This station was settled by Dutch pioneers from Pennsylvania and was also known as New Holland Station.
Her father, a farmer, was born in East Guilford, Vermont on November 1, 1786 and her mother, a descendant of Dutch pioneers, on July 10, 1792 at Salisbury, Connecticut.
His narrative distills rich archives from Manhattan's unsung Dutch pioneers, who planted crucial seeds of the island's cosmopolitan grit.
Then in the late 17th century, Dutch pioneers took over the area as well drained the Great Lake Passaic, whilst farming rubrab on it, and put their houses there.
Antje and her remaining six children settled near other Dutch pioneers 20-30 miles south of Chicago, buying eighty acres of land at seven dollars an acre by Thorn Creek.
They were assimilated into the larger colony of Dutch pioneers, whose descendants all now speak Afrikaans.
They were probably known to the Dutch pioneer of protozoology, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, and were clearly described by his contemporary Christiaan Huygens in a letter of 1678.
Jacques von Marten is regarded as one of the Dutch pioneers in the development of industrial food production because of his concept of factory production.
The method derived its name from Dutch pioneers in the 17th Golden Century who were discussing foreign business deals while sipping coffee and smoking a cigar.
Between 1964 and 1973 Dutch overseas pioneers established a Bahá'í Spiritual Assembly in Suriname at Paramaribo.