Genealogie Bos

This is my English-language Genealogy & Ancestry Blog.
(Mijn Nederlandstalige blog is genealogiebos.blogspot.nl).

9 Jan 2016

Surname Saturday - Kwakernaat

Pleun Tuk (1852-1940) &
Goverdina Kwakernaat (1858-1936) 
in September 1926 in a
newspaper called "Voorwaarts".
A Kwakernaat family lived for two centuries in 's-Gravendeel, The Netherlands. Around 1800 Dirk Kwakernaak (1775-1847) moved from Gorkum to 's-Gravendeel. He married a local girl, Maaijke Visser (±1780-1846); they had 8 children. One of them, Dirk Kwakernaat (±1821-1867), married Hendriksje Dekker (±1822-1905) in 1845. A picture of their daughter Goverdina Kwakernaat (1858-1936) and her husband Pleun Tak is shown to the right. The couple had 16 children, but many of them died young.

Two areas with the name 'Quakernaak' can be found on old maps. One is an area of farm land to the southeast of Meerkerk that dates back to medieval times, when the polder was protected by dikes and developed. The other was located between the village of Schelluinen and the city of Gorinchem. The Kwakernaat family may have derived its name from either of these areas, but the last one is the most likely. 

Thanks to@Anneke_Bode.

1 comment:

  1. De Kwakernaaksche Polder bij Schelluinen:
    "De oude kern van Schelluinen bestaat uit de bebouwing rond het Kerkplein met de aanliggende Nederlands Hervormde Kerk en het oude kasteel. Deze kern ontstond in de zuidwesthoek van de Kwakernaaksche Polder, daar waar het noordelijk deel van de (Groote) Schelluinensche Vliet met een bijna haakse bocht overgaat in het oostelijk deel. De Kwakernaaksche Polder werd echter in cultuur gebracht vanuit de noordelijk van de kern gelegen De Nol (de huidige Nolweg)."

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