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Rev Antonie Jacob Betten

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Rev Antonie Jacob Betten

Birth
Utrecht, Utrecht Municipality, Utrecht, Netherlands
Death
6 Dec 1900 (aged 87)
Orange City, Sioux County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Orange City, Sioux County, Iowa, USA Add to Map
Plot
Sec A, Lot 24, Gr 8
Memorial ID
View Source
The subject of this sketch was born at Utrecht, Holland in 1813 and died at Orange City Dec. 6th, 1900.

Mr. Betten was no ordinary man and his life deserves more than passing notice. He was married in 1834 and ordained a minister in 1842.

In 1847 an organization called the Christian Union for Emigration was formed in his native land and Mr. Betten became vice president. One year later four vessels laden with well-to-do Hollanders started from Rotterdam for Baltimore. The passage by sailing vessel at that time required nearly two months so the party which left in April did not reach the new continent until June. A few of the leaders looked over St. Louis for awhile and finally a settlement was made at Pella in September. From that time on Mr. Betten's life was an active one.

He preached in the school houses on Sunday and engaged in business during the week. There were no courts in Pella and offenses were tried by the church consistory before the congregation. If one of the colony was guilty of lying he was pretty apt to find himself confronted by the elders and pastors whose reproof was sometimes the hardest kind of punishment.

Mr. Betten found him amid many duties to prosecute a critical study of the bible and was deeply learned in biblical lore. Especially interesting to him were scriptural references to the second coming of Christ and it has been thought that he meditated a book along this line.

It was the very vigor and independence of his mind, perhaps, which led him to decline to be bound by any formal church rules or regulations though everyone recognized his piety and upright character.

He came to Sioux county in 1872.

His physical frame was a strong one and death came last Thursday only after a long illness.

The funeral on Saturday was largely attended. The pallbearers were Adrianus Kuyper, T. H. Muilenburg, D. H. Schalekamp, L. Knook, A. Van der Meide, H. J. Van der Waa. Dr. Steffens, Revs. Kolyn and Winter officiated at the last sad rites which were very impressive.

-Sioux County Herald
(12/12/1900)
The subject of this sketch was born at Utrecht, Holland in 1813 and died at Orange City Dec. 6th, 1900.

Mr. Betten was no ordinary man and his life deserves more than passing notice. He was married in 1834 and ordained a minister in 1842.

In 1847 an organization called the Christian Union for Emigration was formed in his native land and Mr. Betten became vice president. One year later four vessels laden with well-to-do Hollanders started from Rotterdam for Baltimore. The passage by sailing vessel at that time required nearly two months so the party which left in April did not reach the new continent until June. A few of the leaders looked over St. Louis for awhile and finally a settlement was made at Pella in September. From that time on Mr. Betten's life was an active one.

He preached in the school houses on Sunday and engaged in business during the week. There were no courts in Pella and offenses were tried by the church consistory before the congregation. If one of the colony was guilty of lying he was pretty apt to find himself confronted by the elders and pastors whose reproof was sometimes the hardest kind of punishment.

Mr. Betten found him amid many duties to prosecute a critical study of the bible and was deeply learned in biblical lore. Especially interesting to him were scriptural references to the second coming of Christ and it has been thought that he meditated a book along this line.

It was the very vigor and independence of his mind, perhaps, which led him to decline to be bound by any formal church rules or regulations though everyone recognized his piety and upright character.

He came to Sioux county in 1872.

His physical frame was a strong one and death came last Thursday only after a long illness.

The funeral on Saturday was largely attended. The pallbearers were Adrianus Kuyper, T. H. Muilenburg, D. H. Schalekamp, L. Knook, A. Van der Meide, H. J. Van der Waa. Dr. Steffens, Revs. Kolyn and Winter officiated at the last sad rites which were very impressive.

-Sioux County Herald
(12/12/1900)


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