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Zelle 1=[[Datei:Beleg van Bergen op Zoom 1747.jpeg|197px|center]]<center><small>'''The Siege of Bergen op Zoom 1747'''</small></center> <br>[[Datei:Het Nederlandsch Koffiehuis, Grote Markt 19.jpg|197px|center]]<center><small>'''The Dutch Coffee House<br>Grote Markt 19'''</small>|
Zelle 2=<center>'''Unsere Familiengeschichte'''</center>
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Zelle 2=<br><br>'''<big><big>Our family history in Bergen op Zoom</big></big>'''<br><br>
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'''[[Andriessen/de|Andriessen]] settles in Bergen op Zoom'''
  
[[1722]] taucht der Name ''Andriessen'' in der Stadt Bergen op Zoom auf. Ein gewisser ''Jan Andriessen'', Landwirt und Witwer aus Essen (Belgien) heiratet [[1726]] ''Theuntje Cornelissen Meeuwense''. Seine erste Ehe wurde vermutlich [[1722]] in Bergen op Zoom gechlossen und
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Long before [[1700/nl|1700]] there are Andriessen families in Bergen op Zoom and the surrounding area, one of these families starts with a certain '''Jordanus Andriessen'''(Jordanus Andreae) who marries Catharina Jansen on Tuesday [[4. Februar|February 4,]] [[1642/de|1642]] in Essen, he died on [[28. Mai|May 28,]] [[1660/de|1660]] in Essen (Spilbeek). One of his children, '''Nicolaus Janssen Andriessen''' was baptized in Nispen in [[1656/de|1656]] but lived in Essen, now in Belgium. Essen belonged to the parish of Nispen but was not located in the Marquisate of Bergen op Zoom. According to Belgian sources, the origin of the Andriessen families lay north of Turnhout. Even today, several Andriessen families live in Ravels and Essen. In [[1722/de|1722]] a certain '''Johannes Claessen Andriessen''', the son of Nicolaus Janssen Andriessen, is working as a farmer and widower from Essen in Borgvliet, south of the city of Bergen op Zoom. It is a settlement that already existed before 1200, making it one of the oldest in West Brabant. Johannes Claessen Andriessen, known as Jan for short, married Theuntje Cornelissen Meeuwense on [[17. April|April 17,]] [[1726/de|1726]]. His first marriage to Paulina Rombouts van Caem was probably concluded on [[24. Mai|24 May,]] [[1722/de|1722]] in Bergen op Zoom, and was therefore of short duration. His second marriage to Theuntje is also short, because he becomes a widower again. On [[15. Februar|February 15,]] [[1733/nl|1733]] he marries for the third time to a certain Gregoria Verdult. From this marriage no less than 9 children were born, and Jan thus became the progenitor of many Andriessen families in the Netherlands. Jan Andriessen died on [[19. Dezember|December 19,]] [[1746/de|1746]] a few months before the French siege in [[1747/de|1747]], his youngest child Gommaris had just been baptized. Due to all the war violence, Borgvliet was unable to develop further as a village. Even after the French invasion of 1747, it remained a small village with only a few farms and a pump. Bergen op Zoom was taken, plundered and set on fire. The losses during the siege can be called disproportionate: 5,250 dead on the French side and about 5,000 on the Dutch. The city was plundered and burned for hours after its capture, with approximately 2,000 of the 5,000 inhabitants losing their lives and around 1,000 wounded. The brutal plundering of the city was condemned throughout Europe, and only three of Jan's children are known to have survived the siege. His eldest son Jacobus Andriessen became a citizen of the city of Bergen op Zoom in [[1763/de|1763]], and in addition to being a farmer, he was also a "coffee house owner" or innkeeper. Eventually he would owns the famous coffee house "den Engel". (Later the Dutch coffee house and the former Roxy cinema, from December 2007 a dance school and since 2013 again in use as a cafe, a party venue and Theater "den Engel"). Apparently they did very well, as many family members worked in the business. Grandson '''Gabriël Andriessen''', born in [[1818/de|1818]], was able to go to school as a young boy, which meant that his father had a reasonable income. Gabriel Andriessen was the founder of the watch and jewelry company in 1848.<br><br><br>|
war nur von kurzer Dauer, auch seine zweite Ehe währt nur kurz, denn er wird wiederum Witwer.
 
Seine dritte Frau wird [[1736]] die ''Gregoria Verdult'': Sie bringt 9 Kinder zur Welt und macht ''Jan Andriessen'' damit zum Stammvater von etlichen Familien dieses Familienzweiges in den Niederlanden.
 
  
Während der Belagerung Hollands durch die Franzosen im Jahre [[1747]] wird ''Jan Andriessen'' zum Opfer dieser kriegerischen Auseinandersetzung. Sein jüngstes Kind ist zu dieser Zeit gerade erst ein Jahr alt.
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Zelle 3=<center>[[Bild:Gabriel Andriessen.jpg|197px]]</center><br>|
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Zelle 4='''[[Andriessen, Gabriël/de|Gabriël Andriessen]] (29.10.1818 – 11.7.1884)'''
  
Sein ältester Sohn Jacobus wird [[1763]] Bürger der Stadt Bergen op Zoom und arbeitet sowohl als Landwirt wie auch als "koffijhuishouder" -Kaffeehausbetreiber. Er wird später das bekannte Café "Der Engel" besitzen (später das "Nederlandsch koffiehuis" und das ehemalige "Roxy Kino"). Die Geschäfte liefen offensichtlich sehr gut, denn viele Familienmitglieder konnten ihren Lebensunterhalt in diesem Unternehmen verdienen. Sein Enkel ''Gabriël Andriessen'', der [[1818]] geboren wird, durfte schon als kleiner Junge eine Schule besuchen. Das war zu dieser Zeit nicht selbstverständlich und setzte voraus, daß der Vater bzw. die Familie ein entsprechendes Einkommen erzielte.|
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Gabriël Andriessen was unfortunately lame and could not keep up with the farm and it would certainly not be easy for him to be an innkeeper either. However, he was a good student and it was decided to choose a suitable profession for him. He would leave for Brussels to train as a "watchmaker", according to tradition he had lodgings with a distant relative. When he returned to Bergen op Zoom he started his own company and on [[18. Juli|18. July]] [[1848/de|1848]] registered himself in the guarantee register as a merchant of gold and silver watches. Shortly afterwards he was able to rent his own building in the Engelse Staat number 42. This building called "Romeijn" dated from [[1610/de|1610]] and it was also here that his son and later successor Dionisius Cornelis was born. However, the building was demolished in [[1889/de|1889]] to make way for a larger building. In [[1859/de|1859]] Gabriel and his family moved to the Bosstraat to set up a larger shop. (now Bosstraat 1) In [[1884/de|1884]] Gabriël dies, a year earlier '''Dionisius Cornelis Andriessen''' had already taken over the company. The deed of the takeover of the goods from that time gives a nice picture of what was in stock at that time.<br><br><br><br><br><br>|
  
Zelle 3=[[Bild:Andriessen 1.jpg|297px]]|
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Zelle 5=<center>[[Bild:Dyonisius Cornelis Andriessen.jpg|197px]]</center><br>|
Zelle 4='''Gabriël Andriessen (29.10.1818 11.7.1884)'''
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Zelle 6='''[[Andriessen, Dionisius Cornelis/de|Dionisius Cornelis Andriessen]] (27.2.1855 4.9.1912)'''
  
''Gabriël Andriessen'' war gelähmt und konnte deshalb weder in der Landwirtschaft noch in der
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Dionisius Cornelis turned out to be not only a talented watchmaker but also very artistic. As a young boy he already showed himself to be a gifted draftsman and at first it was not at all certain whether he would be able to take over his father's business, the clientele doubted whether he was as good as his father. He had rather modern ideas. For example, he was a strong advocate of the new flat French watches instead of the thick heavy English clocks. His first job was not as a watchmaker but he was appointed by the municipal authorities as "supervisor of hand drawing in the Stadsteekenschool", where he himself had been a pupil. After three years he decided to call it a day and resigned in [[1875/de|1875]] and went to work in his father's business. He increasingly takes over the work and since his marriage in [[1881/de|1881]], there is increasing talk of taking over the company, which then actually happens in [[1883/de|1883]].
Gastwirtschaft mitarbeiten. Er verfügte aber über eine hohe Auffassungsgabe und so beschloß die Familie für ihn einen passenden Beruf zu finden. ''Gabriël Andriessen'' zog nach Brüssel um das Uhrmacherhandwerk zu erlernen, laut den familieären Überlieferungen wohnte er bei einem entfernten Familienmitglied in Brüssel.
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Two girls have already been born in the family, but a son as successor only presents himself in [[1886/nl|1886]] Cornelis Johannes Gabriël. Eventually the family consists of 9 children, 5 of whom end up in the jewelry trade. Three sons became clergymen, '''[[Andriessen, Piet (1)/nl|Piet Andriessen]]''' first became a watchmaker and later a missionary priest in Bondo Congo. As the family grew, the company also grew; in addition to watches, the sale of gold and silverware was also taken up. In addition to the building on Bosstraat, the buildings Grote Markt 22 and 22a were purchased. D.C. Andriessen not only expanded the company, but he was also very active socially, including in the R.K. Poor Board and the board of the poorhouse, which is still known as "de Blok". His sudden death was not only a shock for the family but apparently also a loss for the city, given the reporting in the newspapers of those days.<br><br>|
  
Nachdem er zurückkommt nach Bergen op Zoom, eröffnet er einen eigenen Betrieb und
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Zelle 7=<center>[[Bild:Andriessen Cornelis.JPG|197px]]</center><br>|
lässt sich am [[18. Juli]] [[1848]] als Kaufmann von Gold- und Silberuhren einschreiben in das
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Zelle 8='''[[Andriessen, Cornelis/de|Cornelis Andriessen]] (20.4.1886 – 25.4.1982)'''
Genehmigungsregister der Gemeinde.
 
Kurze Zeit darauf kann er ein eigenes Haus in der Engelse Straat Nr. 42 mieten. Dieses
 
Haus mit Namen „Romijn“ stammte aus dem Jahr [[1610]] und hier wurde auch sein Sohn
 
und später Nachfolger Dionisius Cornelis geboren. Das Haus wurde jedoch 1889 abgerissen
 
und machte Platz für ein grösseres Gebäude. [[1859]] zog Gabriël mit seiner Familie um in
 
De Bosstraat, um eine grösseres Geschäft zu errichten (heutzutage Bosstraat). [[1884]] stirbt
 
Gabriël, ein Jahr zuvor hatte D.C. Andriessen den Betrieb bereits übernommen. Die Akte
 
der Übernahme der Waren jener Zeit gibt ein gutes Bild von dem, was damals in Vorrat
 
war.|
 
  
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It was quite a challenge for the young Cornelis and his brother Antoine to take over their father's company at such a young age. Admittedly, they had received a solid education at home and were good at their trade. Cornelis would take over the watch department and the optics department. Antoine was given the management of the goldsmith's shop (which can still be seen at Grote Markt 25, now a restaurant). The company was split into two separate businesses. The oldest part of the shop on Bosstraat was converted into a house for the widow, and the building on Grote Markt "St. Jacob" was expanded with the building next door "De Ketel". The old characteristic shop front was expanded entirely in style according to the original design by Architect van Genk. In [[1917/nl|1917]] the outdoor clock was hung on the facade. It was ordered from the firm [[Bahnzeit]] in [[Glashütte]] near Dresden in Germany. This small town is still known today for its watchmaking industry. '''[[Andriessen,  Jacques/nl|Jacques Andriessen]]''' , Cornelis' youngest brother, but also his brother-in-law '''[[Verhagen, Cornelis|Cor. Verhagen]]''' were able to complete their education there at the [[Deutsche Uhrmacherschule Glashütte|Deutsche Uhrmacherschule]]. If circumstances prevented Cornelis from attending this famous school, his son and successor '''Bernard Andriessen''' was able to do so. However, Cornelis was very gifted and a solid craftsman. The seconds regulator he built is a fine example of this. His dedication to the profession was reflected in his involvement in vocational training in the Netherlands, for many years and into old age. Many watchmakers took their exams with him. He was also known beyond the borders for his work as a board member of the Union Horlogère [[Alpina]]. He also had a special watch spring he had developed patented. His great hobby was billiards, which he often took as seriously as his profession. At the age of 80, he did not mind going on holiday to his son Piet in America.<br><br>|
  
Zelle 5=[[Bild:Andriessen 100 Jahre.jpg|297px]]|
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Zelle 9=<center>[[Bild:Andriessen, Bernard.jpg|197px]]</center>|
Zelle 6='''Dionisius Cornelis Andriessen (27.2.1855 – 4.9.1912)'''
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Zelle 10='''[[Andriessen, Bernard/de|Bernard Andriessen]] (16.4.1915 – 19.9.1987)'''
 
 
Dionisius Cornelis war nicht nur ein talentierter Uhrmacher, sondern auch sehr
 
künstlerisch veranlagt. Als kleiner Junge war er schon ein begabter Zeichner und es war zu
 
Anfang gar nicht so sicher, dass er das Geschäft des Vaters übernehmen
 
könnte, denn die Kundschaft bezweifelte, ob er wohl so gut wie sein Vater sei. Er hatte
 
moderne Ideen, war ein grosser Befürworter der modernen flachen französischen Uhren
 
anstelle der dicken schweren englischen Uhrwerke. Seine erste Anstellung war dann auch
 
kein Uhrmacher: er wurde vom Magistrat als „Lehrer beim Handzeichnen (Kunstzeichnen)
 
in der städtischen Zeichenschule“ angestellt, wo er selbst zuvor Schüler war. Nach drei
 
Jahren hat er genug und kündigt in 1875 und arbeitet weiter in der Firma seines Vaters.
 
Mehr und mehr übernimmt er die Geschäfte, und seit seiner Heirat in Jahre 1881 wird
 
öfter darüber gesprochen, den Betrieb zu übernehmen, was dann 1883 tatsächlich passiert.
 
In der Familie sind bereits zwei Töchter geboren, aber ein Sohn als Nachfolger kommt erst
 
1886: Cornelis Johannes Gabriël. Schliesslich besteht die Familie aus 9 Kindern, von denen
 
5 in der Juweliersbranche arbeiten. Obendrein war es sehr gebräuchlich, dass es in einer
 
grossen und gut katholischen Familie zumindest einige Geistliche gab. Auffallend ist auch
 
die späte Berufung von Pater Piet Andriessen, der erst das Uhrmacherhandweerk erlernt
 
hatte. Als Missionspater im Kongo gründete er in der Stadt Bondo eine Schule, in der man
 
den Beruf als Uhrmacher erlernen konnte. In dem Mass, in dem die Familie grösser wurde,
 
wuchs auch das Unternehmen, neben Uhrwerken wurde auch mit dem Verkauf von Goldund
 
Silbergegenständen begonnen. Neben dem Gebäude auf der Bosstraat wurden die
 
Häuser Grote Markt 22 und 22a gekauft. D.C. Andriessen baute nicht nur seinen Betrieb
 
weiter aus, er war auch auf sozialer Ebene sehr aktiv in der röm.-kath. Armenverwaltung
 
und in der Verwaltung des Armenhauses, das nog heute bekannt ist als „de Blok“. Sein
 
plötzlicher Tod war nicht nur ein Schock für die Familie, sondern offenbar auch ein Verlust
 
für die Stadt, was aus der Berichterstattung der Zeitungen jener Tage ersichtlich ist.|
 
 
 
Zelle 7=[[Bild:Andriessen 2.jpg|297px]]|
 
Zelle 8='''Cornelis Andriessen (20.4.1886 – 25.4.1982)'''
 
 
 
Für den jungen Cornelis und seinen Bruder Antoine war es eine grosse Herausforderung,
 
um so jung schon das Unternehmen des Vaters zu übernehmen. Sie hatten zwar zu Hause
 
eine gediegene Ausbildung erhalten und kannten ihren Beruf gut. Cornelis sollte die
 
Uhrwerkabteilung und auch die Abteilung Optik übernehmen. Antoine hatte die Leitung
 
über die Goldschmiederei (noch zu sehen am Gebäude auf dem Grote Markt 25, heute
 
Restaurant). Der Betrieb wurde in zwei eigene Firmen abgeteilt. Für die Witwe wurde der
 
älteste Teil des Ladens in der Bosstraat umgebaut als Wohnhaus, das Gebäude auf dem
 
Grote Markt „St. Jacob“ wurde vergrössert mit dem daneben gelegenen Haus „De Ketel“.
 
Die alte charakteristische Geschäftsfassade wurde total im Stil vergrössert nach dem
 
ursprünglichen Entwurf von Architekt van Genk. Im Jahre 1917 wird am Giebel die nog
 
stets funktionierende markante Aussenuhr befestigt. Diese wurde bei der Firma „Bahnzeit“
 
in Glashütte bei Dresden bestellt. Dieses kleine Städtchen ist heutzutage noch immer
 
bekannt wegen seiner Uhrwerkindustrie. Jacques, jüngster Bruder von Cornelis, aber auch
 
sein Schwager Cor. Verhagen konnten dort an der Deutschen Uhrmacherschule ihre
 
Ausbildung beendigen. War es für Cornelis durch die Umstände nicht möglich gewesen,
 
auf diese berühmte Schule zu gehen, so konnte sein Sohn und Nachfolger Bernard wohl
 
dorthin gehen. Cornelis war ein sehr begabter und gediegener Fachmann. Der von ihm
 
gebaute Sekundenregulator gibt davon ein schönes Vorbild. Sein Einsatz für das Fach zeigte
 
sich besonders in seiner Mitarbeit der Fachausbildungen in den Niederlanden, er war
 
jahrelang und bis ins hohe Alter Examinator. Viele Uhrmacher haben bei ihm ihr Examen
 
abgelegt. Auch über die Grenzen hinaus war er bekannt durch seine Arbeit als
 
Vorstandsmitglied der Union Horlogère Alpina. Daneben liess er eine von ihm entwickelte
 
speziale Aufzugsfeder patentieren. Sein grosses Hobby war Billard spielen, was er oft genau
 
so seriös wie seinen Beruf ausübte. Zu seinem 80. Geburtstag fand er es noch gut, um
 
seinen Sohn Piet in Amerika in den Ferien zu besuchen.
 
( Jacques Andriessen arbeitete nach seiner ausbildung ein halbes Jahr bei Lange & Söhne
 
in Glashütte )|
 
 
 
 
 
Zelle 9=[[Bild:Andriessen, Bernard.jpg|297px]]|
 
Zelle 10='''[[Bernard Andriessen]] (16.4.1915 – 19.9.1987)'''
 
 
 
Ihm war als ältester Sohn vorbestimmt, die Nachfolgeschaft seines Vaters zu übernehmen
 
Also bekam er erst seine Ausbildung im elterlichen Betrieb, um sich 1936 an der Deutschen
 
Uhrmacherschule anzumelden. Hier fertigte er ein Mikrometer an, seine eigene Taschenuhr
 
und ein Gangmodell, was ein vergrössertes Modell ist von einer Unruh, einem Anker und
 
Ankerrad, so wie dies auch in der Uhr anzutreffen ist. Für seine besonderen Leistungen
 
empfing er die Moritz Grossmann Urkunde. In den Niederlanden machte er auch noch
 
seinen „Meister“ Titel. Er war jahrelang Mitglied der Examenskommission und
 
Verwaltungsmitglied der Fachschule in Schoonhoven. Neben seiner Uhrmacherausbildung
 
interessierte er sich sehr für die Elektronik. Die Entwicklung von Radio und später
 
Fernsehen brachten ihn dazu, auch in dieser Richtung Pioniersarbeit zu leisten. Nach der
 
Betriebsübernahme von seinem Sohn Piet im Jahr 1979 wurden diese Aktivitäten wie auch
 
die Optik abgestossen. Da Antoine und seine Nachkommen den Betrieb verliessen und
 
nach Steenbergen gingen, war es wieder möglich geworden, um in der von Gabriël
 
Andriessen gegründeten Firma Schmuck zu verkaufen. Gegen Ende der 70er Jahre nahm er
 
wieder Kontakt auf mit seinen Mitschülern von der Schule in Glashütte. Dieser war durch
 
die Kriegsgeschehen total verlorengegangen. Bernard blieb bis zu seinem Tod aktiv im
 
Geschäft.|
 
  
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Bernard, as the eldest son, was destined to follow in his father's footsteps in the trade, so he first received his training in the parental business, before enrolling in the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule in [[1936/nl|1936]]. Here he made a micrometer, his own pocket watch and a model of a escapement, which is an enlarged model of a balance, lever (anchor in Germen an Dutch) and escapement wheel as can also be found in a watch. For his special achievements he received the [[Grossmann-Stiftung|Moritz Grossmann]] certificate. He also obtained his "Master" title in the Netherlands. For many years he was a member of the examination committee and board member of the [[Vakschool Schoonhoven/nl|Vakschool Schoonhoven]]. In addition to his watchmaker training he was very interested in electronics. The rise of radio and later television made him decide to pioneer in this direction as well. After the takeover by his son Piet in [[1979/de|1979]] these activities and also the optics were sold off. The departure of the business of Antoine and his descendants to Steenbergen gave the opportunity to sell jewelry in the business founded by Gabriël Andriessen. At the end of the 70s, he re-established ties with his fellow students from the school in Glashütte. These had been completely lost due to the war. Bernard remained active in the business until his death.<br><br><br><br><br>|
 
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[[Kategorie:Biographie]]
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[[Kategorie:Biographie A]]
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[[Categorie:English]]

Aktuelle Version vom 4. Februar 2025, 14:08 Uhr

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Beleg van Bergen op Zoom 1747.jpeg
The Siege of Bergen op Zoom 1747

Het Nederlandsch Koffiehuis, Grote Markt 19.jpg
The Dutch Coffee House
Grote Markt 19


Our family history in Bergen op Zoom

Andriessen settles in Bergen op Zoom

Long before 1700 there are Andriessen families in Bergen op Zoom and the surrounding area, one of these families starts with a certain Jordanus Andriessen(Jordanus Andreae) who marries Catharina Jansen on Tuesday February 4, 1642 in Essen, he died on May 28, 1660 in Essen (Spilbeek). One of his children, Nicolaus Janssen Andriessen was baptized in Nispen in 1656 but lived in Essen, now in Belgium. Essen belonged to the parish of Nispen but was not located in the Marquisate of Bergen op Zoom. According to Belgian sources, the origin of the Andriessen families lay north of Turnhout. Even today, several Andriessen families live in Ravels and Essen. In 1722 a certain Johannes Claessen Andriessen, the son of Nicolaus Janssen Andriessen, is working as a farmer and widower from Essen in Borgvliet, south of the city of Bergen op Zoom. It is a settlement that already existed before 1200, making it one of the oldest in West Brabant. Johannes Claessen Andriessen, known as Jan for short, married Theuntje Cornelissen Meeuwense on April 17, 1726. His first marriage to Paulina Rombouts van Caem was probably concluded on 24 May, 1722 in Bergen op Zoom, and was therefore of short duration. His second marriage to Theuntje is also short, because he becomes a widower again. On February 15, 1733 he marries for the third time to a certain Gregoria Verdult. From this marriage no less than 9 children were born, and Jan thus became the progenitor of many Andriessen families in the Netherlands. Jan Andriessen died on December 19, 1746 a few months before the French siege in 1747, his youngest child Gommaris had just been baptized. Due to all the war violence, Borgvliet was unable to develop further as a village. Even after the French invasion of 1747, it remained a small village with only a few farms and a pump. Bergen op Zoom was taken, plundered and set on fire. The losses during the siege can be called disproportionate: 5,250 dead on the French side and about 5,000 on the Dutch. The city was plundered and burned for hours after its capture, with approximately 2,000 of the 5,000 inhabitants losing their lives and around 1,000 wounded. The brutal plundering of the city was condemned throughout Europe, and only three of Jan's children are known to have survived the siege. His eldest son Jacobus Andriessen became a citizen of the city of Bergen op Zoom in 1763, and in addition to being a farmer, he was also a "coffee house owner" or innkeeper. Eventually he would owns the famous coffee house "den Engel". (Later the Dutch coffee house and the former Roxy cinema, from December 2007 a dance school and since 2013 again in use as a cafe, a party venue and Theater "den Engel"). Apparently they did very well, as many family members worked in the business. Grandson Gabriël Andriessen, born in 1818, was able to go to school as a young boy, which meant that his father had a reasonable income. Gabriel Andriessen was the founder of the watch and jewelry company in 1848.


Gabriel Andriessen.jpg

Gabriël Andriessen (29.10.1818 – 11.7.1884)

Gabriël Andriessen was unfortunately lame and could not keep up with the farm and it would certainly not be easy for him to be an innkeeper either. However, he was a good student and it was decided to choose a suitable profession for him. He would leave for Brussels to train as a "watchmaker", according to tradition he had lodgings with a distant relative. When he returned to Bergen op Zoom he started his own company and on 18. July 1848 registered himself in the guarantee register as a merchant of gold and silver watches. Shortly afterwards he was able to rent his own building in the Engelse Staat number 42. This building called "Romeijn" dated from 1610 and it was also here that his son and later successor Dionisius Cornelis was born. However, the building was demolished in 1889 to make way for a larger building. In 1859 Gabriel and his family moved to the Bosstraat to set up a larger shop. (now Bosstraat 1) In 1884 Gabriël dies, a year earlier Dionisius Cornelis Andriessen had already taken over the company. The deed of the takeover of the goods from that time gives a nice picture of what was in stock at that time.





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Dionisius Cornelis Andriessen (27.2.1855 – 4.9.1912)

Dionisius Cornelis turned out to be not only a talented watchmaker but also very artistic. As a young boy he already showed himself to be a gifted draftsman and at first it was not at all certain whether he would be able to take over his father's business, the clientele doubted whether he was as good as his father. He had rather modern ideas. For example, he was a strong advocate of the new flat French watches instead of the thick heavy English clocks. His first job was not as a watchmaker but he was appointed by the municipal authorities as "supervisor of hand drawing in the Stadsteekenschool", where he himself had been a pupil. After three years he decided to call it a day and resigned in 1875 and went to work in his father's business. He increasingly takes over the work and since his marriage in 1881, there is increasing talk of taking over the company, which then actually happens in 1883. Two girls have already been born in the family, but a son as successor only presents himself in 1886 Cornelis Johannes Gabriël. Eventually the family consists of 9 children, 5 of whom end up in the jewelry trade. Three sons became clergymen, Piet Andriessen first became a watchmaker and later a missionary priest in Bondo Congo. As the family grew, the company also grew; in addition to watches, the sale of gold and silverware was also taken up. In addition to the building on Bosstraat, the buildings Grote Markt 22 and 22a were purchased. D.C. Andriessen not only expanded the company, but he was also very active socially, including in the R.K. Poor Board and the board of the poorhouse, which is still known as "de Blok". His sudden death was not only a shock for the family but apparently also a loss for the city, given the reporting in the newspapers of those days.

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Cornelis Andriessen (20.4.1886 – 25.4.1982)

It was quite a challenge for the young Cornelis and his brother Antoine to take over their father's company at such a young age. Admittedly, they had received a solid education at home and were good at their trade. Cornelis would take over the watch department and the optics department. Antoine was given the management of the goldsmith's shop (which can still be seen at Grote Markt 25, now a restaurant). The company was split into two separate businesses. The oldest part of the shop on Bosstraat was converted into a house for the widow, and the building on Grote Markt "St. Jacob" was expanded with the building next door "De Ketel". The old characteristic shop front was expanded entirely in style according to the original design by Architect van Genk. In 1917 the outdoor clock was hung on the facade. It was ordered from the firm Bahnzeit in Glashütte near Dresden in Germany. This small town is still known today for its watchmaking industry. Jacques Andriessen , Cornelis' youngest brother, but also his brother-in-law Cor. Verhagen were able to complete their education there at the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule. If circumstances prevented Cornelis from attending this famous school, his son and successor Bernard Andriessen was able to do so. However, Cornelis was very gifted and a solid craftsman. The seconds regulator he built is a fine example of this. His dedication to the profession was reflected in his involvement in vocational training in the Netherlands, for many years and into old age. Many watchmakers took their exams with him. He was also known beyond the borders for his work as a board member of the Union Horlogère Alpina. He also had a special watch spring he had developed patented. His great hobby was billiards, which he often took as seriously as his profession. At the age of 80, he did not mind going on holiday to his son Piet in America.

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Bernard Andriessen (16.4.1915 – 19.9.1987)

Bernard, as the eldest son, was destined to follow in his father's footsteps in the trade, so he first received his training in the parental business, before enrolling in the Deutsche Uhrmacherschule in 1936. Here he made a micrometer, his own pocket watch and a model of a escapement, which is an enlarged model of a balance, lever (anchor in Germen an Dutch) and escapement wheel as can also be found in a watch. For his special achievements he received the Moritz Grossmann certificate. He also obtained his "Master" title in the Netherlands. For many years he was a member of the examination committee and board member of the Vakschool Schoonhoven. In addition to his watchmaker training he was very interested in electronics. The rise of radio and later television made him decide to pioneer in this direction as well. After the takeover by his son Piet in 1979 these activities and also the optics were sold off. The departure of the business of Antoine and his descendants to Steenbergen gave the opportunity to sell jewelry in the business founded by Gabriël Andriessen. At the end of the 70s, he re-established ties with his fellow students from the school in Glashütte. These had been completely lost due to the war. Bernard remained active in the business until his death.