Tuesday, 5 October 2021

What has happened to the most respected Jerome Nicholas Vlieland?

It is a long story,  to long and sad to tell, so if you want to hear more about me and my soul-mate, contact me by email.













The information collect from old papers are here to keep the connection between blog and followers open.
please contact me  by email 
Vlieland Ancester Maija

Monday, 19 July 2021

LOVELY LADY



VertaalresultatenELLY VLIET VLIELAND


                      ELLY  VLIET VLIELAND
    thank you for all the inspiration  and love you brought into our lives
Leiden, 25-09-1954   Noordwijk, 19-07-2022

Thursday, 17 June 2021

Aucher Villas, 41–46 London Road Canterbury

 Aucher Villas, 41–46 London Road Canterbury





When Sarah Ann Vlieland moved here on the death of her husband in 1877, the almshouses were 10 years’ old, but the new Hospital is as full of interest as John Cogan’s house, where the charity began. Clearly the upkeep of an 1860s’ newbuild would be a lot less than that of a dilapidated sixteenth-century town house but, as we can see from the pictures already posted, care and beauty were lavished on Aucher Villas, making them a worthy successor. The three semi-detached houses around a central courtyard were built by John Greene Hall, Canterbury’s surveyor, and are now part of the city’s most significant Grade II listed heritage.


 John’s academic architectural training would have been in the mid-Victorian ‘Gothic Revival’ style of Augustus Pugin (who designed the interior of the Houses of Parliament after they had burned down in 1834), referencing medieval craftsmanship and ornate decoration. But Aucher Villas show more modern influences as well, looking towards the Arts & Crafts movement later in the century. John would have known the Red House in Kent, built by Philip Webb for William Morris, using local materials and drawing on traditional farmhouse design and ‘honest’ craftsmanship. 


Aucher Villas are built of pale cream Kentish rubble* with stone facings round the windows, ‘gothic’ gables and a striking contrast of the red fishscale roof tiles with the dark bargeboards, decorated with a trefoil and quatrefoil cutout imitating leaves or rose petals, a standard motif in Arts & Crafts textiles and homeware. This was  almost certainly influenced by the work of Pugin’s contemporary William Butterfield, who pioneered what he called ‘structural polychromy’, contrasting the colours on the facing of a house, such as the bands of black brick on a red brick façade in his master work, Keble College in the University of Oxford.


The quatrefoil pattern is repeated in Aucher Villas’ beautiful lead light mullioned windows, ‘mullions’ being the stone bars supporting the window frames. Large panes of plate glass only became possible when glass itself became less expensive early in the twentieth century, so small pieces of glass in a geometric pattern were held together by lead strips to make ‘leaded lights’, above all in the downstairs’ canted bay windows (‘canted’ because they opened on three sides, with the two side panels set at an angle to the centre one).


When one of the villas was recently for sale, it was marketed as ‘an enchanting ... house’, as Sarah Ann must have found it in her declining years.


*Also known as ragstone or Kentish rag, a stone still quarried today in nearby Maidstone. 


thanks Barbara !!!

Saturday, 22 May 2021

Remembering the Cogan Hospital in Canterbury

 Remembering the Cogan Hospital in Canterbury

The reminiscences about the Hospital on the Historic Canterbury site give a fascinating insight into its work and history (see quote (1)), and show clearly how having to rely on bequests (money or the income from land left in a will) often put its finances under severe strain. 


The Aucher family ((2), (5), (6)), who we know from Otterden House and Aucher Villas (the new ‘handsome villa-like semi-detached houses on the London Road’, where Sarah Ann Vlieland lived from 1877 to 1902) were clearly important benefactors, but there were rarely enough funds to keep up the building itself, which was one reason for the move to London Road in 1870.





The Hospital was also left in a precarious position on John Cogan’s death in 1657 ((2)). Under the Puritan government following the execution of King Charles I in 1649, John had been in charge of sequestrating (forcibly repossessing) the lands of royalist gentry and clergy in East Kent. The estate in Littlebourn he bequeathed to endow the Hospital had belonged to the Archbishops of Canterbury, and when Charles II was restored to the throne in 1660, all such sequestered lands had to be returned to their former owners. Their income was lost to the Hospital, which remained badly under-funded until the Barling, Lovejoy and Aucher bequests ((2), (3), (4)).


It is hard to tell how much income was derived from the marshland bequeathed by Aucher and Barling ((3), (6)). If it was land reclaimed from the sea, it would have been very fertile pasture, but it could also be land from which salt was mined, barrelled up and sold for premium prices as a very precious commodity for preserving meat, even after the government tax on it was paid. Burmarsh, in the Aucher bequest, was a centre of the Roman trade, from where salt was exported all over the Empire.


The Masters’ bequest ((7)) in fact became worthless in 1720, on the collapse of  the South Sea Company in which she was invested – caught up in the ‘bubble’ in its shares caused by frenzied buying of stock when there was no realistic prospect of any profit being made. Her heir and executor, Sir Harcourt Masters, a Director of the Company, had already contested her will in 1718, maintaining it was unclear which Canterbury hospital she had intended to endow, but his estates were forfeited when the Company went down, and it was not until 1737 that any monies were paid out.


(1) ‘Cogan’s Hospital ... was founded in 1199 for six poor widows of clergymen; within the old buildings are the remains of a dwelling belonging to the Grey or Franciscan Friars, who were settled here in 1224 by Henry III.’


(2) ‘Mr. Cogan, of the city of Canterbury, gave by his will, dated July 27, 1657, his mansion house in St. Peter’s ... in trust to the mayor and corporation, for the habitation of six poor widows of clergymen  ..., and endowed it with the lands of the late archbishop ... in Littlebourn:* but these being resumed at the restoration, the house ... remained unendowed ... [I]n 1696, [this was] in some measure compensated by the benefaction of Dr. [John] Aucher, a prebendary [administrator] of ... [Canterbury] Cathedral, who invested an estate ... for the payment of ten pounds a year.’


(3) ’Mr. [Walter] Barling, by his will proved in 1670, devised one annuity or yearly rent of three pounds to be paid ... for ever, on September 1 yearly: one moiety [half] to the six poor widows inhabiting this house, and the other moiety towards the repair of the house ... to be paid out of his lands in Dering March [Marsh].’


(4) ‘Mrs. Elizabeth Lovejoy, by her will in 1694, ... gave out of her personal estate, four pounds per annum, to be paid to Cogan’s hospital.’


(5) ‘Dr. John Aucher, Prebendary of Canterbury, who died March 12, 1701, left an Estate of abt. 90£ a year for 6 poor widows of Clergymen in the Diocese. Each hath constantly 10 Guineas a year  and commonly 2 [guineas] more and sometimes [an allowance] of Coals.’


(6) ’Dr. Aucher’s deed is dated [1701]. The revenues consist of the rent of a messuage or farm-house, with 55 acres in Worde, and 32 acres of marsh land in Burmarsh and Eastchurch, in Romney Marsh.’


(7) ‘[T]he poor in Cogan’s hospital are entitled to receive from Mrs. [Mary] Masters’s legacy, who died in 1716, the sixth part of the interest due from one hundred and sixty-three pounds sixteen shillings and three pence, old South-sea annuities.’


Some words in the original quotations have been edited, shown in [], to make their meaning clearer.

* The modern village is known as Littlebourne.

The dates and sources for the quotations can be found on the Historic Canterbury site: http://machadoink.com/Cogan’s%20Hospital.htm; thanks are due to Tina Machado for permission to use them. 

Thanks Barbara !


Thursday, 13 May 2021

Tenterden

Probably you know the books of Lucinda Riley.
Easy books to read and a lot of pages .
Ideal to help you through the covid .
The first book is about Brazil and Rio .
5 years ago we were looking at the same Christo.
The second one about Grieg and Bergen where we were just for the covid.
And the third one about London and Kent where a great part of Jerome Nicholas Vlieland blogs have their origine.


So today I was looking for a possible connection between Jerome and  Flora MacNichol or other people  in this book which is fiction based on some historic persons or events.
And it is not Mrs Keppel or the king or the bookshops that connect.
But the only connection can be found in Tenterden.
Some children of the Benzies were born there.
Other chapters on the Benzies in the blog are on James Benzie and Robert Hammond Benzie


Of the other places mentioned in the book of Lucinda Riley is  Rye the only one we know ,as I think we must be the only tourists to get lost there and because of that nearly missed our bus and ship.



Monday, 26 April 2021

 William Lewin of Otterden Place



We have already seen that the striking alabaster memorial to William Lewin in Otterden Church was moved into the north aisle when the new church was built, and William Paxton would have seen it every day he when worshipped there. But Lewin’s own family, and that of the Auchers (after whom Aucher Villas’ almshouses in Canterbury are named), from whom he inherited Otterden Place, has its own fascinating story.


The Aucher family had a very long pedigree, and were connected with Otterden Place from at least the 1430s. Many were in government service: Anthony Aucher, Marshal of Calais, died of wounds sustained in the siege of the town in January 1558 when a surprise artillery attack caused the fall of the last English-held territory in France. John Aucher’s daughter Anne married Sir Humphrey Gilbert in 1570 and brought him Otterden Place as part of her dowry, and it was Gilbert from whom William Lewin bought the house around 1578, sold to finance Gilbert’s voyages of exploration that ended when his ship , the Squirrel, was wrecked off Newfoundland  in September 1583. 


Otterden Place then still had many of the features, such as the bright red brick courses around the corners of the east and west faces and octagonal chimney stacks, dating from its first Tudor building in the early 1500s, although William remodelled it as a two-winged and two-storey courtyard house. He cannot have spent much time in Kent, however as, after a glittering career at Cambridge University, he became a prominent church and chancery lawyer in the later years of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, sitting in Parliament as the member for Rochester. 


William’s wife Anne  bore him 7 daughters and 4 sons, although the eldest son Thomas seems to have predeceased him; I think one can count only 3 sons at the head of the mourning group kneeling beside the cenotaph that Epiphanius Evesham built for him in 1599, with his achievements as lawyer and statesman written on the stonework. William’s second son Justinian became his heir and Evesham built him an equally striking alabaster and black marble memorial in the church in 1620. William had wished to be buried in Otterden but was in fact interred in St Leonard’s Church in Shoreditch in East London in April 1598: plague was rampant in London in the 1590s and it may be that his body could not be moved to the country for fear of infection.


Otterden Place then passed through the Curteis’ and Wheler families, the farm and estate becoming part of the Wheler Foundation trust in 2004. The other Aucher estates in Bishopsbourne and Bourne Park near Canterbury provided enough income for John Aucher to endow in 1701 a home for 6 poor widows in the Cogan Hospital, thus neatly linking Otterden and Canterbury in our Vlieland story.


Thanks to Amicia de Moubray and Faversham Life for the photograph of the 

Lewin tomb in Otterden Church.And to Barbara !!


Wednesday, 7 April 2021

St Lawrence the Martyr, Otterden: William Paxton’s church

 St Lawrence the Martyr, Otterden: William Paxton’s church

St Lawrence Church, in the ancient parkland of Otterden House on the North Downs, is now a private chapel but was as we know, from 1850 to 1882, William Paxton’s living: the parish church for the village is now St Mary’s Stalisfield, Jerome Nicholas’ church.


The church is dedicated to St Lawrence (or Laurence). St Lawrence was executed in the persecution of Christians under the Emperor Valerian in 258; another Lawrence was sent by Rome to convert the Anglo-Saxons of Kent to Christianity; arriving in Thanet in 597 or 601, he was Archbishop of Canterbury from 604 to 619, the year of his death. 


In a countryside described by Edward Hasted* in 1798 as ‘poor and barren’ with steep flint roads ‘unsafe to travellers’, it was surprising to find a sophisticated classical Georgian church in austere red brick, built in1753–4 on the footings of the original flint thatched 13th-century foundation. The bricks were probably made in the estate for both Otterden House and the church, as transporting bricks imported from Holland and landed on Faversham Quay was impossible over the existing roads.  


The 1750s’ rebuild was financed by the Reverend Granville Wheler, £400 of the cost coming from the will of Lady Elizabeth Hastings, Granville’s sister-in-law. The elegance of the ‘Chinese Chippendale’ fretwork benches, painted to look as if they were of grained wood, and the monuments to previous owners of Otterden House, made William’s church a very special space. Sir William Lewin’s seven daughters are lined up in identical ruffs and bonnets under his tomb; his son Justinian lies in full armour, with his widow and daughter kneeling beside him, both moved from the old church into a recess in the north wall of the new one. 


These were almost certainly sculpted by Epiphanius Evesham, a pupil of the Anglo-Dutch master Richard Stephens: Evesham was noted for ‘the gift of grouping’ and also made monuments to the Roper family in Lynsted Church and the Hawkins’ in Boughton-under-Blean (home of Phoebe and George Coulson). They were both recusant (Catholic) families, who trusted Evesham, who passed as an Anglican but had Catholic sympathies, to memorialise their dead in ways that looked Anglican but had secret images within the sculpture that a Catholic would understand.


*Edward Hasted wrote a topographical history of Kent in  12 volumes (1779–99), with such details as being attacked by ‘biting flies’ as he surveyed an apple orchard!


Thanks are due to Faversham Life (favershamlife@gmail.com) for some of the material in this post, taken from their post of 19 April 2019,and to Barbara !


Friday, 26 March 2021

Cogan House in Canterbury

 Cogan House in Canterbury

Cogan Hospital (later St Aucher’s Charity) was the foundation that gave a home

to the indigent widows of the clergy, including Sarah Johnston in 1877. 

But the house itself, the oldest non-ecclesiastical house in Canterbury, has a long tale of

its own to tell before the Hospital was even thought of.

Luke the Moneyer (an authorised coiner of the currency) built the on the site in

1200, one of the few stone houses in Canterbury to survive, and it then passed to

William Cokyn, who bequeathed it in his estate at his death in 1203 to be used as

a hospital, and a large hall was added. After serving as a residence for the mayors

and bailiffs of the town, it became the home of John Bygg in 1473, mercer (silk-

worker) and Mayor, who added a beamed medieval hall.

It was the Tudor mansion of John Thomas in 1528 and then the Jacobean one of

Ralph Bawden around 1600, with a jettied (overhanging) frontage, a parlour

downstairs and a bedchamber above. In 1626, John Cogan, who may have been a

descendant of William Cokyn, lived there until 1657; his estates were in

Littlebourne, 4 miles from Canterbury, and their proceeds founded the Hospital

in his name that remained at 53 St Peter’s Street until 1870.

Some of the endowments, however, came from lands taken from their Royalist

owners during the Puritan rule in England in the 1650s: in 1660, when the

monarchy was restored and these lands had to be returned, the Hospital was left

in a poor financial position, saved only by John Aucher’s bequests 40 years later.

John Bygg’s hall had a moulded oak ceiling, and the Tudor wood panelling John

Thomas installed showed his pastimes of hunting and bear baiting and the

implements of his hosier’s (stocking-maker’s) trade, with his own face hidden in

the carvings; images of vines and grapes and his wife’s face still survived on the

staircase in John Cogan’s house. Ralph Bawden, a glove-maker who was Mayor in

1584 and 1603, installed fantastic lime plaster work on the ceilings of the

parlour and bedchamber, including a Tudor rose frieze and geometric and

foliage designs. A pelican in piety (feeding her young with the blood drawn from

her own breast which she had speared with her beak) and a griffin, a symbol of

divine power, were carved corbels (supporting brackets) on the front of the

house.

In 1870, when the inmates of the hospital moved to Aucher Villas in London

Road, Cogan House was sold to Thomas Wells, ‘tailer and outfitter’, who removed

the jettied overhang, installed a red-brick frontage and large glass windows on

the street and turned the parlour into his shop. He moved the pelican and griffin

into his new entrance hall and made stabling for his horse, which pulled a

delivery van around the city and countryside for many years. From the later

1930s, it became a private house again and is now an Italian restaurant with

some of the historic fabric displayed in its modern decor.

Thanks Barbara!

Saturday, 20 March 2021

William Archibald Paxton, 1818–1882

 William Archibald Paxton, 1818–1882


William Paxton, vicar of St Lawrence the Martyr Church Otterden was, with his wife Mary, among those who supported the six Vlieland children in 1864, after Frances Elizabeth’s death, but he has a fascinating history in his own right. 


One of 8 children, he was ordained a Deacon in Oxford in 1843 and awarded an MA from Trinity College Oxford the next year; he became rector of St Lawrence’s 7 years later, holding the incumbency until his death in 1882. He was 55 when in 1873 he married Mary Payne, 31 years his junior, whose family had sent her to America for a year in an unsuccessful the hope of getting her to break off the affair and who did not attend her London wedding. They had no children but made a home for at least three of Mary’s nieces. Otterden was a very wealthy parish, with an income twice that of Stalisfield 2 miles away and an annual gift from the London Leathersellers’ Company towards the upkeep of the church and the support of the poor of the parish. William had a Parish Rooms built and an album compiled with photographs of every dwelling in the district. Mary survived William by 38 years, and they are buried in Otterden churchyard under the inscription ‘Love conquers all things’. 


When Charles James and Alice Edith Vlieland moved to Barnfield Road in Exeter, around 1905, they named their new home ‘Otterden’, which shows what the village, William and Mary meant to them.


Sunday, 14 March 2021

Alice Stevens, née Vlieland: A Victorian daughter, mother and wife

 

Alice Stevens, née Vlieland: A Victorian daughter, mother and wife



All three daughters of Jerome NicholasVlieland, Jr, were strong-featured, but Alice’s beauty was enhanced by the determination in her face, which carried her through the sorrows of her life from childhood to widowhood. Her daughter Marjorie says that ‘she could have run the nation single-handed ... had she been given the opportunity’, and Alice’s early life seems to have given her the resilience she showed at every turn of fortune.

 

After his marriage to Frances Elizabeth Samworth in 1852, Alice’s father was firstly a curate at Great Ilford in Essex, where her eldest sister Frances Elizabeth was born the following year. In 1854, Jerome was appointed vicar of Christ Church, George Gilbert Scott’s striking flint-faced newbuild on Turnham Green in West London; Alice’s elder sister Mary Heath was born there in 1854, she was born in 1856 and her brother Charles James in 1857.  In 1858, Jerome became the incumbent of St Mary’s Church in Stalisfield in Kent, but in August 1859 Alice’s next brother was stillborn, and her sister Margaret lived only for one day in January 1860. Two more brothers, Arthur Heath and Herbert Bloomfield, were born in May 1861 and November 1862.

 

So by the time she was 4, Alice had lost two siblings, and when she was 8, in August 1864,  her mother died of a haemorrhage, aged 38, giving birth to a stillborn sister. Frances and Mary were then 11 and 10, Charles 7, Arthur 3 and Herbert 2. Until Jerome married Sarah Johnson in 1866, the children seem to have been cared for by William and Phoebe Millen in nearby Syndale, and perhaps also the Shove family in Queen Court Ospringe and the Paxtons in Otterden: William Paxton, rector of  St Lawrence the Martyr Church from 1851 to 1882, had no children of his own but Alice seems to have been very close to both him and his new wife Mary. The Millen’s eldest daughter, Helena, born on Christmas Day in 1858, lived only 18 months, leaving Alice Millen as the eldest child and here may lie the roots of the edgy relationship between Alice and her sister-in-law (as Alice Millen became when she married Charles James Vlielandin 1883): Alice Millen saw herself  as superior to the impoverished vicarage children, and later may have shared her husband’s distaste at having a prosperous brewer as a brother-in-law.


On 27 January 1877, Jerome died of lung congestion and liver disease, aged only 51. The vicarage passed to the new incumbent, the furniture was sold, and the children scattered, Sarah going to live in Aucher Villas in Canterbury, a charitable foundation for the widows of the clergy. Mary then seems to have become the heart of the family, marrying the eminent doctor Richard Shillitoe that November, from whose home in Hitchen, Hertfordshire, first Frances  in 1880 and then Alice in 1887, were married (the 1881 census also briefly places Arthur there as a medical student).  Alice who, like her grandmother Sarah Heath,  may have been a governess or a teacher after her father’s death, met Thomas PearmanStevens in Exeter in the mid-1880s. Beginning as an assistant brewer in the Swan Brewery in St Thomas’ in the 1870s, he became as we know a partner in the Well Park Brewery with his first wife’s two brothers, Hayward Gould and Thomas Gould Pidsley. Their sister Ellen married Thomas in August 1874 and at her death in May 1883, a fortnight after giving birth to her daughter Ellen Mary,  left five children aged between 8 and a newborn.

 

So when Alice married Thomas in March 1887 aged 31, she became stepmother to Mabel Marion, aged 12, Reginald Gould, 6 and Violet Maud, 5; Allan Randolph, aged 7 and Ellen Mary, were later sent to live with Herbert Vlieland in Wisconsin and then relatives in Alberta Canada, but Alice still had to make a home for them and her own three children, Thomas, Paul and Marjorie, born in 1888, 1889 and 1892, when she was 36. Marjorie tells of a fulfilled family life until her father’s death in 1907, but Alice lived to see the boys settled in their careers and Marjorie turned 21 before she died aged 58 in early 1914.

 

 Thanks to Barbara and Gilly and Ray and many more researchers most of all  family and tellers of our family story.

 

De Beatrix Elisabeth



Bij de stichting Maritiem historische data komen we van alles tegen over de Beatrix Elisabeth

veel staat al lang in de blog ,maar dit ziet er zo netjes en chronologisch uit dat we het u niet willen onthouden.

1816


Op 18-10-1816 wordt voor de BEATRIX ELISABETH door Beatrix Elizabeth van der Berg uit Rotterdam een eerste zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. Hendrik Vlieland.

1817

RC 270917
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar Rouen: het bomschip de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, kapt. Hendrik Vlieland.
Naar St. Valery sur Somme en Havre het bomschip de JONGE CORNELIS, kapt. Gerrit de Jong.
Adres bij bestelmeester K. de Vogel of bij Ooms en de Groot.

1818

RC 040618
Maassluis, 2 juni. Heden morgen arriveerde BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland van Londen.
RC 180618
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar Rouen: het schip de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, kapt. Hendrik Vlieland. Adres bij bestelmeester K. de Vogel of bij Ooms en de Groot.

Op 05-10-1818 wordt voor de BEATRIX ELISABETH door Beatrix Elizabeth van der Berg uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. Hendrik Vlieland.

1819

RC 100619
Den 9 juni arriveerde in de Maas de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland van Newcastle.
RC 280919
Brielle, 25 september. Wel in zee gekomen de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland naar Londen.
RC 251119
Rotterdam, 24 november. Van Helvoetsluis wordt van den 23 dezer gemeld: De bom, die in het gezicht was, is BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland, van Londen.

1820

RC 060420
Den 3 april, des morgens, zeilden uit de Maas de schepen de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland, naar Fecamp; de DRIE GEBROEDERS, J. van der Niet, naar Havre-de-Grace.

Op 14-10-1820 wordt voor de BEATRIX ELISABETH door M. Knapen uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. Hendrik Vlieland.

1821

RC 050521
Helvoetsluis, 6 mei. Gearriveerd de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, H. Vlieland van Rouen.

Op 20-09-1821 wordt voor de BEATRIX ELISABETH door M. Knapen uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. L. van der Wiel.

RC 011121
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam liggen in Lading: Naar Rouen het bomschip BEATRIX ELIZABETH, kapitein L. van der Wiel. Naar St. Valery-sur-Somme en Fecamp, het smakschip VROUW ANTJE, kapitein O.G. Stuit. Adres bij Johs. Ooms Ez., cargadoor.
RC 291221
Het schip BEATRIX ELIZABETH, van der Mark (opm. L. van der Wiel) van Rotterdam naar Rouen, is den 21 dezer, met schade en verlies van een anker en kabel, te Margate binnengelopen.

1822

RC 200722
Brielle, 17 juli. Des avonds zeilde de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel naar Londen.
RC 120922
Helvoetsluis, 11 september. Binnengekomen BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel van Londen.
RC 191122
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar: St. Valery en Dieppe. Het Hollands bomschip BEATRIX ELIZABETH, kapitein L. van der Wiel. Adres bij Johs. Ooms Ez., cargadoor.

1823

RC 180223
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar: St. Valery-sur-Somme en Dieppe. Het Hollandse bomschip BEATRIX ELIZABETH, kapitein L. van der Wiel. Vertrekt uiterlijk de 27 februari. Adres bij Johs. Ooms Ez., cargadoor.

1824

RC 030224
Maassluis, 1 februari. Uitgezeild BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel naar Londen.
RC 200424
Den 18 april zeilde uit de Maas de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel naar Lynn.
RC 180524
Helvoetsluis, 15 mei. Binnengekomen BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel van Lynn.
RC 150724
Den 13 juli zeilde uit de Maas de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel naar Yarmouth.
RC 160924
Brielle, 14 september. Gearriveerd de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel van Londen.
RC 231024
Brielle, 21 oktober. Uitgezeild de BEATRIX ELIZABETH, L. van der Wiel naar Colchester.

1825

RC 240225
Amsterdam, 22 februari. Het schip BEATRIX ELIZABETH (opm: bom BEATRIX ELISABETH), kapt. L. Van der Wiel, van Hull naar Amsterdam, te Yarmouth binnen, heeft, volgens nader bericht, een anker en touw verloren en andere schade bekomen, welke echter zonder lossen kan gerepareerd worden, waarmee men dacht in weinige dagen gereed te zijn.
AC 070325
Texel, 4 maart. Binnengekomen: TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. A.J. Overzee, van Londen; BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. v.d. Wiel, van Hull. Niets uitgezeild.
AC 110425
Texel, 9 april. Den 7 dezer uitgezeild: VROUW ANTJE, kapt. Y.J. Post, naar Bordeaux; VROUW GESINA, kapt. T. Christoftus, BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. v.d. Wiel, HENDRIKA, kapt. H. Martens, alle drie naar Hull.
DC 160725
Vlissingen, 9 juli. Van Antwerpen zijn de Schelde afgekomen en 7 en 8 dezer van onze rede naar zee gezeild: PIETER EN MARIA, kapt. C.P. Eggers met stukgoederen en HENDRIKA, kapt. E.S. Vet met boomschors, beide naar Londen; OROMASE, kapt. R. Roluffs naar Alexandrie en DELPHINE, kapt. S. Martin naar Batavia, beide met stukgoederen; LA VICTOIRE, kapt. G. Kuper en BEATRIX EN ELISABETH, kapt. L. van de Wiel, beide naar Londen met boomschors.
DC 060825
Brielle, 3 augustus. Van de morgen arriveerden uit zee: BASTIAAN, kapt. J. van Beelen van Alnmouth; JONGE CORNELIS, kapt. J.S. van der Mey van Yarmouth; BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. C. van der Wiel, van Londen. De wind WZW.
DC 230825
Brielle, 19 augustus.
Gisteren na posttijd zeilden in zee: JOHANNA WILHELMINA, kapt. D. Mooijekind en BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel, beide naar Londen.
DC 130925
Hellevoetsluis, 10 september. Heden arriveerde uit zee BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel van Londen.

Op 24-09-1825 wordt voor de BEATRIX ELISABETH door M. Knapen uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. L. van der Wiel.

DC 061025
Brielle, 3 oktober. Gisteren namiddag zeilden in zee: DE HOOP, kapt. K.J. Schut naar Yarmouth en BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel naar Sunderland.
DC 061225
Brielle, 2 december. Gisteren namiddag zeilden in zee: JACOBA, kapt. L. Hus naar Wells; VRIENDSCHAP, kapt. F. Plokker, naar Hull; BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel naar Snape;
DC 311225
Hellevoetsluis, 28 december. Gisteren namiddag arriveerde uit zee: BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel van Perth. De wind Z.W.

1826

DC 030826
Brielle, 29 juli. Heden zeilden in zee: VROUW FEMMEGINA, kapt. A.K. Braam naar Nordshield; MARGARETHA, kapt. B. Berg naar Wisbach; FLORA, kapt. C. Klok naar Londen; VROUW ANNA, kapt. H.C. Uil naar Lynn; GOEDE VERWACHTING, kapt. J.J. Schuring naar Leith; BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel, JOHANNA WILHELMINA, kapt. D. Mooijekind, JONGE GERRIT, kapt. P. de Best, en WUBBINA, kapt. M.R. Kielo, alle naar Hull. De wind ZW.
AC 080926
Texel, 6 september. Binnengekomen: BRISEIS, kapt. P. Bakker, van Smyrna, ligt quarantaine; BEATRIX ELISABETH, kapt. L. van der Wiel, van Hull
RC 191026
Advertentie. Nicolaus Montauban van Swijndregt, Hubertus Montauban van Swijndregt en Frederik van Dam, makelaars, binnen de stad Rotterdam, zijn van mening, na gedane aangifte en ingevolge de wet, publiek te veilen en verkopen op dinsdag den 31 oktober 1826, des middags ten vier ure in het logement genaamd Het Groot Hotel van Engeland:
Eerstelijks het hecht, sterk, snelzeilend en Nederlands gebouwd smakschip, genaamd DE TWEE GEBROEDERS, gevoerd door kapt. M. de Jong, lang over steven volgens meetbrief 18 el, 8 palmen, 5 duimen; wijd 3 el, 6 palmen, 8 duimen; hol 1 el, 7 palmen, 4 duimen; alles Nederlandse maat; zoals hetzelve is liggende in de Leuvehaven, tegenover het woonhuis van de weledel geboren heer meester Jonkheer Van der Heim; zullende eerst stuksgewijze en bij kavelingen worden geveild en daarna het gehele schip en inventaris ineens.
Ten tweede het hecht, sterk, snelzeilend en Nederlands gebouwd bomschip, genaamd BEATRIX ELISABETH (opm: bouwjaar 1816), laatst gevoerd geweest bij kapt. Leendert van der Wiel, lang over steven volgens meetbrief 14 el, 7 palmen; wijd 3 el, 6 palmen, 8 duimen; hol 2 el, 2 palmen, 6 duimen; alles Nederlandse maat, met al deszelfs rondhout, staand en lopend want, ankers, touwen, zeilen en verder toebehoren, volgens de inventaris, ineens en bij elkander en voorts zoals hetzelve is liggende in de Scheepmakershaven aan de punt, voor het kantoor van de heer Knaape. Iemand nadere onderrichting begerende, adressere zich bij bovengemelde makelaars. (opm: voor 1.400 gulden aangekocht door koopman Willem Kuijpers, Rotterdam; nieuwe scheepsnaam TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapitein L. Maasdijk)

Op 10-11-1826 wordt voor de TWEE GEBROEDERS door Willem Kuypers uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. L. Maasdijk.

DC 211126
Brielle, 18 november. Heden zeilden in zee: JOHANNES WILHELMINA, kapt. D. Mooijekind, TWEE GEBROEDERS (opm: bom, ex- BEATRIX ELISABETH), kapt. L. Maasdijk, COMMERCE, kapt. J. Dance en BESS, kapt. J. Morden, alle naar Londen.
DC 301226
Hellevoetsluis, 28 december. Gisteren namiddag arriveerde uit zee: TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk van Londen. De wind N.

1827

RC 070427
Brielle, 6 april. Uitgezeild de TWEE GEBROEDERS, L. Maasdijk naar Londen.
OHC 190627
Arrivementen: Te Newhaven L. Maasdijk van Rotterdam.
RC 210627
Den 21 juni arriveerde in de Maas de TWEE GEBROEDERS, L. Maasdijk van Newhaven.

1828

AH 090128
Helvoetsluis, 6 januari. Uitgezeild de TWEE GEBROEDERS, L. Maasdijk naar Rouen.
RC 020228
Te Rouen aan gekomen L. Maasdijk van Rotterdam.
MCO 150428
Vlissingen, 8 april. Voor Antwerpen op onze rede gekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk van Rouen met pleistersteen.
OHC 211028
Arrivementen: Te Wisbeach (opm. Wisby) L. Maasdijk van Rotterdam.

Op 25-11-1828 wordt voor de TWEE GEBROEDERS door Willem Kuypers uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. L. Maasdijk.

1829

OHC 100229
Te Ramsgate is den 29 januari binnengelopen het schip de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk, van St. Valery naar Rotterdam.
MCO 240329
Vlissingen, 19 maart. Voor Antwerpen op onze rede gekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk van Havre de Grace met stukgoederen.
MCO 210429
Vlissingen, 14 april. Van Antwerpen de Schelde afgekomen en naar zee gezeild de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk naar Yarmouth met boomschors.
OHC 070529
Te Helvoetsluis binnengekomen L. Maasdijk van Yarmouth.
OHC 110629
Arrivementen: Te Rouen L. Maasdijk van Rotterdam.
OHC 020729
Te Helvoetsluis binnengekomen L. Maasdijk van Rouen.
OHC 260929
Te Helvoetsluis binnengekomen L. Maasdijk van Bergen.

1830

AH 200130
Lijst van schepen die in het tweede half jaar 1829 Havre hebben aangedaan: waaronder de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk van Rotterdam met kaas en huiden. Ligt nog.
MCO 180330
Vlissingen, 13 maart. Voor Antwerpen op onze rede gekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk van Londen met stukgoederen.
OHC 030630
Arrivementen: Te Brielle L. Maasdijk van Cherbourg.
RC 300930
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar: St. Valery-sur-Somme en Fecamp. Het Hollandse bomschip de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapt. L. Maasdijk. Adres bij Johs. Ooms Ez., cargadoor.

1831

RC 010131
Den 29 december 1830, na posttijd, arriveerde in de Maas de TWEE GEBROEDERS, L. Maasdijk van Fécamp, en is op de haven gekomen.
RC 240331
Advertentie. Te Rotterdam ligt in lading naar: Duinkerken het schip de TWEE GEBROEDERS, kapitein L. Maasdijk. Adres ten kantore van Johs. Ooms Ez., cargadoor.
AH 280431
Helvoetsluis, 22 april. Uitgezeild de TWEE GEBROEDERS, Maasdijk naar Duinkerken.
AH 030531
Cargalijst Rotterdam. TWEE GEBROEDERS, L. Maasdijk van Duinkerken met 141 fusten olie.

1832

Op 04-05-1832 wordt voor de TWEE GEBROEDERS door Willem Kuypers uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. W. Meeuwenoord.

RC 140632
Helvoetsluis, 12 juni, binnengekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Duinkerken. Ligt in quarantaine.
AH 191032
Texel, 17 oktober. Binnengekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Londen.

1833

Op 05-09-1834 wordt voor de TWEE GEBROEDERS door Willem Kuypers uit Rotterdam een zeebrief aangevraagd voor kapt. W. Meeuwenoord.

AH 300933
Brielle, 27 september. Binnengekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Havre de Grace.
RC 211133
Helvoetsluis, 19 november. Binnengekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Havre.

1834

RC 041134
Helvoetsluis, 2 november. Binnengekomen de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Rouen.
RC 301234
Maassluis, 28 december. Uitgezeild TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord naar Bordeaux.

1835

RC 010135
Helvoetsluis, 30 december. Gearriveerd de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord uit de Maas, als bijlegger naar Bordeaux.
RC 030135
Helvoetsluis, 2 januari. Uitgezeild de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord naar Bordeaux.
RC 270135
Den 25 januari arriveerde te Helvoetsluis de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Fecamp.
AH 200335
Maassluis, 18 maart. Uitgezeild TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord naar Havre.
RC 120535
Den 11 mei, des morgens, arriveerde te Maassluis, de TWEE GEBROEDERS, W. Meeuwenoord van Havre.

Dit is het laatst gevonden scheepvaart bericht.