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Jan Dirk Beving

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Jan Dirk Beving

Birth
Holthusen, Landkreis Leer, Lower Saxony, Germany
Death
28 Oct 1928 (aged 87)
Wellsburg, Grundy County, Iowa, USA
Burial
Grundy County, Iowa, USA GPS-Latitude: 42.4855881, Longitude: -93.0053101
Plot
OC- 8-E4
Memorial ID
View Source
Wellsburg

Obituary

Jan Beving was born December 2, 1840, in Holthusen, Ostfriesland, Germany. In the year 1860 he came to America, and lived for a number of years in the vicinity of Freeport, Ill., and then moved to Cleves, Iowa.

He was joined in matrimony with Margaret Sents in the year 1873, and established his home on the farm near Wellsburg. God blessed their union with ten children, of whom two preceded him in death in 1904. His faithful wife was removed to the great beyond in 1910.

In 1914 he moved from the farm and made his home with his children in Wellsburg, spending the evening of his life without care or worry, well-deserved reward for the industry and frugality of his earlier years.

He was one of the quiet ones in Israel, and as long as God left him his eyesight, he was a searcher and a student of the Bible, which fitted him to give his children thorough training in the doctrine of the Scriptures.

He abstained from human honor and despised all self-conceit. He was always a true and upright friend of the writer, and disclosed to him many things of the conditions of his faith.

God favored him with a special grace and endowed him with a deep spiritual knowledge, which caused more or less the difficulty of his spiritual fight. But in the last week of his illness he was permitted to make an open confession in his Savior Jesus Christ, to the comfort of all his children.

He was especially endowed with a lovable disposition and proved himself very patient during his suffering. During the last two years he was afflicted with a chronic throat trouble. Three weeks ago he contracted a severe cold, apparently rallying from his illness, but gradually grew weaker due to the infirmities accompanying old age, until his body, tired of all physical exertion, became exhausted and his soul departed for its eternal home, last Sunday afternoon, at half-past six, to begin his eternal Sabbath.

He reached the good old age of 87 years, 10 months and 26 days.

There are left to mourn four sons -- Dick J. of Wellsburg, Iowa. Rev. Fred Beving of George, Iowa, John and Ailt of Wellsburg, Iowa, four daughters, Mrs. Hattie Flessner, Wellsburg, Iowa, Mrs. Mary Behrends, Iona, Minn, Mrs. Anna Arends, Ackley, Iowa, and Mrs. Margaret Lindaman, Wellsburg, Iowa; twenty-six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, one brother, Dick B. Beving, Fergus Falls, Minn., two sisters, Mrs. J. W. Riekena of Wellsburg, Iowa, and Mrs. Casper Jutting, of Cleves, Iowa, and a host of friends whose love and esteem he won during his life.

May the God of all comfort comfort the sorrowing hearts with the verse, "For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God and house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens." The same verse which the departed quoted a day or two before his death.

Card of Thanks: We desire to thank most heartily all the kind neighbors and friends who generously stood
by us during the illness of our beloved father and during the days after his death.

The Beving family.

[Source unknown but likely Ackley World Journal - Wedding for Art Beving and Evelyn Schultz on the same page]
both in the Wellsburg section of the paper
Wellsburg

Obituary

Jan Beving was born December 2, 1840, in Holthusen, Ostfriesland, Germany. In the year 1860 he came to America, and lived for a number of years in the vicinity of Freeport, Ill., and then moved to Cleves, Iowa.

He was joined in matrimony with Margaret Sents in the year 1873, and established his home on the farm near Wellsburg. God blessed their union with ten children, of whom two preceded him in death in 1904. His faithful wife was removed to the great beyond in 1910.

In 1914 he moved from the farm and made his home with his children in Wellsburg, spending the evening of his life without care or worry, well-deserved reward for the industry and frugality of his earlier years.

He was one of the quiet ones in Israel, and as long as God left him his eyesight, he was a searcher and a student of the Bible, which fitted him to give his children thorough training in the doctrine of the Scriptures.

He abstained from human honor and despised all self-conceit. He was always a true and upright friend of the writer, and disclosed to him many things of the conditions of his faith.

God favored him with a special grace and endowed him with a deep spiritual knowledge, which caused more or less the difficulty of his spiritual fight. But in the last week of his illness he was permitted to make an open confession in his Savior Jesus Christ, to the comfort of all his children.

He was especially endowed with a lovable disposition and proved himself very patient during his suffering. During the last two years he was afflicted with a chronic throat trouble. Three weeks ago he contracted a severe cold, apparently rallying from his illness, but gradually grew weaker due to the infirmities accompanying old age, until his body, tired of all physical exertion, became exhausted and his soul departed for its eternal home, last Sunday afternoon, at half-past six, to begin his eternal Sabbath.

He reached the good old age of 87 years, 10 months and 26 days.

There are left to mourn four sons -- Dick J. of Wellsburg, Iowa. Rev. Fred Beving of George, Iowa, John and Ailt of Wellsburg, Iowa, four daughters, Mrs. Hattie Flessner, Wellsburg, Iowa, Mrs. Mary Behrends, Iona, Minn, Mrs. Anna Arends, Ackley, Iowa, and Mrs. Margaret Lindaman, Wellsburg, Iowa; twenty-six grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, one brother, Dick B. Beving, Fergus Falls, Minn., two sisters, Mrs. J. W. Riekena of Wellsburg, Iowa, and Mrs. Casper Jutting, of Cleves, Iowa, and a host of friends whose love and esteem he won during his life.

May the God of all comfort comfort the sorrowing hearts with the verse, "For we know that if our earthly house of this tabernacle were dissolved, we have a building of God and house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens." The same verse which the departed quoted a day or two before his death.

Card of Thanks: We desire to thank most heartily all the kind neighbors and friends who generously stood
by us during the illness of our beloved father and during the days after his death.

The Beving family.

[Source unknown but likely Ackley World Journal - Wedding for Art Beving and Evelyn Schultz on the same page]
both in the Wellsburg section of the paper

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