Table J: Ports of Embarkation of Zeeland families subdivided by Region, 1835-1880 Region Ports of Embarkation Rotterdam Antwerp Liverpool London Amsterdam Others* Total N N N N N N N Tholen/St. Ph. 39 47 8 10 16 19 17 20 1 1 2 I 83 Schouwen-D. 222 61 53 14 62 17 17 5 1 0 11 3 366 N.-Beveland 64 54 39 33 12 10 - - 3 3 - - 118 Z.-Beveland 154 55 45 16 51 18 23 7 1 0 5 2 279 Walcheren 122 59 41 20 14 7 - 13 6 17 8 207 W. Z.-Vlaand. 288 52 158 28 34 6 5 48 9 16 3 549 O. Z.-Vlaand. 58 67 24 28 2 2 - - - - 3 4 87 Totals 947 56 368 22 191 11 62 4 67 4 54 3 1689 Includes Le Havre 30, Glasgow 14, Bremen 7, Stettin 3. Source: Data file: Dutch Immigrants in U.S. Ship Passenger Manifests, 1820-1880 This province-wide picture is quickly refined by taking into account regional variations among Zeelanders in the choice of ports of embarkation (Table 3). For whatever reasons, emigrants from Tholen were least likely to use Rotterdam, while those from Oost Zeeuws-Vlaanderen were most likely to do so. Less than onehalf (47 percent) of Tholen emigrants sailed from Rotterdam, compared to 61 percent of those from Oost Zeeuws-Vlaanderen. Here the similarity ends. The others from Tholen were divided between London (20 percent), Liverpool (19 percent), and Antwerp (10 percent); whereas 28 percent of Oost Zeeuws-Vlaanderen emigrants used nearby Antwerp. The same proportion of emigrants from West Zeeuws- Vlaanderen took ship at Antwerp, as did a relatively large proportion (33 percent) of emigrants from Zuid-Beveland. Antwerp was clearly a convenient port of embarkation for southern regions, but the Dutch barge (trekvaart) transport system funneled passenger traffic to Rotterdam much more regularly than it did to Antwerp, which had only one line from Bergen op Zoom.12 The premier Dutch harbor captured most of the emigrants from the four pri mary regions of emigration: in order. West Zeeuws-Vlaanderen, Duiveland, Zuid- Beveland and Walcheren. Barges ran from Breskens to Rotterdam over Middelburg, Goes, and Zierikzee twice daily. Zeeuwen preferred to take passage on Dutch vessels with Dutch captains and Dutch crews. Immigrant Agents The major Dutch immigrant agency and ship broker in the middle decades of the nineteenth century was the Rotterdam firm of Wambersie, founded in 1838 by Johan Wambersie (1806-1874). Wambersie was ideally suited to capture the immigrant transport market because he knew the English language and the American scene at first hand, having been bom of Dutch parents at Savannah. Georgia. He returned to the Netherlands in 1833 and spent the next fifty years in the shipping business. In 1847 Wambersie and his partner Hendrikus Crooswijck offered to bring emigrants to New York 'as cheaply as possible, in fact, for 30 guilders each1.13 22 ZEEUWSE EMIGRATIE NAAR AMERIKA 1840-1920

Tijdschriftenbank Zeeland

Nehalennia | 1997 | | pagina 24