include Lynden, Washington, Ripon, California, and places in New Jersey. It is estimated that, by 1927, as many as 40,000 Dutch settlers, primarily from North Brabant and Limburg, had immigrated to the United States, with the largest concentrations in the area near Little Chute, Wisconsin.[35] By the early twentieth century, Little Chute was the largest Catholic Dutch community in the United States.[36] In the Chicago suburbs, there are sizable Dutch communities in and around Elmhurst, Wheaton, Palos Heights, South Holland, Lansing, Dyer, and other surrounding communities, anchored by Reformed churches and Christian schools.

In California, the San Joaquin Delta had a major Dutch (incl. Frisian) and Belgian influence, as settlers from those countries arrived in the 1850s, after California obtained statehood. They drained away swamps and created artificial islands known as polders, constructed dikes to back away the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers flowing into the San Francisco Bay, also turned them into fertile farmlands and set up inland ports such as Stockton. Also their communities like Lathrop, Galt, Rio Vista and French Camp which were named for Belgians from Belgium are of both French (Walloon) or Flemish origin.

Not included among Dutch Americans are the Pennsylvania Dutch, a group of German Americans who settled in Pennsylvania in the colonial era and whose name is a corruption of the word "Deutsch", meaning "German".

2020 population of Dutch ancestry by state

As of 2020, the distribution of Dutch Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table:

 Estimated Dutch American population by state [37][3]
State Number Percentage
  Alabama 30,349 0.62%
  Alaska 10,533 1.43%
  Arizona 80,124 1.12%
  Arkansas 31,550 1.05%
  California 313,233 0.80%
  Colorado 86,616 1.52%
  Connecticut 24,644 0.69%
  Delaware 7,895 0.82%
  District of Columbia 4,886 0.70%
  Florida 170,831 0.81%
  Georgia 64,164 0.61%
  Hawaii 6,567 0.46%
  Idaho 31,398 1.79%
  Illinois 145,771 1.15%
  Indiana 109,108 1.63%
  Iowa 116,971 3.71%
  Kansas 43,715 1.50%
  Kentucky 41,100 0.92%
  Louisiana 17,506 0.38%
  Maine 11,767 0.88%
  Maryland 40,293 0.67%
  Massachusetts 36,951 0.54%
  Michigan 427,818 4.29%
  Minnesota 91,012 1.63%
  Mississippi 13,356 0.45%
  Missouri 78,763 1.29%
  Montana 19,606 1.85%
  Nebraska 31,950 1.66%
  Nevada 26,471 0.87%
  New Hampshire 12,596 0.93%
  New Jersey 79,492 0.89%
  New Mexico 14,614 0.70%
  New York 204,250 1.05%
  North Carolina 83,803 0.81%
  North Dakota 8,156 1.07%
  Ohio 140,161 1.20%
  Oklahoma 47,932 1.21%
  Oregon 74,960 1.79%
  Pennsylvania 161,506 1.26%
  Rhode Island 4,459 0.42%
  South Carolina 36,482 0.72%
  South Dakota 37,913 4.31%
  Tennessee 64,028 0.95%
  Texas 178,457 0.62%
  Utah 58,948 1.87%
  Vermont 7,396 1.18%
  Virginia 64,790 0.76%
  Washington 131,299 1.75%
  West Virginia 24,445 1.35%
  Wisconsin 132,420 2.28%
  Wyoming 9,834 1.69%
  United States 3,692,889 1.13%

Notable people

Harmen Jansen Knickerbocker was an early Dutch settler of New York's Hudson River Valley.

In art, Willem de Kooning was a leading Abstract Expressionist painter, often depicting the human form in violent brush strokes and daring color juxtapositions. Muralist Anthony Heinsbergen interior designs are still seen today in most of the world's movie theaters. Cowboy artist Earl W. Bascom, a sculptor known as the "cowboy of cowboy artists", is a descendant of the Van Riper family who were early settlers of New York.

In business, the Vanderbilt family were once among the richest families in the United States.

In literature, Janwillem van de Wetering is renowned for his detective fiction; his most popular creation being that of Grijpstra and de Gier. Edward W. Bok was a Pulitzer Prize-winning autobiographer and magazine editor. He is also credited with coining the term "living room". Greta Van Susteren's father was a Dutch American. Prolific poet Leo Vroman escaped from the Nazi-occupied Netherlands to the Dutch East Indies to end up in a harsh concentration camp for Europeans run by the Japanese army when it overran the islands. After the war he immigrated to the United States. His Dutch Indonesian friend, fellow camp survivor and author Tjalie Robinson also lived in the United States, where he founded several cultural institutions. The author Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema, writer of the book Soldier of Orange, was a Dutch resistance fighter, spy, and decorated war hero that immigrated to the United States after World War II. Born on Java in the Dutch East Indies, he died in his home on Hawaii.

In entertainment, actor, presenter and entertainer Dick Van Dyke is of Dutch descent, with a career spanning six decades. He is best known for his starring roles in Mary Poppins, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, The Dick Van Dyke Show and Diagnosis: Murder. Dick Van Patten and his son Vincent are of Dutch descent; Dick was famous for the television show Eight is Enough. Three generations of Fondas from Fonda, New York have graced the stage and screen for almost a century, including Henry Fonda, son Peter Fonda, daughter Jane Fonda, granddaughter Bridget Fonda and grandson Troy Garity. The X-Men trilogy starred Dutch actress Famke Janssen and Dutch-descended Rebecca Romijn who is perhaps best known for her TV roles on such comedies as Ugly Betty. Anneliese van der Pol, a singer and actress, is a star of Disney's That's so Raven. Iconic star Audrey Hepburn was born in Belgium to a Dutch expatriate. Musicians Eddie and Alex van Halen were the lead guitarist and drummer, respectively, and co-founders of the band Van Halen, born to a Dutch father and Dutch-Indonesian mother. Bruce Springsteen's father was of Dutch and Irish heritage, from one of the original families that settled in New Netherland. The brothers Ronny, Johnny and Donnie van Zant, the lead singer of Lynyrd Skynyrd and founder of 38 Special have Dutch ancestry. Singer Whitney Houston had Dutch ancestry. Don Van Vliet, the musician with the stage name Captain Beefheart, changed his middle name from Glen to the preposition to 1965 to honor his Dutch heritage. Actor Mark-Paul Gosselaar, known from the series Saved by the Bell, was born to a Dutch father and a Dutch-Indonesian mother. Matt Groening, the author of The Simpsons and Futurama has Dutch Mennonite ancestors, his family name originating from the Dutch city of Groningen. Chevy Chase also has deep Dutch roots from colonial New York.

In politics, Peter Stuyvesant was the last Director-General of the colony of New Netherland. Stuyvesant greatly expanded the settlement of New Amsterdam, today known as New York. Stuyvesant's administration built the protective wall on Wall Street, and the canal that became Broad Street, known today as Broadway. The prestigious Stuyvesant High School is named after him. Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt, presidents of the United States, were not only of Dutch descent, but cousins. Martin Van Buren was another president of Dutch descent. Martin Kalbfleisch served as a U.S. Representative for the state of New York. Pete Hoekstra served as congressman for the state of Michigan's 2nd congressional district from 1993 until 2011. On January 10, 2018, he took office as United States Ambassador to the Netherlands. Jacob Aaron Westervelt was a renowned and prolific shipbuilder and Mayor of New York (1853–1855).

In science and technology, inventor and businessman Thomas Edison was of Dutch descent. Nicolaas Bloembergen won the Nobel Prize in 1981 for his work in laser spectroscopy. He was also awarded the Lorentz Medal in 1978. Physicists Samuel Abraham Goudsmit and George Eugene Uhlenbeck proposed the concept of electron spin. Goudsmit was also the scientific head of the Operation Alsos mission in the Manhattan Project. Tjalling Koopmans was the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1975.

In astronomy, Maarten Schmidt pioneered the research of quasars. Astronomer Gerard Kuiper discovered two new moons in the Solar System and predicted the existence of the Kuiper belt, which is named in his honor. Popular astronomer Bart J. Bok won the Klumpke-Roberts Award in 1982 and the Bruce Medal in 1977. Jan Schilt invented the Schilt photometer.

In sports, Hall of Fame baseball player and two-time World Series champion Bert Blyleven gained fame for his curveball. Earl Bascom was a Hall of Fame rodeo champion known as the "father of modern rodeo." Golfer Tiger Woods has Dutch ancestry through his mother.

In religion, Albertus van Raalte was a Reformed Church of America pastor who led the Dutch immigrants who founded the city of Holland, Michigan in 1846. Louis Berkhof, a Reformed systematic theologian, is greatly studied today in seminaries and Bible colleges. Herman Hoeksema, a theologian, was instrumental in the series of events that precipitated the creation of the Protestant Reformed Church. Prominent Christian author Lewis B. Smedes wrote Forgive and Forget, an influential work discussing a religious view on sexuality and forgiveness. Menno Simons (1496 – 31 January 1561) was a former Catholic priest from the Friesland region of the Netherlands who became an influential Anabaptist religious leader. Simons was a contemporary of the Protestant Reformers and it is from his name that his followers became known as Mennonites.

See also

References

  1. ^ "IPUMS USA". University of Minnesota. Retrieved October 12, 2022.
  2. ^ One Nation Under God: Religion in Contemporary American Society, p. 120
  3. ^ a b "Table B04006 - People Reporting Ancestry - 2020 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates". United States Census Bureau. from the original on July 13, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
  4. ^ The United States of America and the Netherlands, 3/14 The First Dutch Settlers. By George M. Welling. (Link)
  5. ^ Blackburn, Roderic H.; Ruth Piwonka (1988). Remembrance of Patria: Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America, 1609-1776. SUNY Press. ISBN 9780939072064.
  6. ^ Randall H. Balmer, "The Social Roots of Dutch Pietism in the Middle Colonies," Church History 53#2 (1984), pp. 187-199 JSTOR
  7. ^ Jacob Ernest Cooke, ed. Encyclopedia of the North American colonies (3 vol. 1993), gives detailed topical coverage of the Dutch colonists.
  8. ^ A. G. Roeber "Dutch colonists cope with English control" in Bernard Bailyn, and Philip D. Morgan, eds. Strangers within the realm: cultural margins of the first British Empire (1991) pp 222-36.
  9. ^ Thomas S. Wermuth, Rip Van Winkle's Neighbors: The Transformation of Rural Society in the Hudson River Valley, 1720-1850 (2001).
  10. ^ American Council of Learned Societies. Committee on Linguistic and National Stocks in the Population of the United States (1932). Report of the Committee on Linguistic and National Stocks in the Population of the United States. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office. OCLC 1086749050.
  11. ^ a b "Place Matters: The Social Geography of Dutch-American Immigration in the Nineteenth Century". swierenga.com.
  12. ^ Vanderheide, Albert. "Priest led party of emigrants to Wisconsin's frontier territory:American communities formed close ties with North Brabant villages". godutch.com. Retrieved December 18, 2016.
  13. ^ "Landverhuizing als regionaal verschijnsel, Van Noord-Brabant naar Noord-Amerika 1820–1880". Doctoral thesis, H.A.V.M. Van Stekelenburg. March 7, 2003.
  14. ^ Yda Schreuder, Dutch Catholic Immigrant Settlement in Wisconsin, 1850-1905 (New York: Garland, 1989); and H. A. V. M. van Stekelenburg, Landverhuizing als regionaal verschijnsel: Van Noord-Brabant naar Noord-Amerika 1820-1880 (Tilburg: Stichting Zuidelijk Historisch Contact, 1991).
  15. ^ . UC Berkeley 'Amerindo' Research Website. Archived from the original on March 23, 2010.
  16. ^ War and Navy Departments of the United States Army, 'A pocket guide to the Netherlands East Indies.' (Facsimile by Army Information Branch of the Army Service Forces re-published by Elsevier/Reed Business November 2009) ISBN 978-90-6882-748-4 p.18
  17. ^ Willems, Wim "De uittocht uit Indie (1945-1995), De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders" (Publisher: Bert Bakker, Amsterdam, 2001) p.254 ISBN 90-351-2361-1
  18. ^ Willems, Wim "De uittocht uit Indie (1945-1995), De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders" (Publisher: Bert Bakker, Amsterdam, 2001) p.255 ISBN 90-351-2361-1
  19. ^ Willems, Wim "De uittocht uit Indie (1945-1995), De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders" (Publisher: Bert Bakker, Amsterdam, 2001) p.256-257 ISBN 90-351-2361-1
  20. ^ Willems, Wim "De uittocht uit Indie (1945-1995), De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders" (Publisher: Bert Bakker, Amsterdam, 2001) p.258 ISBN 90-351-2361-1
  21. ^ Richard E. Mooney, "If You Believe They Paid $24, Here's a Bridge for Sale", The New York Times, December 28, 1997, sec. 4, p. 2. See also Peter Minuit.
  22. ^ Sturgis, Amy H. (2007). The Trail of Tears and Indian Removal. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-313-33658-4.
  23. ^ Russell, Thomas (1923). The illustrious life and work of Warren G. Harding, twenty-ninth President of the United States. the University of Wisconsin - Madison. p. 51.
  24. ^ Ancestry of George W. Bush Wargs.com; William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services.
  25. ^ "Mother Tongue of the Foreign-Born Population: 1910 to 1940, 1960, and 1970". United States Census Bureau. March 9, 1999. Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  26. ^ . dutchinamerica.com. Archived from the original on February 6, 2012.
  27. ^ Milwaukee Sentinel, July 15, 1898
  28. ^ Twilah DeBoer (June 1999). . wlhn.org. Archived from the original on October 8, 2007.
  29. ^ "Site Disabled". Archived from the original on December 9, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
  30. ^ a b . Archived from the original on April 23, 2016. Retrieved March 17, 2015.
  31. ^ "26th ANNUAL HOLLAND FESTIVAL 2015 - GEMMRIG PARK, LONG BEACH, CALIFORNIA". nassocal.org.
  32. ^ "Dutch Americans", Herbert J. Brinks
  33. ^ "Sinterklaas!".
  34. ^ "The Portland Dutch Society". portlanddutch.com. Retrieved February 21, 2016.
  35. ^ "Nederlanders in Amerika", Van Hinte, Assen, 1928
  36. ^ "Netherlanders in America" Lucas, 1955
  37. ^ "Table B04006 - People Reporting Ancestry - 2020 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates, All States". United States Census Bureau. from the original on July 17, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2022.

Further reading

  • Bratt, James D. Dutch Calvinism in Modern America: A History of a Conservative Subculture. (Eerdmans, 1984).
  • Brinks, Herbert J. "Dutch Americans." in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 35–45. online
  • Corwin, S. T. History of the Dutch Reformed Church in the United States (1895).
  • De Gerald, F. Jong The Dutch in America, 1609-1974. (Twayne, 1975); short survey
  • Ganzevoort, Herman, and Mark Boekelman, eds. Dutch Immigration to North America. Toronto: Multicultural History Society of Ontario, 1983.
  • Goodfriend, Joyce D. Benjamin Schmidt, and Annette Stott, eds. Going Dutch: The Dutch Presence in America, 1609-2009 (2008)
  • Kirk, Gordon W. The Promise of American Life: Social Mobility in a Nineteenth-Century Immigrant Community, Holland, Michigan, 1847-1894. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society, 1978.
  • Krabbendam, Hans. Freedom on the Horizon: Dutch Immigration to America, 1840-1940 (2009), Emphasis on the Dutch Reformed Church
  • Kroes, Rob. The Persistence of Ethnicity: Dutch Calvinist Pioneers in Amsterdam, Montana. University of Illinois Press, 1992.
  • Kroes, Rob, and Henk-Otto Neuschafer, eds. The Dutch in North America: Their Immigration and Cultural Continuity. Amsterdam: Free University Press, 1991.
  • Kromminga, John. The Christian Reformed Church: A Study in Orthodoxy. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Books, 1949.
  • Lucas, Henry. Netherlanders in America: Dutch Immigration to the United States and Canada, 1789-1950. University of Michigan Press, 1955.
  • Schreuder, Yda. Dutch Catholic Immigrant Settlement in Wisconsin, 1850-1905. New York: Garland, 1989.
  • Swierenga, Robert P. The Forerunners: Dutch Jewry in the North American Diaspora. Wayne State University Press, 1994.
  • Swierenga, Robert P. ed. The Dutch in America: Immigration, Settlement, and Cultural Change. Rutgers University Press, 1985.
  • Swierenga, Robert P., "Faith and Family --Dutch Immigration and Settlement in the United States, 1820–1920" (Ellis Island Series.) New York: Holmes and Meyer. 2000.
  • Taylor, Lawrence J. Dutchmen on the Bay: The Ethnohistory of a Contractual Community. University of Pennsylvania Press, 1983.
  • Thernstrom, Stephan, ed. Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups. Harvard University Press, 1980.
  • Van Jacob Hinte. Netherlanders in America: A Study of Emigration and Settlement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries in the United States of America. Ed. Robert P. Swierenga. Grand Rapids, Mich.: Baker Book House, 1985. translation of a 1928 Dutch-language book
  • Wabeke, Bertus Harry Dutch emigration to North America, 1624-1860
  • Wittke, Carl. We Who Built America: The Saga of the Immigrant (1939), ch 2, 11

Colonial/ New Netherland

  • Balmer, Randall. A Perfect Babel of Confusion: Dutch Religion and English Culture in the Middle Colonies (2002).
  • Blackburn, Roderic H.; Ruth Piwonka (1988). Remembrance of Patria: Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America, 1609-1776. SUNY Press. ISBN 9780939072064.
  • Cohen, David Steven. "How Dutch Were the Dutch of New Netherland?." New York History 62#1 (1981): 43–60. in JSTOR
  • Cooke, Jacob Ernest, ed. Encyclopedia of the North American colonies (3 vol. 1993), highly detailed topical coverage of the Dutch colonists.
  • Jacobs, Jaap. New Netherland: a Dutch colony in seventeenth-century America (Brill, 2005) online.
  • Kenney, Alice P. "Neglected Heritage: Hudson River Valley Dutch Material Culture." Winterthur Portfolio 20#1 (1985): 49–70. in JSTOR
  • Kim, Sung Bok. Landlord and Tenant in Colonial New York: Manorial Society, 1664-1775 (1987)
  • Leiby; Adrian C. The Revolutionary War in the Hackensack Valley: The Jersey Dutch and the Neutral Ground, 1775-1783 Rutgers University Press. 1962.
  • Nissenson, S. G. The Patroon's Domain (1937).
  • Roeber, A. G. "Dutch colonists cope with English control" in Bernard Bailyn, and Philip D. Morgan, eds. Strangers within the realm: cultural margins of the first British Empire (1991) pp 222–36.
  • Scheltema, Gajus and Westerhuijs, Heleen (eds.),Exploring Historic Dutch New York. Museum of the City of New York/Dover Publications, New York (2011). ISBN 978-0-486-48637-6
  • Todt, Kim. "'Women Are as Knowing Therein as the Men': Dutch Women in Early America," in Thomas A. Foster, ed. Women in Early America (2015) pp 43–65 online.
  • Van Lieburg, Fred. "Interpreting the Dutch Great Awakening (1749–1755)." Church History 77#2 (2008): 318–336. in JSTOR
  • Wermuth, Thomas S. Rip Van Winkle's Neighbors: The Transformation of Rural Society in the Hudson River Valley, 1720-1850 (2001).
  • Wermuth, Thomas S. "New York farmers and the market revolution: Economic behavior in the mid-Hudson Valley, 1780-1830." Journal of Social History (1998): 179–196. in JSTOR
  • Wittke, Carl. We Who Built America: The Saga of the Immigrant (1939), ch 2

Historiography

  • Doezema, Linda Pegman. Dutch Americans: A Guide to Information Sources. Gale Research, 1979. Bibliography

Primary sources

  • Herbert J. Brinks, Dutch American Voices: Letters from the United States, 1850-1930 (1995)
  • Lucas, Henry, ed. Dutch Immigrant Memoirs and Related Writings. 2 vols. Assen, Netherlands: Van Gorcum, 1955.

External links

  • Little Chute Historical Society, Little Chute, Wisconsin

dutch, americans, confused, with, pennsylvania, dutch, dutch, nederlandse, amerikanen, americans, dutch, descent, whose, ancestors, came, from, netherlands, recent, distant, past, dutch, settlement, americas, started, 1613, with, amsterdam, which, exchanged, w. Not to be confused with the Pennsylvania Dutch Dutch Americans Dutch Nederlandse Amerikanen are Americans of Dutch descent whose ancestors came from the Netherlands in the recent or distant past Dutch settlement in the Americas started in 1613 with New Amsterdam which was exchanged with the English for Suriname at the Treaty of Breda 1667 and renamed New York City The English split the Dutch colony of New Netherland into two pieces and named them New York and New Jersey Further waves of immigration occurred in the 19th and 20th centuries Dutch AmericansNederlandse AmerikanenTotal population3 103 648 0 9 in combination916 096 0 3 Dutch alone 2021 estimates self reported 1 Regions with significant populationsCalifornia Mountain states especially in Montana Wyoming and Colorado Northeast especially in Pennsylvania New York and New Jersey Midwest especially in Iowa Michigan Indiana Ohio and WisconsinLanguagesEnglish DutchReligion74 Protestant 10 Roman Catholic 15 other 2 Related ethnic groupsDutch people Dutch Brazilians Dutch Canadians Dutch Surinamese Afrikaners Pennsylvania Dutch Belgian Americans Dutch West Indian Americans Surinamese AmericansProminent partial Dutch American political figures include Presidents Martin Van Buren Warren G Harding and Theodore and Franklin D Roosevelt and U S Senators Philip Schuyler Nicholas Van Dyke Hamilton Fish John C Ten Eyck Daniel W Voorhees Arthur Vandenberg Peter G Van Winkle Alan Simpson Fred Thompson John Hoeven and Christopher Van Hollen Two of the Founding Fathers of the United States Egbert Benson and John Jay were also of Dutch descent Governors John Hickenlooper of Colorado Harold G Hoffman and Thomas Kean of New Jersey William Henry Vanderbilt III of Rhode Island George Bell Timmerman Jr of South Carolina and Cornelius P Van Ness of Vermont were also born to Dutch American families According to the 2020 American Community Survey an estimated 3 7 million Americans claim total or partial Dutch heritage 3 Today the majority of the Dutch Americans live in Michigan California Montana Minnesota Illinois Wyoming Colorado North Dakota South Dakota Nebraska Kansas Missouri Indiana New York New Jersey Wisconsin Idaho Utah Iowa Ohio West Virginia and Pennsylvania Contents 1 Dutch presence in the present day territory of the United States 1 1 Early exploration 1 2 Oldest Dutch settlement 1 3 17th century migration 1 4 18th century 1 4 1 Colonial Dutch American population in 1790 1 5 19th century 1 6 20th century migration 2 Dutch influence on the United States 3 Dutch language and Dutch names in North America 4 Dutch American Heritage Day 5 Dutch American Friendship Day 6 Dutch Heritage Festivals 7 Religion 8 Numbers 8 1 2020 population of Dutch ancestry by state 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 12 1 Colonial New Netherland 12 2 Historiography 12 3 Primary sources 13 External linksDutch presence in the present day territory of the United States EditEarly exploration Edit Main areas in which Dutch Americans can be found In 1602 the Dutch government chartered the Dutch East India Company Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie VOC It sent explorers under the command of Henry Hudson who arrived in 1609 and mapped what is now known as the Hudson River Their initial goal was to find an alternative route to Asia but they found good farmland and plenty of wildlife instead Oldest Dutch settlement Edit Principal Dutch colonies in North America The earliest Dutch settlement was built around 1613 it consisted of a number of small huts built by the crew of the Tijger Tiger a Dutch ship under the command of Captain Adriaen Block which had caught fire while sailing on the Hudson in the winter of 1613 The ship was lost and Block and his crew established a camp ashore In the spring Block and his men did some explorations along the coast of Long Island Block Island still bears his name Finally they were sighted and rescued by another Dutch ship and the settlement was abandoned 4 17th century migration Edit Dutch trade in the New York area led to the establishment of trade posts as early as 1613 Permanent settlers arrived in 1617 at what is now Albany New York New Amsterdam was settled in 1625 In 1629 Dutch officials tried to expand the northern colony through a plan that promised Liberties and Exemptions to anyone who would ship fifty colonists to America at his own expense Anyone who did so would be allowed to buy a stretch of land along the Hudson River from the Dutch West India Company of about twelve miles extending as far inland as the owner wanted The landowners were called patroons and had complete jurisdiction over their domains as well as extensive trading privileges They also received these rights in perpetuity That was a form of feudalism which had vanished in the Dutch Republic but was introduced in North America The Patroonships were not a success by 1635 the Dutch West India Company had bought back four of the five patroonships originally registered in Amsterdam citation needed The Native Americans were no longer consulted or offered asked to sell their lands The Dutch were confronted with a new phenomenon Native American raids since the local tribes had now realized that the Dutch were not simply visitors but people set to settle their land citation needed The Dutch realized that they had gone with the wrong approach as they offered great privileges to wealthy not poor citizens It was not until 1656 that the Dutch state abandoned its passivity and decided to actively support New Netherland The Dutch state issued a proclamation which stated that all mechanics and farmers who can prove their ability to earn a living here shall receive free passage for themselves their wives and children citation needed Although the Dutch were in control only about half the settlers were ethnically Dutch the other half consisted mainly of Walloons Germans and French Huguenots as well as New England Yankees Manhattan grew increasingly multicultural In 1664 the English seized the colony and renamed it New York The Dutch briefly recaptured the colony in 1673 but during peace talks with the English they decided to trade it in 1674 for Suriname in South America which was more profitable citation needed 18th century Edit The Van Bergen farm 1733 near Albany New York distinctively Dutch 5 In the hundred years of British rule that followed the change of ownership of New Netherland Dutch immigration to America came to an almost complete standstill citation needed While the Netherlands was a small country the Dutch Empire was quite large so emigrants leaving the mother country had a wide variety of choices New Amsterdam was not high on their list especially because of the Native American risk The major Dutch cities were centers of high culture but they still sent immigrants Most new arrivals were farmers from remote villages who on arrival in America scattered into widely separated villages with little contact with one another Even inside a settlement different Dutch groups had minimal interaction With very few new arrivals the result was an increasingly traditional system cut off from the forces for change The people maintained their popular culture revolving around their language and their Calvinist religion The Dutch brought along their own folklore most famously Sinterklaas the foundation of the modern day Santa Claus and created their own as in The Legend of Sleepy Hollow They maintained their distinctive clothing and food preferences and introduced some new foods to America including beets endive spinach parsley and cookies After the British takeover the rich Dutch families in Albany and New York City emulated the English elite and purchased English furniture silverware crystal and jewelry They were proud of their language which was strongly reinforced by the church but they were much slower than the Yankees in setting up schools for their children They finally set up Queens College now Rutgers University in New Jersey but it quickly became anglicized They never attempted to start newspapers they published no books and only a handful of religious tracts annually Pietist leader Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen 1691 1747 launched a series of revivals that challenge the mainstream church s emphasis on sacraments Church buildings increasingly followed English rather than historic Dutch models 6 Politically however there was a strong anti British sentiment that led most of the Dutch to support the American Revolution One famous Dutch folk hero was Rip Van Winkle characterized by being absurdly old fashioned and out of date which aimed to instill the establishment of an American culture distinct from British culture 7 8 Most farmers focused on providing subsistence for their families about a third were chiefly oriented to market prices 9 Dutch Quakers came to the Philadelphia area in response to the appeal of William Penn Penn himself a Dutch Briton his mother being from Rotterdam had paid three visits to the Netherlands where he published several pamphlets citation needed Colonial Dutch American population in 1790 Edit The Census Bureau produced estimates of the colonial American population with roots in the Netherlands in collaboration with the American Council of Learned Societies by scholarly classification of the names of all White heads of families recorded in the first U S census of 1790 The government required accurate estimates of the origins of the colonial stock population as basis for computing National Origins Formula immigration quotas in the 1920s for this task scholars estimated the proportion of names in each state determined to be of Dutch derivation The final report estimated about 3 1 of the U S population in 1790 was of Dutch origin heavily concentrated in the Middle Colonies of historic New Netherland which became the British American Colonial Province of New York Province of New Jersey Province of Pennsylvania and Delaware Colony ultimately forming the U S states of New York New Jersey Pennsylvania and Delaware Estimated Dutch American population in the Continental United States as of the 1790 Census 10 State or Territory Dutch Connecticut 600 0 26 Delaware 2 000 4 32 Georgia 100 0 19 Kentucky amp Tenn 1 200 1 29 Maine 100 0 10 Maryland 1 000 0 48 Massachusetts 600 0 16 New Hampshire 100 0 07 New Jersey 28 250 16 62 New York 55 000 17 50 North Carolina 800 0 28 Pennsylvania 7 500 1 77 Rhode Island 250 0 39 South Carolina 500 0 36 Vermont 500 0 59 Virginia 1 500 0 34 1790 Census Area 100 000 3 10 Northwest Territory French America Spanish America United States 100 000 3 10 19th century Edit Typical Dutch homestead in Northeast Wisconsin circa 1855During the early nineteenth century large numbers of Dutch farmers forced by high taxes and low wages started immigrating to America They mainly settled down in the Midwest especially Michigan Illinois and Iowa In the 1840s Calvinist immigrants desiring more religious freedom immigrated West Michigan in particular has become associated with Dutch American culture and the highly conservative influence of the Dutch Reformed Church centering on the cities of Holland and to a lesser extent Grand Rapids Waves of Catholic emigrants initially encouraged in the 1840s by Father Theodore J van den Broek emigrated from southern Netherlands to form communities in Wisconsin primarily to Little Chute Hollandtown and the outlying farming communities Whole families and even neighborhoods left for America Most of these early emigrants were from villages near Uden including Zeeland Boekel Mill Oploo and Gemert By contrast many Protestant agrarian emigrants to Michigan and Iowa were drawn from Groningen Friesland and Zeeland areas known for their clay soils 11 The Dutch economy of the 1840s was stagnant and much of the motivation to emigrate was economic rather than political or religious The emigrants were not poor as the cost of passage expenses and land purchase in America would have been substantial They were not however affluent and many would have been risking most of their wealth on the chance of economic improvement There were also political pressures at the time that favored mass emigrations of Catholics 11 12 13 14 20th century migration Edit A significant number of Dutchmen emigrating to the United States after World War II arrived from Indonesia via the Netherlands After Indonesia formerly known as the Dutch East Indies gained independence its Indo European Eurasian population known as Indies Dutchmen Dutch Indische Nederlanders repatriated to the Netherlands Around 60 000 continued their diaspora to the United States This particular group is also known as Dutch Indonesians Indonesian Dutch or Amerindos 15 Nine tenths of the so called Europeans in the Dutch East Indies are the offspring of whites married to native women These mixed people are called Indo Europeans They have formed the backbone of officialdom In general they feel the same loyalty to Holland as do the white Netherlanders They have full rights as Dutch citizens and they are Christians and follow Dutch customs This group has suffered more than any other during the Japanese occupation Official U S Army publication for the benefit of G I s 1944 16 These Dutch Indos mainly entered the United States under legislative refugee measures and were sponsored by Christian organizations such as the Church World Service and the Catholic Relief Services An accurate count of Indo immigrants is not available as the U S Census classified people according to their self determined ethnic affiliation The Indos could have therefore been included in overlapping categories of country of origin other Asians total foreign mixed parentage total foreign born and foreign mother tongue However the Indos that settled in the United States via the legislative refugee measures number at least 25 000 people 17 The original post war refugee legislation of 1948 already adhering to a strict affidavit of support policy was still maintaining a color bar making it difficult for Indos to emigrate to the USA By 1951 American consulates in the Netherlands registered 33 500 requests and had waiting times of 3 to 5 years Also the Walter McCarren Act of 1953 adhered to the traditional American policy of minimizing immigrants from Asia The yearly quota for Indonesia was limited to a 100 visas even though Dutch foreign affairs attempted to profile Indos as refugees from the alleged pro communist Sukarno administration 18 The 1953 flood disaster in the Netherlands resulted in the Refugee Relief Act including a slot for 15 000 ethnic Dutch that had at least 50 European blood one year later loosened to Dutch citizens with at least two Dutch grandparents and an immaculate legal and political track record In 1954 only 187 visas were actually granted Partly influenced by the anti Western rhetoric and policies of the Sukarno administration the anti communist senator Francis E Walter pleaded for a second term of the Refugee Relief Act in 1957 and an additional slot of 15 000 visas in 1958 19 In 1958 the Pastore Walter Immigration Act for the relief of certain distressed aliens was passed allowing for a one off acceptance of 10 000 Dutchmen from Indonesia excluding the regular annual quota of 3 136 visas It was hoped however that only 10 of these Dutch refugees would in fact be racially mixed Indos and the American embassy in The Hague was frustrated with the fact that Canada where ethnic profiling was even stricter was getting the full blooded Dutch and the United States was getting Dutch all rather heavily dark Still in 1960 senators Pastore and Walter managed to get a second two year term for their act which was used by a great number of Dutch Indos 20 Dutch influence on the United States EditAccording to tradition in 1626 Peter Minuit obtained the island of Manhattan from the Native Americans in exchange for goods with a total value of 60 guilders 24 most aspects of the story have been called into question by experts 21 Minuit a Walloon was employed by the Dutch West India Company to manage its colony of New Amsterdam the future New York The names of some other settlements that were established still exist today as boroughs and neighborhoods of New York Brooklyn Breukelen Wall Street Wal Straat Stuyvesant The Bronx named after Dutch settler Jonas Bronck Staten Island named after the Dutch parliament the Staten Generaal Harlem Haarlem Coney Island Konijnen Eiland means Rabbit Island and Flushing Vlissingen In 1657 the clash between Peter Stuyvesant and Quakers led by John Bowne resulted in the Flushing Remonstrance which served as the basis for religious freedom in America Dutch settlers and their descendants in the colonies played active roles in the American Revolution and the formation of the United States most especially descendants of the Schuyler family and the Van Cortlandt family Dutch American signers of the Declaration of Independence included Philip Livingston and Lewis Morris both from New York Generals for the patriots included Philip Schuyler Peter Gansevoort and Major General James Morgan Jr from New Jersey On the side working with the British included New York City Mayor David Mathews a cousin of General Schuyler Major General Oliver Delancey and Brigadier General Cortlandt Skinner both Schuyler family descendants During the American war of Independence the Dutch were active allies of the American revolutionaries From the island of Sint Eustatius they gave the Thirteen Colonies one of the few opportunities to acquire arms In 1778 British Lord Stormont claimed in parliament that if Sint Eustatius had sunk into the sea three years before the United Kingdom would already have dealt with George Washington The Dutch were the first to salute the flag and therefore the first to acknowledge the independence of the United States on November 16 1776 The American Declaration of Independence is said to have in many ways been influenced by the Dutch Plakkaat van Verlatinghe Act of Abjuration Several American Presidents had Dutch ancestry Martin Van Buren 8th President He was a key organizer of the Democratic Party and the first president who was not of English Irish Scottish or Welsh descent He is also the only president not to have spoken English as his first language but rather grew up speaking Dutch 22 Theodore Roosevelt 26th President Roosevelt is most famous for his personality his energy his vast range of interests and achievements his model of masculinity and his cowboy persona In 1901 he became president after the assassination of President William McKinley Roosevelt was a Progressive reformer who sought to move the Republican Party into the Progressive camp Warren G Harding 29th President His mother s ancestors were Dutch including the well known Van Kirk family 23 Franklin D Roosevelt 32nd President Elected to four terms in office he served from 1933 to 1945 and is the only U S president to have served more than two terms A central figure of the twentieth century he has consistently been ranked as one of the three greatest U S presidents in scholarly surveys George H W Bush and George W Bush 41st and 43rd Presidents respectively They count members of the Schuyler family and the related Beekman family among their ancestors 24 Dutch language and Dutch names in North America EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Dutch Americans news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Foreign born Dutch speakers in the U S 25 Year Population1910 126 0451920 136 5401930 133 1421940 102 7001960 130 4821970 127 834The first Dutch settlers lived in small isolated communities and as a consequence were barely exposed to English As the Dutch lost their own colonies in North America to the British the Dutch settlers increasingly were exposed to other immigrants and their languages and the Dutch language gradually started to disappear In 1764 Archibald Laidlie preached the first English sermon to the Dutch Reformed congregation in New York City Ten years later English was introduced in the schools In Kingston Dutch was used in church as late as 1808 A few years before a traveler had reported that on Long Island and along the North River in Albany Dutch was still the lingua franca of the elderly citation needed Francis Adrian van der Kemp who came to the United States as a refugee in 1788 wrote that his wife was able to converse in Dutch with the wives of Alexander Hamilton and General George Clinton In 1847 immigrants from the Netherlands were welcomed in Dutch by the Reverend Isaac Wyckoff upon their arrival in New York Wyckoff himself was a descendant of one of the first settlers in Rensselaerswyck who had learned to speak English at school Until recently many communities in New Jersey adhered to the tradition of a monthly church service in Dutch As late as 1905 Dutch was still heard among the old people in the Ramapo Valley of that state Dutch is still spoken by the elderly and their children in Western Michigan It was not until 1910 that Roseland Christian School in Chicago switched to an English curriculum from Dutch citation needed In the first half of the twentieth century the Dutch language was hardly spoken in North America with the exception of first generation Dutch immigrants The marks of the Dutch heritage in language in reference to historical Dutch people for example Stuyvesant and in reference to Dutch places for example Brooklyn which stems from Breukelen can still be seen There are about 35 Dutch restaurants and bakeries in the United States most of them founded in the 20th century 26 New York City for example has many originally Dutch street and place names which range from Coney Island and Brooklyn to Wall Street and Broadway And up the river in New York State Piermont Orangeburg Blauvelt and Haverstraw just to name a few places In the Hudson Valley region there are many places and waterways whose names incorporate the word kill Dutch for stream or riverbed including the Catskill Mountains Peekskill and the Kill van Kull There are also some words in American English that are of Dutch origin like cookie koekje and boss baas And in some family names a couple of Dutch characteristics still remain Like a the prefix van as in Martin Van Buren b the prefix de der des den as in Jared DeVries c a combination of the two van de as in Robert J Van de Graaff or d ter te ten which mean respectively a of possessive or locative b the definite article c of the and d at the of the in the locative Similarities between Dutch and English are abundant Examples include the article the de in Dutch the words book boek house huis pen pen and street straat among others Dutch and English are both part of the West Germanic language group and share several aspects Adaptation of place names between the languages is common as was the case of New York where several landmarks like Conyne Eylandt Rabbit Island became more suitable to Anglophones Coney Island Contact between other languages also created various creoles with Dutch as the base language Two examples Jersey Dutch and Mohawk Dutch are now extinct This is possibly due to the ease of transition from Dutch to English stemming from a shared linguistic genealogy Little Chute Wisconsin remained a Dutch speaking community known locally as speaking Hollander into the twentieth century As late as 1898 church sermons and event announcements were in Dutch 27 Dutch newspapers continued in the area mainly in De Pere by Catholic clergymen were published up until World War I 28 The only remaining publication that is written exclusively in Dutch is Maandblad de Krant which is published monthly in Penticton British Columbia Canada and mailed to subscribers throughout the United States from Oroville Washington 29 The American state of Rhode Island is a surviving example of Dutch influence in Colonial America In 1614 was christened as Roodt Eylandt Rood Eiland in modern Dutch meaning Red Island referring to the red clay found on the island citation needed Dutch American Heritage Day EditAs of 1990 November 16 is Dutch American Heritage Day On November 16 1776 a small American warship the Andrew Doria sailed into the harbor of the Dutch island of Sint Eustatius in the West Indies Only four months before the United States had declared its independence from Great Britain The American crew was delighted when the governor of the island ordered that his fort s cannons be fired in a friendly salute The first ever given by a foreign power to the flag of the United States it was a risky and courageous act Indeed angered by Dutch trading and contraband with the rebellious colonies the British seized the island a few years later The Dutch recaptured the island in 1784 30 Dutch American Friendship Day EditApril 19th is Dutch American Friendship Day which remembers the day in 1782 when John Adams later to become the second president of the United States was received by the States General in The Hague and recognized as Minister Plenipotentiary of the United States of America It was also the day that the house he had purchased at Fluwelen Burgwal 18 in The Hague was to become the first American Embassy in the world 30 Dutch Heritage Festivals Edit Sinterklaas Many of the Dutch heritage festivals that take place around the United States coincide with the blooming of tulips in a particular region The Tulip Time Festival in Holland Michigan is the largest such festival with other notable gatherings such as the Pella Tulip Time in Pella Iowa Tulip Festival in Orange City Iowa and Albany New York Dutch Days in Fulton Illinois Let s Go Dutch Days in Baldwin Wisconsin Holland Days in Lynden Washington Holland Happening in Oak Harbor Washington Holland Fest in Cedar Grove Wisconsin and the Wooden Shoe Tulip Fest in Woodburn Oregon Often Dutch heritage festivals coincide with the blooming of the tulip See Tulip Festival for additional explanations of some of these festivals A Dutch Festival is also held at Hofstra University in Hempstead New York and a Holland Festival 31 in Long Beach California A traditional Dutch Kermis Festival is celebrated in October in Little Chute WI During late November and early December a Dutch Winterfest is held in Holland MI to coincide with the traditional arrival of Sinterklaas the cultural ancestor of the American Santa Claus 32 There is an annual Sinterklass festival held in Rhinebeck and Kingston New York where Sinterklaas crosses the Hudson River and a parade is held in recognition of the Greater New York Area s Dutch cultural heritage 33 This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2015 Lately many of the larger cities in the US have a King s Day Koningsdag festival that is celebrated in the Netherlands on April 27 to celebrate the birthday of King Willem Alexander The Portland Dutch Society 34 started this annual Dutch Holiday celebration in Portland OR in 2013 and will have one again in 2015 on April 26 It is celebrated by people of Dutch heritage dressed in their Orange clothes and enjoying the sounds of Dutch music and eating typical Dutch foods like kroketten patat met mayonnaise zoute haring and other Dutch delicacies Religion EditThe beginnings of the Reformed Church in America date to 1628 By 1740 it had 65 congregations in New York and New Jersey served by ministers trained in Europe Schools were few but to obtain their own ministers they formed Queens College now Rutgers University in 1766 In 1771 there were 34 ministers for over 100 churches Until 1764 in at least three Dutch churches in New York City all sermons were in Dutch Theodore Roosevelt reports his grandfather s church used Dutch as late as 1810 Other churches with roots in Dutch immigration to the United States include the Christian Reformed Church the Protestant Reformed Churches the United Reformed Churches the Netherlands Reformed Congregations the Heritage Netherlands Reformed Congregations and the Free Reformed Churches Along with the Reformed churches Roman Catholicism is the other major religion of Dutch Americans Beginning in 1848 a significant number of Roman Catholics from the Dutch provinces of North Brabant Limburg and southern Gelderland went to create many settlements in northeastern Wisconsin But even today Dutch Americans remain majority Protestant Numbers EditBetween 1820 and 1900 340 000 Dutch emigrated from the Netherlands to the United States of America In the aftermath of World War II several tens of thousands of Dutch immigrants joined them mainly moving to California and Washington In several counties in Michigan and Iowa Dutch Americans remain the largest ethnic group Nowadays most Dutch Americans 27 live in California followed by New York Michigan and Pennsylvania according to whom According to the 2000 United States Census more than 5 million Americans claim total or partial Dutch heritage They are particularly concentrated around Grand Rapids Michigan Rock Rapids Iowa Sioux City Iowa Des Moines Iowa Fulton Illinois Celeryville Ohio and Little Chute Wisconsin These areas are surrounded with towns and villages that were founded by Dutch settlers in the 19th century such as Holland Michigan and Zeeland Michigan Pella Iowa and Orange City Iowa Other Dutch enclaves include Lynden Washington Ripon California and places in New Jersey It is estimated that by 1927 as many as 40 000 Dutch settlers primarily from North Brabant and Limburg had immigrated to the United States with the largest concentrations in the area near Little Chute Wisconsin 35 By the early twentieth century Little Chute was the largest Catholic Dutch community in the United States 36 In the Chicago suburbs there are sizable Dutch communities in and around Elmhurst Wheaton Palos Heights South Holland Lansing Dyer and other surrounding communities anchored by Reformed churches and Christian schools In California the San Joaquin Delta had a major Dutch incl Frisian and Belgian influence as settlers from those countries arrived in the 1850s after California obtained statehood They drained away swamps and created artificial islands known as polders constructed dikes to back away the Sacramento and San Joaquin Rivers flowing into the San Francisco Bay also turned them into fertile farmlands and set up inland ports such as Stockton Also their communities like Lathrop Galt Rio Vista and French Camp which were named for Belgians from Belgium are of both French Walloon or Flemish origin Not included among Dutch Americans are the Pennsylvania Dutch a group of German Americans who settled in Pennsylvania in the colonial era and whose name is a corruption of the word Deutsch meaning German 2020 population of Dutch ancestry by state Edit As of 2020 the distribution of Dutch Americans across the 50 states and DC is as presented in the following table Estimated Dutch American population by state 37 3 State Number Percentage Alabama 30 349 0 62 Alaska 10 533 1 43 Arizona 80 124 1 12 Arkansas 31 550 1 05 California 313 233 0 80 Colorado 86 616 1 52 Connecticut 24 644 0 69 Delaware 7 895 0 82 District of Columbia 4 886 0 70 Florida 170 831 0 81 Georgia 64 164 0 61 Hawaii 6 567 0 46 Idaho 31 398 1 79 Illinois 145 771 1 15 Indiana 109 108 1 63 Iowa 116 971 3 71 Kansas 43 715 1 50 Kentucky 41 100 0 92 Louisiana 17 506 0 38 Maine 11 767 0 88 Maryland 40 293 0 67 Massachusetts 36 951 0 54 Michigan 427 818 4 29 Minnesota 91 012 1 63 Mississippi 13 356 0 45 Missouri 78 763 1 29 Montana 19 606 1 85 Nebraska 31 950 1 66 Nevada 26 471 0 87 New Hampshire 12 596 0 93 New Jersey 79 492 0 89 New Mexico 14 614 0 70 New York 204 250 1 05 North Carolina 83 803 0 81 North Dakota 8 156 1 07 Ohio 140 161 1 20 Oklahoma 47 932 1 21 Oregon 74 960 1 79 Pennsylvania 161 506 1 26 Rhode Island 4 459 0 42 South Carolina 36 482 0 72 South Dakota 37 913 4 31 Tennessee 64 028 0 95 Texas 178 457 0 62 Utah 58 948 1 87 Vermont 7 396 1 18 Virginia 64 790 0 76 Washington 131 299 1 75 West Virginia 24 445 1 35 Wisconsin 132 420 2 28 Wyoming 9 834 1 69 United States 3 692 889 1 13 Notable people EditFor a more comprehensive list see List of Dutch Americans Harmen Jansen Knickerbocker was an early Dutch settler of New York s Hudson River Valley In art Willem de Kooning was a leading Abstract Expressionist painter often depicting the human form in violent brush strokes and daring color juxtapositions Muralist Anthony Heinsbergen interior designs are still seen today in most of the world s movie theaters Cowboy artist Earl W Bascom a sculptor known as the cowboy of cowboy artists is a descendant of the Van Riper family who were early settlers of New York In business the Vanderbilt family were once among the richest families in the United States In literature Janwillem van de Wetering is renowned for his detective fiction his most popular creation being that of Grijpstra and de Gier Edward W Bok was a Pulitzer Prize winning autobiographer and magazine editor He is also credited with coining the term living room Greta Van Susteren s father was a Dutch American Prolific poet Leo Vroman escaped from the Nazi occupied Netherlands to the Dutch East Indies to end up in a harsh concentration camp for Europeans run by the Japanese army when it overran the islands After the war he immigrated to the United States His Dutch Indonesian friend fellow camp survivor and author Tjalie Robinson also lived in the United States where he founded several cultural institutions The author Erik Hazelhoff Roelfzema writer of the book Soldier of Orange was a Dutch resistance fighter spy and decorated war hero that immigrated to the United States after World War II Born on Java in the Dutch East Indies he died in his home on Hawaii In entertainment actor presenter and entertainer Dick Van Dyke is of Dutch descent with a career spanning six decades He is best known for his starring roles in Mary Poppins Chitty Chitty Bang Bang The Dick Van Dyke Show and Diagnosis Murder Dick Van Patten and his son Vincent are of Dutch descent Dick was famous for the television show Eight is Enough Three generations of Fondas from Fonda New York have graced the stage and screen for almost a century including Henry Fonda son Peter Fonda daughter Jane Fonda granddaughter Bridget Fonda and grandson Troy Garity The X Men trilogy starred Dutch actress Famke Janssen and Dutch descended Rebecca Romijn who is perhaps best known for her TV roles on such comedies as Ugly Betty Anneliese van der Pol a singer and actress is a star of Disney s That s so Raven Iconic star Audrey Hepburn was born in Belgium to a Dutch expatriate Musicians Eddie and Alex van Halen were the lead guitarist and drummer respectively and co founders of the band Van Halen born to a Dutch father and Dutch Indonesian mother Bruce Springsteen s father was of Dutch and Irish heritage from one of the original families that settled in New Netherland The brothers Ronny Johnny and Donnie van Zant the lead singer of Lynyrd Skynyrd and founder of 38 Special have Dutch ancestry Singer Whitney Houston had Dutch ancestry Don Van Vliet the musician with the stage name Captain Beefheart changed his middle name from Glen to the preposition to 1965 to honor his Dutch heritage Actor Mark Paul Gosselaar known from the series Saved by the Bell was born to a Dutch father and a Dutch Indonesian mother Matt Groening the author of The Simpsons and Futurama has Dutch Mennonite ancestors his family name originating from the Dutch city of Groningen Chevy Chase also has deep Dutch roots from colonial New York In politics Peter Stuyvesant was the last Director General of the colony of New Netherland Stuyvesant greatly expanded the settlement of New Amsterdam today known as New York Stuyvesant s administration built the protective wall on Wall Street and the canal that became Broad Street known today as Broadway The prestigious Stuyvesant High School is named after him Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin Delano Roosevelt presidents of the United States were not only of Dutch descent but cousins Martin Van Buren was another president of Dutch descent Martin Kalbfleisch served as a U S Representative for the state of New York Pete Hoekstra served as congressman for the state of Michigan s 2nd congressional district from 1993 until 2011 On January 10 2018 he took office as United States Ambassador to the Netherlands Jacob Aaron Westervelt was a renowned and prolific shipbuilder and Mayor of New York 1853 1855 In science and technology inventor and businessman Thomas Edison was of Dutch descent Nicolaas Bloembergen won the Nobel Prize in 1981 for his work in laser spectroscopy He was also awarded the Lorentz Medal in 1978 Physicists Samuel Abraham Goudsmit and George Eugene Uhlenbeck proposed the concept of electron spin Goudsmit was also the scientific head of the Operation Alsos mission in the Manhattan Project Tjalling Koopmans was the recipient of the Nobel Prize in Economics in 1975 In astronomy Maarten Schmidt pioneered the research of quasars Astronomer Gerard Kuiper discovered two new moons in the Solar System and predicted the existence of the Kuiper belt which is named in his honor Popular astronomer Bart J Bok won the Klumpke Roberts Award in 1982 and the Bruce Medal in 1977 Jan Schilt invented the Schilt photometer In sports Hall of Fame baseball player and two time World Series champion Bert Blyleven gained fame for his curveball Earl Bascom was a Hall of Fame rodeo champion known as the father of modern rodeo Golfer Tiger Woods has Dutch ancestry through his mother In religion Albertus van Raalte was a Reformed Church of America pastor who led the Dutch immigrants who founded the city of Holland Michigan in 1846 Louis Berkhof a Reformed systematic theologian is greatly studied today in seminaries and Bible colleges Herman Hoeksema a theologian was instrumental in the series of events that precipitated the creation of the Protestant Reformed Church Prominent Christian author Lewis B Smedes wrote Forgive and Forget an influential work discussing a religious view on sexuality and forgiveness Menno Simons 1496 31 January 1561 was a former Catholic priest from the Friesland region of the Netherlands who became an influential Anabaptist religious leader Simons was a contemporary of the Protestant Reformers and it is from his name that his followers became known as Mennonites See also Edit United States portal Netherlands portalDutch Canadians European Americans Hyphenated American Netherlands United States relations Dutch the magazine Van Dutch Dutch West Indian Americans Dutch Americans in New York City Surinamese AmericansReferences Edit IPUMS USA University of Minnesota Retrieved October 12 2022 One Nation Under God Religion in Contemporary American Society p 120 a b Table B04006 People Reporting Ancestry 2020 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 13 2022 Retrieved November 6 2022 The United States of America and the Netherlands 3 14 The First Dutch Settlers By George M Welling Link Blackburn Roderic H Ruth Piwonka 1988 Remembrance of Patria Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America 1609 1776 SUNY Press ISBN 9780939072064 Randall H Balmer The Social Roots of Dutch Pietism in the Middle Colonies Church History 53 2 1984 pp 187 199 JSTOR Jacob Ernest Cooke ed Encyclopedia of the North American colonies 3 vol 1993 gives detailed topical coverage of the Dutch colonists A G Roeber Dutch colonists cope with English control in Bernard Bailyn and Philip D Morgan eds Strangers within the realm cultural margins of the first British Empire 1991 pp 222 36 Thomas S Wermuth Rip Van Winkle s Neighbors The Transformation of Rural Society in the Hudson River Valley 1720 1850 2001 American Council of Learned Societies Committee on Linguistic and National Stocks in the Population of the United States 1932 Report of the Committee on Linguistic and National Stocks in the Population of the United States Washington D C U S Government Printing Office OCLC 1086749050 a b Place Matters The Social Geography of Dutch American Immigration in the Nineteenth Century swierenga com Vanderheide Albert Priest led party of emigrants to Wisconsin s frontier territory American communities formed close ties with North Brabant villages godutch com Retrieved December 18 2016 Landverhuizing als regionaal verschijnsel Van Noord Brabant naar Noord Amerika 1820 1880 Doctoral thesis H A V M Van Stekelenburg March 7 2003 Yda Schreuder Dutch Catholic Immigrant Settlement in Wisconsin 1850 1905 New York Garland 1989 and H A V M van Stekelenburg Landverhuizing als regionaal verschijnsel Van Noord Brabant naar Noord Amerika 1820 1880 Tilburg Stichting Zuidelijk Historisch Contact 1991 Amerindo UC Berkeley Amerindo Research Website Archived from the original on March 23 2010 War and Navy Departments of the United States Army A pocket guide to the Netherlands East Indies Facsimile by Army Information Branch of the Army Service Forces re published by Elsevier Reed Business November 2009 ISBN 978 90 6882 748 4 p 18 Willems Wim De uittocht uit Indie 1945 1995 De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders Publisher Bert Bakker Amsterdam 2001 p 254 ISBN 90 351 2361 1 Willems Wim De uittocht uit Indie 1945 1995 De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders Publisher Bert Bakker Amsterdam 2001 p 255 ISBN 90 351 2361 1 Willems Wim De uittocht uit Indie 1945 1995 De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders Publisher Bert Bakker Amsterdam 2001 p 256 257 ISBN 90 351 2361 1 Willems Wim De uittocht uit Indie 1945 1995 De geschiedenis van Indische Nederlanders Publisher Bert Bakker Amsterdam 2001 p 258 ISBN 90 351 2361 1 Richard E Mooney If You Believe They Paid 24 Here s a Bridge for Sale The New York Times December 28 1997 sec 4 p 2 See also Peter Minuit Sturgis Amy H 2007 The Trail of Tears and Indian Removal Greenwood Publishing Group p 93 ISBN 978 0 313 33658 4 Russell Thomas 1923 The illustrious life and work of Warren G Harding twenty ninth President of the United States the University of Wisconsin Madison p 51 Ancestry of George W Bush Wargs com William Addams Reitwiesner Genealogical Services Mother Tongue of the Foreign Born Population 1910 to 1940 1960 and 1970 United States Census Bureau March 9 1999 Retrieved August 6 2012 Dutch restaurants in the USA dutchinamerica com Archived from the original on February 6 2012 Milwaukee Sentinel July 15 1898 Twilah DeBoer June 1999 Early Dutch Settlements in Wisconsin wlhn org Archived from the original on October 8 2007 Site Disabled Archived from the original on December 9 2012 Retrieved March 17 2015 a b usembassy nl Archived from the original on April 23 2016 Retrieved March 17 2015 26th ANNUAL HOLLAND FESTIVAL 2015 GEMMRIG PARK LONG BEACH CALIFORNIA nassocal org Dutch Americans Herbert J Brinks Sinterklaas The Portland Dutch Society portlanddutch com Retrieved February 21 2016 Nederlanders in Amerika Van Hinte Assen 1928 Netherlanders in America Lucas 1955 Table B04006 People Reporting Ancestry 2020 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates All States United States Census Bureau Archived from the original on July 17 2022 Retrieved November 6 2022 Further reading EditBratt James D Dutch Calvinism in Modern America A History of a Conservative Subculture Eerdmans 1984 Brinks Herbert J Dutch Americans in Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 2 Gale 2014 pp 35 45 online Corwin S T History of the Dutch Reformed Church in the United States 1895 De Gerald F Jong The Dutch in America 1609 1974 Twayne 1975 short survey Ganzevoort Herman and Mark Boekelman eds Dutch Immigration to North America Toronto Multicultural History Society of Ontario 1983 Goodfriend Joyce D Benjamin Schmidt and Annette Stott eds Going Dutch The Dutch Presence in America 1609 2009 2008 Kirk Gordon W The Promise of American Life Social Mobility in a Nineteenth Century Immigrant Community Holland Michigan 1847 1894 Philadelphia American Philosophical Society 1978 Krabbendam Hans Freedom on the Horizon Dutch Immigration to America 1840 1940 2009 Emphasis on the Dutch Reformed Church Kroes Rob The Persistence of Ethnicity Dutch Calvinist Pioneers in Amsterdam Montana University of Illinois Press 1992 Kroes Rob and Henk Otto Neuschafer eds The Dutch in North America Their Immigration and Cultural Continuity Amsterdam Free University Press 1991 Kromminga John The Christian Reformed Church A Study in Orthodoxy Grand Rapids Mich Baker Books 1949 Lucas Henry Netherlanders in America Dutch Immigration to the United States and Canada 1789 1950 University of Michigan Press 1955 Schreuder Yda Dutch Catholic Immigrant Settlement in Wisconsin 1850 1905 New York Garland 1989 Swierenga Robert P The Forerunners Dutch Jewry in the North American Diaspora Wayne State University Press 1994 Swierenga Robert P ed The Dutch in America Immigration Settlement and Cultural Change Rutgers University Press 1985 Swierenga Robert P Faith and Family Dutch Immigration and Settlement in the United States 1820 1920 Ellis Island Series New York Holmes and Meyer 2000 Taylor Lawrence J Dutchmen on the Bay The Ethnohistory of a Contractual Community University of Pennsylvania Press 1983 Thernstrom Stephan ed Harvard Encyclopedia of American Ethnic Groups Harvard University Press 1980 Van Jacob Hinte Netherlanders in America A Study of Emigration and Settlement in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries in the United States of America Ed Robert P Swierenga Grand Rapids Mich Baker Book House 1985 translation of a 1928 Dutch language book Wabeke Bertus Harry Dutch emigration to North America 1624 1860 Wittke Carl We Who Built America The Saga of the Immigrant 1939 ch 2 11Colonial New Netherland Edit Balmer Randall A Perfect Babel of Confusion Dutch Religion and English Culture in the Middle Colonies 2002 Blackburn Roderic H Ruth Piwonka 1988 Remembrance of Patria Dutch Arts and Culture in Colonial America 1609 1776 SUNY Press ISBN 9780939072064 Cohen David Steven How Dutch Were the Dutch of New Netherland New York History 62 1 1981 43 60 in JSTOR Cooke Jacob Ernest ed Encyclopedia of the North American colonies 3 vol 1993 highly detailed topical coverage of the Dutch colonists Jacobs Jaap New Netherland a Dutch colony in seventeenth century America Brill 2005 online Kenney Alice P Neglected Heritage Hudson River Valley Dutch Material Culture Winterthur Portfolio 20 1 1985 49 70 in JSTOR Kim Sung Bok Landlord and Tenant in Colonial New York Manorial Society 1664 1775 1987 Leiby Adrian C The Revolutionary War in the Hackensack Valley The Jersey Dutch and the Neutral Ground 1775 1783 Rutgers University Press 1962 Nissenson S G The Patroon s Domain 1937 Roeber A G Dutch colonists cope with English control in Bernard Bailyn and Philip D Morgan eds Strangers within the realm cultural margins of the first British Empire 1991 pp 222 36 Scheltema Gajus and Westerhuijs Heleen eds Exploring Historic Dutch New York Museum of the City of New York Dover Publications New York 2011 ISBN 978 0 486 48637 6 Todt Kim Women Are as Knowing Therein as the Men Dutch Women in Early America in Thomas A Foster ed Women in Early America 2015 pp 43 65 online Van Lieburg Fred Interpreting the Dutch Great Awakening 1749 1755 Church History 77 2 2008 318 336 in JSTOR Wermuth Thomas S Rip Van Winkle s Neighbors The Transformation of Rural Society in the Hudson River Valley 1720 1850 2001 Wermuth Thomas S New York farmers and the market revolution Economic behavior in the mid Hudson Valley 1780 1830 Journal of Social History 1998 179 196 in JSTOR Wittke Carl We Who Built America The Saga of the Immigrant 1939 ch 2Historiography Edit Doezema Linda Pegman Dutch Americans A Guide to Information Sources Gale Research 1979 BibliographyPrimary sources Edit Herbert J Brinks Dutch American Voices Letters from the United States 1850 1930 1995 Lucas Henry ed Dutch Immigrant Memoirs and Related Writings 2 vols Assen Netherlands Van Gorcum 1955 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Dutch diaspora in the United States Article about Dutch immigration to the United States 1945 2000 Little Chute Historical Society Little Chute Wisconsin Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dutch Americans amp oldid 1133563348, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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