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Burgraff/Kortlever/Stek/Bel

Willem and Sygje in Iowa 2

The most interesting censuses to me are the 1854 and 1856 Iowa State Census records.1,2 In 1856 Willem’s farm is listed as a new farm and his older brother Pieter (Peter on this record) is on the same page. Pieter’s farm is established by 1856 and his crops are listed. Willem is listed as a voter and a member of the militia. Usually men that serve in the military for a period of time are granted citizenship upon completion of the service. With citizenship would come the right to exercise their franchise, and Willem is listed as a voter on the census records. Both Willem and Peter (the younger) were militia members and voters, while Pieter was not. I have found a muster record for Peter, but I haven’t found anything beyond the census records for Willem that establish his service.

By the 1860 census the family as we know it is firmly established.3 Willem and Sygje appear to be in about the same financial class as their neighbors.

On the 1870 census Willem and Sygje are listed as being unable to read and write English.4 Willem is listed as a citizen.

On the 1880 census the only child left at home is the 24 year old Anna, but Jantje and Goverdina are in the next two dwelling.5 By now both Willem and Sygje appear to be able to read and write English.

Both Willem and Sygje appear on the 1895 Iowa State Census, which on Ancestry has no images attached.6



1. 1854 Iowa State Census, Marion County, Iowa, population schedule, Lake Prairie Twp., p. Roll IA 122, line 2, W. Burggraaf, 2 males, 3 females, 1 voter, 1 militia; digital images, The Generations Network, Inc., Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 9 Jul 2009); citing State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest.
2. 1856 Iowa State Census, Marion County, Iowa, population schedule, Lake Prairie Twp., p. 450, dwelling 75, family 80, Willem Burggraaf, age 35; digital images, The Generations Network, Inc., Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 9 Jul 2009); citing State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest.
3. 1860 U.S. census, Marion County, Iowa population schedule, Pella, Lake Prairie Twp, p. 199, dwelling 1431, family 1340, Willem Burggraaf; digital images, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 5 Jul 2009); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M653, roll 335.
4. 1870 U.S. census, Marion County, Iowa population schedule, Pella, Lake Prairie Twp, p. 134, dwelling 211, family 210, Willem Burggraaf; digital images, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 5 Jul 2009); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M593, roll 409.
5. 1880 U.S. census, Marion County, Iowa population schedule, Lake Prairie Twp., enumeration district (ED) 120, p. 8, dwelling 70, family 70, William Burgraff, age 59; digital images, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 9 Jul 2009); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm T9, roll 354.
6. 1895 Iowa State Census, Marion County, Iowa, population schedule, Lake Prairie, p. 74, Wm Burgraaf; digital images, The Generations Network, Inc., Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 9 Jul 2009); citing State Historical Society of Iowa via Heritage Quest.

February 24, 2010 By Sharon

Burgraff/Kortlever/Stek/Bel

Willem & Sygje in Iowa 1

When Willem and Sygje arrived in Pella that fall of 1847, it must have been a shock. There were few houses available and winter was coming. I have no idea where they lived that first year, but I am making a guess that it was hardly the clean dry surroundings they were used to. There is a wonderful book called Iowa Letters: Dutch Immigrants on the American Frontier by Johan Stellingwerff. It’s a slow read (not a cover to cover thriller) but it is translations of letters from immigrants to their families in Holland and from those families to the immigrants. It was amazing to read about the variety of experiences different people within the same group had, and to also to find out that not everyone stayed. The letters help you grasp the enormity of the struggles, the political and religious problems within the community, and the simple joy of a letter from home. I loved reading the parts about day-to-day life and the things that the immigrants asked their families to send or bring with them when they came.

No doubt those early years were a struggle for Willem and Sygje as they broke the land and built a home. I’m not sure where the young couple stood in the religious politics that played out in the community. They were married by Henry P Scholte, Justice of the Peace, and I also noticed that the first four of their children were all baptized on the same day, 26 March 1859, two months before youngest son Jan is born. I found no baptism record for Jan in the First Reformed Church of Pella. This does not seem to indicate regular church attendance.

Willem and Sygje appear on the 1850 census with daughter Jantje.1 The cool thing about the 1850 census in Pella is that all the Dutch women used their maiden names. When I first saw this record I thought Willem and Sygje were not married and just living together. Later I learned that the Dutch women had always used their maiden names on their government records in the Netherlands and they did so here on that first census. Willem is a laborer on this census as are Pieter and Peter. This meant they did not own a farm, as owners in this location are listed as farmers. Older brother Pieter and his family are next door to Willem and Sygje and they appear on the bottom of the previous page.



1. 1850 U.S. census, Marion County, Iowa population schedule, Lake Prairie, p. 289, dwelling 141, family 146, Willem Burggraaf; digital images, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com: accessed 9 Jul 2009); citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm M432, roll 187.

February 20, 2010 By Sharon

Burgraff/Kortlever/Stek/Bel

Leaving the Netherlands

There are lots of great books and sites that can explain, far better than I, why so many Dutch migrated in the mid-1800s. The IowaGenWeb Project has up the Pioneers of Marion County by Wm. M. Donnel,1 and Part II, Chapter VI provides a good basic story of the immigration to Pella. Our three Burggraafs, Pieter, Willem, and Peter, departed Rotterdam in April 1847 aboard the Maastroom.2 Pieter Burggraaf was the third child of Jan Burggraaf, (1811-1892); he came with his wife Cornelia Verschoor (1816-1896),3 his sons Teunis (1842-1904) and Jan (1846 – ). According to the records on Genlias, Pieter and Cornelia had two other children, Jan and Jannigje who had died young.4,5

The passenger list was my first discovery of Peter Burggraaf. He is #59 on the line directly above Pieter and lists his age as 20. Willem is passenger #196 on a separate page of the passenger list and Sygje Stek is on the line directly below him, indicating there may already have been a relationship between them. Sygje is the only member of the Stek family listed, but she may have traveled with other relatives. It should be noted that Dutch women were known to be very independent and many did travel on their own.

They arrived 2 June 1847 in Baltimore, Maryland and there are some interesting accounts of the trip available from letters and also some fun things written up in the Souvenir History of Pella.6 Apparently the Dutch women cleaned the ship from stem-to-stern while at sea, and it was remarked upon by the inspectors at the Port of Baltimore.

From Baltimore the group of immigrants traveled to Pella via Pittsburgh and St. Louis and finally arrived in the fall of 1847. Sygje and Willem married in 1848 and settled into the hard work of farming in Marion County, Iowa. Their family of 5 children is fairly small by Dutch farm standards of the day. Also unusual is that all their (known) children survived to adulthood.

Older brother Pieter had a total of 9 children and he died in Pella on 20 Jan 1892.7 He is buried in Graceland Cemetery with his wife Cornelia. I have posted a family group sheet for Pieter Burggraaf, but I don’t plan on providing any more information on his family in this blog. His line is well documented on Ancestry, Rootsweb and FamilySearch.

The family of Peter Burggraaf (I have come to think of him as Peter the Younger) will be discussed as they are closely intertwined with Willem’s family.



1. William M. Donnel, Pioneers of Marion County (N.p.: n.p., 1872), Part II: Chapter VI, transcribed on the Iowa GenWeb Project, http://iagenweb.org/marion/DONNEL.
2. National Archives, Washington, D.C., “Baltimore Passenger Lists, 1820-1848,” database, Ancestry (http://www.ancestry.com : accessed 9 Jul 2009), Ship name: Maasstroom, Passenger: Willem Burggraaf, age 24, Farmer; Passenger Lists of Vessels Arriving at Baltimore, Maryland.
3. Genlias database, Genlias (http://www.genlias.nl/en : accessed 9 Jul 2009), Marriage – Pieter Burggraaf and Cornelia Verschoor 2 May 1840; Civil Register – Nationaal Archief (Rijksarchief Zuid-Holland).
4. Genlias database, Genlias (http://www.genlias.nl/en : accessed 9 Jul 2009), Death – Jan Burggraaf, 24 May 1841; Civil Register – Nationaal Archief (Rijksarchief Zuid-Holland).
5. Genlias database, Genlias (http://www.genlias.nl/en : accessed 9 Jul 2009), Death – Jannigje Burggraaf, 12 Jun 1845, age 1; Civil Register – Nationaal Archief (Rijksarchief Zuid-Holland).
6. G.A. Stout, Souvenir History of Pella Iowa, (Booster Press, 1922).
7. Graceland Cemetery (Marion County, Iowa), Pieter Burggraaf marker.

February 18, 2010 By Sharon

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