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Then to Oosterhout , and back towards the camp. After passing through Nijmegen once again the military have a piece by themselves, and a kilometer or so before the camp we come to a bowling alley. The establishment puts out a beer tap and tables out front and those who have the time sit and have a beer before taking the last of the route back to camp. (walking.about.com....megen1.htm)

In deference to local building practice, the monasteries at Quarr and Oosterhout were both built principally of load-bearing brickwork though for reasons of economy, most of the bricks used were cheap Belgian imports from Zandvoorde near Ostend. As Dom Bellot had been taught little or nothing about brickwork at the Ecole des BeauxArts, he stopped off on his outward journey to Oosterhout in 1906, to collect such technical information as his father, the architecte-verificateur Paul-Emile Bellot, had been able to find on the subject in Paris. In the course of the next 12 months, he divided his time between the drawing-board and the building site and learnt a very great deal, not least that bricklayers are not much inclined to read plans. He kept a close eye on them and, when necessary, placed the bricks himself, to demonstrate his design intentions.(8) His father sent him a constant stream of technical tips through the post, on such matters as down-pipe dimensions and gutter flashings, and travelled twice to Oosterhout to inspect the progress of the work (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

What is more, it was to his father in Paris that Dom Bellot sent his working drawings, to have prints made for the contractor at Oosterhout and Bellot pere did not hesitate to let his son know of any errors in the construction details that caught his eagle eye (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

A second building campaign followed at Oosterhout in 1908-1909. During this second stay in the Netherlands , Dom Bellot became better acquainted with Dutch architecture. He was contacted by two Dutch architects then actively engaged in promoting artistic and architectural forms they considered appropriate to the revived Catholic liturgy in the Netherlands Jan Stuyt (1868-1934) and Joseph Cuypers (1861-1941, son of the great P.J.H. Cuypers). Stuyt plied him with information about contemporary and historic Dutch architecture and, in January 1909, Dom Bellot made an architectural tour of Amsterdam . As he later acknowledged, the corbels of brick and stone in the Sacristy at Oosterhout bear a striking resemblance to those in the main trading hall of H.P. Berlage's Amsterdam Stock Exchange. But, far from employing these corbels to support a steel roof structure, as Berlage had done, Dom Bellot used them in conjunction with an extraordinary honeycomb of a brick structure, very possibly modelled on Catalan precedents, designed to modulate daylight penetration from skylights in the tiled roof coverin (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

This phase of the works, which also encompassed a monumental staircase, new cells and kitchens, and the enlargement of the Refectory and cloister, was completed at Oosterhout in December 1909 (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

) was born 29/04/1907 in Oostburg (NL), and died 24/09/1966 in Oosterhout (NL). He married Adriana Maria Elisabeth Joosen . She was born 24/05/1909 in Oosterhout (NL) (users.skynet.be....scenda.htm)

• Voorouder: Michiel Jansse, geb. ca. 1600, landbouwer te Oosterhout , in 1662 vermeld met de familienaam Vermeulen, "waarschijnlijk een verwijzing naar een voorvader die molenaar was geweest" [T. Seelen, De geschiedenis van de Westkempische familie Michiel Jansse Vermeulen 1600-1993, Maastricht 1993; vgl. Genealogie-CBG 1 (1995), nr 1, p 15 (home.planet.nl....m-alg.html)

Circa 40.000 huishoudens in Oosterhout , Breda, Tilburg en Geertruidenberg zaten gisteren zonder verwarming na een breuk in een leiding bij de Amercentrale in Geertruidenberg. Die was binnen een uur hersteld, maar het opstarten duurde veel langer dan Essent had verwach (www.nos.nl....60587.html)

Documentation will be provided assuming the above is consideredsatisfactory for inclusion without major changes .The attached diff does not include the diff of configure because I'mevidently running a different version and result was 200KB of uselessstuff. The full patch is available here: http://svana.org/kleptog/temp/gnutls.patch Just running autoconf on the local machine should also work.Have a nice day,- Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org http://svana.org/kleptog/ From each according to his ability. To each according to his ability to litigate (archives.postgresql.org....g00040.php)

In Strijen lag het percentage nog iets hoger, maar Puttershoek spande de kroon. Hier waren bijna alle schepenen er ook geboren. De schepenen die niet in Puttershoek waren geboren, drie stuks in totaal, kwamen niet van ver. E 3; n kwam uit het oostelijk deel van de Hoeksche Waard, de anderen kwamen van het eiland IJsselmonde, uit respektievelijk Ridderkerk en de Lind. Deze schepen uit de Lind, Jacob van Vliet, werd later schout. Opvallend was dat de schepenen van Puttersho ek, net als de schouten, van dichtbij kwamen. De schepenen van Maasdam kwamen praktisch allemaal uit de Hoeksche Waard. De twee die hier niet vandaan kwamen, waren afkomstig uit Rijsoord en Oosterhout . Het dorp Maasdam ligt in de Hoeksche Waard en niet zoz eer aan de rand ervan, zoals Puttershoek en 's-Gravendeel. Men zou denken dat daarom vrijwel alle schepenen uit de Waard zelf kwamen, maar dit gaat niet echt op. Want Puttershoek, dat aan het water ligt, had net als Maasdam de meeste schepenen uit de Hoek sche Waard en zelfs het meerendeel uit het dorp zel (www.zoeteman.ne....tuur1.html)

Paul Bellot had hoped to marry Hulot's sister, but she chose instead to become a Carmelite nun a decision that led him to abandon his budding career as an architect in Paris and to join the Benedictine monks of Solesmes in their exile on the Isle of Wight.(5) As a newly arrived novice, he was 'requistioned' by the monk-architect Dom Jules Mellet(6) for a few days in the autumn of 1902, to copy plans of the temporary timber-and-corrugated-iron church the latter had designed for the monastic community, and he probably imagined any future demands on his skills as an architect would be no less modest after he had taken his monastic vows in 1904. But, in March 1906, he was summarily dispatched to the Netherlands by his Abbot, to supervise the construction of a Benedictine monastery at Oosterhout , near Breda.(7) No doubt it was the efficiency with which Dom Bellot accomplished the first building phase there in 1906-1907 that prompted the Abbot of Solesmes to give him the task of designing the new Abbey at Quarr for his mother house in 1907 (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

The first phase the cloister, enclosed on two sides by ranges containing the Chapter House and the Refectory, was completed in April 1907 and, soon after the monks of Saint-Paul-de-Wisques had moved to Oosterhout from Belgium , Dom Bellot returned to the Isle of Wight, to make a start on the new Quarr Abbey. Whereas the Oosterhout monastery was built on a green-field site for a small community (a total of 21 monks' cells was envisaged at the outset), a mid-nineteenth-century villa had to be adapted and extended for the use of 100 monks in little more than a year at Quarr (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

Dom Bellot seems to have been based at Quarr to supervise construction from June 1907, with an advance party of monks charged with such tasks as the preparation of the kitchen garden. His father continued to send him copious advice through the post from Paris, and Edward Goldie,(10) the Catholic English architect who had designed the church built at Ryde in 1906-1907 for the nuns of Sainte-Cecile-de-Solesmes, agreed to be named as arbiter in the contract documents for Quarr. Although Goldie may, perhaps, have met Dom Bellot at Appuldurcombe in 1907, he had no hand in designing the new Quarr Abbey. Dom Bellot's approach at Quarr in 1907-1908 flowed directly from his work at Oosterhout in 1906-1907: the Refectory and Chapter House interiors of the two monasteries show how rapidly he overcame initial misgivings about applying masonry principles to brick, which he deployed with growing confidence seemingly to the chagrin of Isle of Wight bricklayers. According to the late Dom Gabriel Tissot, they disliked working with the bricks imported from Belgium because these were much harder than the local bricks to which they were accustome (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

It is, perhaps, difficult to appreciate how great the challenge of employing exposed brickwork for so important a project as the new Abbey church for his mother house must have seemed to Dom Bellot in 1910. Brick was then generally despised in France and although Viollet-le-Duc's disciples had long campaigned against the French habit of concealing brickwork behind stone cladding or stucco, their efforts had produced few new brick buildings of note. No doubt Dom Bellot was encouraged to pursue and distil his own interpretation of how Viollet-le-Duc's theories on the appropriate uses of materials should be applied to brick by an encounter with H.P. Berlage at Oosterhout on 10 April 1910. The celebrated Dutch architect is said to have been very favourably impressed by the monastery buildings,(14) and this meeting may also, perhaps, have stimulated Dom Bellot's nascent interest in the theory of proportions. (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

The means he employed to exploit the structural potential of brick in the new Quarr Abbey church owed much to his reading of Auguste Choisy's analysis of the history of architecture,(19) enriched by his own experiments in earlier building phases at Oosterhout and Quarr, by his recently acquired knowledge of Dutch architecture and the first-hand studies he had made as a student of Mozarabic, Mudejar, Romanesque and Gothic architecture in Spain.(20) For good measure, acoustic principles he had learned from a Dutch Jesuit in 1907 were applied to the design, as was a system of proportions based on the equilateral triangle inspired by the writings of fellow Benedictines.(21) (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

7 The monastery at Oosterhout was built for the Priory of Saint-Paul-de-Wisques, a Benedictine community founded by the Abbey of Solesmes. The monks had left Wisques for Belgium in 1901. The Wisques monks were told Dom Bellot had been sent to Oosterhout to supervise the building works. However, Dom Bellot seems to have had carte blanche from his Abbot to amend the designs. He had revised the overall plan and negotiated substantial modifications to the contract documents in time for a site meeting with Paul Vilain, the initial architect, early in April 1906. The latter promptly resigned from the job. Archives, Abbey of Saint-Paul-de-Wisques, Abbey of Saint Paul, Oosterhout , and Abbey of Saint-Pierre-de-Solesmes (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

8 When he first arrived at Oosterhout , Dom Bellot spoke no Dutch and had to use such means he could to communicate with the bricklayers on site. His formal dealings with the main contractor were sometimes conducted with the help of the Benedictine nuns at the Abbey of Notre-Dame-de-Wisques, and sometimes with the aid of their chaplain, Dom Assemaine, with whom he shared lodgings and who took on the task of translating the Specification 'with the best will in the world' using such Dutch as he had picked up from his studies of Flemish mystics. Archives, Abbey of Saint-Pierre-de-Solesmes (www.encyclopedia.com....71782.html)

For anything more complex you're probably happier doing your string manipulations in the client just because SQL's string primitives are so, well, primitive.I think you're making the assumption that client locale support isgoing to be better than the server's.Besides, pg_strxfrm doesn't help you if you want to doaccent-insensetive matching. Sometimes you don't just want to changethe order, you also want to change what is equal.Have a nice day,- Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org http://svana.org/kleptog/ From each according to his ability. To each according to his ability to litigate (archives.postgresql.org....g00662.php)

On Tue, Dec 19, 2006 at 10:48:41AM -0500, Andrew Dunstan wrote: Sure, but the only sane way I can think of to do that would be have separate logical and physical orderings, with a map between the two. I guess we'd need to see what the potential space savings would be and establish what the processing overhead would be, before considering it. One side advantage would be that it would allow us to do the often requested add column at position x .A patch to allow seperate physical and logical orderings was submittedand rejected. Unless something has changed on that front, anydiscussion in this direction isn't really useful.Once this is possible it would allow a lot of simple savings. Forexample, shifting all fixed width fields to the front means they canall be accessed without looping through the previous columns, forexample.Have a nice day,- Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org http://svana.org/kleptog/ From each according to his ability. To each according to his ability to litiga (archives.postgresql.org....g00782.php)

4*c1 from c where tag(c1) = 'AUD'; ?column? - -72.58 AUD 75.60 AUD(2 rows)test=# select t, timestamp (t), date_part('hour',t) from c; t timestamp date_part -+-+- 2005-08-14 02:00:00+02 Europe /Amsterdam 2005-08-14 02:00:00 2 2005-08-14 02:00:00+02 Australia /Sydney 2005-08-14 10:00:00 10 2005-08-14 02:00:00+02 Asia/Hong_Kong 2005-08-14 08:00:00 8 2005-08-14 02:00:00+02 America/New_York 2005-08-13 20:00:00 20 2005-08-14 02:00:00+02 Asia/Kuwait 2005-08-14 03:00:00 3(5 rows)- Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org http://svana.org/kleptog/ Patent. n. Genius is 5% inspiration and 95% perspiration. A patent is a tool for doing 5% of the work and then sitting around waiting for someone else to do the other 95% so you can sue them (archives.postgresql.org....g01432.php)

Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org writes: ISTM theat the easiest way would be to introduce a sort of predicate like so: SELECT * FROM foo, bar WHERE pg_selectivity(foo.a = bar.a, 0.1);The one saving grace of Florian's proposal was that you could go hackthe statistics *without* changing your queries. This throws that awayagain.The thing I object to about the I want to decorate my queries withplanner hints mindset is that it's coming at it from the wrongdirection. You should never be thinking in terms of fix this onequery , because that just leads back into the same dead end that yourfix doesn't work tomorrow. What you *should* be thinking about is whydid the planner get this wrong, and how do I fix the generic problem? .If you attack it that way then your fix is much more likely to work onthe next slightly-different query.So some kind of override for statistical guesses doesn't seem completelysilly to me. But it needs to be declarative information that's storedsomewhere out of view of the actual SQL queri (archives.postgresql.org....g00506.php)

Stephan Vollmer reported low GiST indexing performance with tsearch2.Tom Lane and Martijn van Oosterhout investigated and after somediscussion on the performance list they identified a bit countingfunction as the culprit. Tom committed an alternative implementationusing a static lookup table to various contrib modules (intarray,ltree, trgm and tsearch2) that resulted in a 20x performanceimprovement for large indexes. Discussion about further improving theso called "picksplit" algorithm for another 10x gain ensued but didnot reach a conclusive resolution, at least not for the 8.1 branch (www.postgresql.org....wn20060129)

Bruce McAlister wrote: Martijn van Oosterhout wrote: All the values here look OK, except one: On Thu, Jun 28, 2007 at 07:50:36AM +0100, Bruce McAlister wrote: blueface-crm=# select oid, relfrozenxid from pg_class where relkind in ('r', 't'); oid relfrozenxid -+- 2570051 2947120794 Whatever this table is, the freeze XID isn't getting updated for some reason.Doh. This looks like a temporary relation, temp4295 2947120794 Is there a way we can manually force these to update?No. Only the session that created the temp table can vacuum it.Autovacuum skips temp tables. I guess the only thing you can do here isclose that session.I'm thinking that maybe should make vac_update_datfrozenxid ignore temptables. But this doesn't really work, because if we were to truncatepg_clog there would be tuples on the temp table marked with XIDs thatare nowhere to be found. Maybe we could make some noise about itthough.This is a problem only in recent releases (8.2) because we startedallowing the max freeze age be configurabl (archives.postgresql.org....g01645.php)

Zij is getrouwd te Breda op maandag 14 augustus 1944, getrouwd te Breda op woensdag 16 augustus 1944 voor de kerk, op 29-jarige leeftijd met Johannes Christianus Marijnissen (Jan) (33 jaar oud), leraar, geboren te Princenhage op zondag 15 januari 1911, overleden te Breda op maandag 11 december 1989, 78 jaar oud, zoon van Johannes Marijnissen en Maria Petronella Rombouts . (Hij is later getrouwd te Breda op donderdag 3 december 1981, op 70-jarige leeftijd met Petronella Leenaarts (Nelly) (65 jaar oud), geboren te Oosterhout op zaterdag 8 juli 1916, overleden te Breda op zaterdag 24 november 1990, 74 jaar oud. (Zij was weduwe van Joachim de Bont , overleden voor zaterdag 24 november 1990. Zij was daarnaast gehuwd met Jan van de Maagdenburg , overleden voor zaterdag 24 november 1990.) (web.inter.nl.net....kw018.html)

Tom Lane wrote: Martijn van Oosterhout kleptog at svana dot org writes: And as a counter-example: pg_dump should absolutly not use the client locale, it should always dump as the same encoding as the server. Sure, but pg_dump should set that explicitly. I'm prepared to believe that looking at the locale is sane for all normal clients.What are normal clients ? I would think that programs in PHP or Perlhave their own idea of the correct encoding (JDBC already has one). It might be worth providing a way to set the client _encoding through a PQconnectdb connection-string keyword, just in case the override-via- PGCLIENTENCODING dodge doesn't suit someone. The priority order would presumably be connection string, then PGCLIENTENCODING, then locale.This sounds like a good idea anyway.- Alvaro Herrera http://www.CommandPrompt.com/ PostgreSQL Replication, Consulting, Custom Development, 24x7 suppor (archives.postgresql.org....g01696.php)

Convents of Norbertine Nuns (the Second Order). Oosterhout Priory , Holland , 48 nuns . Neerpelt Priory , Belgium , 23 nuns . Bonlieu Abbey , nuns expelled from France , reassembled at Grimbergen, Belgium , 36 nuns . Le Mesnil-St-Denis Priory , Seine et Oise, France , 31 nuns . Abbey of St. Sophia, Toro, Spain , 22 nuns . Abbey of St. Maria near Zamora , Villoria de Orbigo, Spain , 16 nuns . Zwierzyniec, near Cracow , Austrian Poland , 47 nuns . Imbramowice Abbey , Russian Poland for a great many years the nuns were not allowed to admit novices , but some years ago leave was given with great restrictions by the Russian government to admit a few. The Abbey of Czerwinsko, where there were only six very old nuns , was suppressed and the nuns sent to Imbramowice. Several novices were admitted, and at present there are at this convent 9 nuns . Priory of Berg Sion, near Utznach, in the Diocese of St. Gall, Switzerland , 30 nuns . Convent of Norbertine Nuns , Third Order , St. Joseph's at Heiligenberg, near Olmütz , with branch house S (www.newadvent.org....12387b.htm)

American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology; 3/1/2007; Heijink, Irene H; Kies, P Marcel; van Oosterhout , Antoon J M; Postma, Dirkje S; Et al; 7834 words; . TARC release are unclear. Since airway epithelium is the first line of defense to inhaled . 16HBE cells and primary bronchial asthma epithelium . Real-time PCR and immunofluorescence . induces TARC expression in bronchial epithelium . Supernatants from Der p-stimulated . Variability of antioxidant-related gene expression in the airway epithelium of cigarette smoker (www.encyclopedia.com....theli.html)

Marritie, 2 Philippe (twins?); Philip Geerardts, Pieter Wolfertszen,Marritie Geerardts, Thomas Hall, Hester ter Neuf25 Oct; Jan Janszen Van Oosterhout ; Hendrick; Hendrick Pieterszen, Pieter Janszen,Engeltje Jans25 Oct; Andries Roos Van der Lipstradt; Lysbeth; Jan de Jonge, Cornelia de Jong, Hillegond Joris1 Nov; Hendrick Van Diepenbroeek; Rebecca ; Lucas de Corporael, Aeltje Schryvers,Lysbeth Pieters5 Nov; Jan Janszen Van Boertang; Johannes; Theunis Craey, Lyntie Hendricks8 Nov; Hendrick Barents, Hermtje Gerrits; Anneken; Claes Eldertszen, Barbel Janszen,Janneken Gerrits8 Nov; Johannes Nevius; Johannes; David Jaspyn and his wife, Cornelis de Potter and his wife22 Nov; Coenraet ten Eyck; Coenraedt; Evert Duycking, Sara Steendam22 Nov; Claes Cromtap; (no other info)22 Nov; Abraham Janszen, Fortuyn; (no other info)22 Nov; Hage Bruynse; Bruyn; Lambert Huybertszen, Cors Janszen29 Nov; Jan Janszen Breestede; Engel; Volckert Janszen, Jan Andrieszen, Engeltje Jans6 Dec; Willem Pieterszen; Pieter; Borger Joriszen, Andries de Haes, Engeltje Mans, TryntieHagedoorn13 Dec; Pieter Stoutenburg; (no name given); no witnesses20 Dec; Theunis Janszen; Marritje; Heyltje Pieters25 Dec; Albert Pieterszen-Swiss; Marritje; Laurens de Drayer, Helena Blommaert (www.altlaw.com....tchbap.htm)

2 Jan; Augustyn Heermans, Jannetje Verleth; Casparus; Capt. Brian Neuton2 Jan; Jacob Walings, Tryntie Jacobs; Annetie; Widem Janszen9 Jan; Andries Hop, Geertie Hendricks; Hendrick; Cornelis Aertszen, Belitje Hendricks16 Jan; Warner Wesselszen, Anna Maskop; Elisabeth; no witnesses16 Jan; Jan Peeck, Maria de Terwick; Jacobus; Fredrick Lubbertszen, Simon de Groot, Tysje Willems16 Jan; Hendrick Janszen Van Utrecht , Tryntie Willems; Willem; Hilletje Idens19 Jan; Hans Dreper, Marritie Pieters; Styntie; Geertruyd Jans23 Jan; Pieter Pieterszen; Sytie; Hendrick Hendrickszen, Claes Bording; Tryntie Corsen26 Jan; Nicolaes de Meyer, Lydia Van Dyck; Johannes; Hendrick Van Dyck and his wife, Willem Beecksman30 Jan; Hendrick Sweeren, Egbertje Jans; Johannes; Mr. Gysbert Van Imbroeck, Thomas Jacobszen, Dirckje Jans2 Feb; Jan Corn. Buys, Ybetje Lubberts; Lubbert; Jan Damien, Pieterje de Ruyter9 Feb; Jan Janszen Van Oosterhout , Anna Hendricks; Hendrick; Lysbeth Dircks20 Feb; Jan Gerritszen Van Boxtel, Grietje Jans; Gerrit; Jacob Willemszen, Aeltie Carstens1 Mar; Jean de Pre, Margariet Jans; Andries; Simon Pel, Adriaen Vienzan, Anna Vienzan5 Mar; Alexander d'Hinjasa, Margarita de Haes; Alexander; Frans Fyn-Cap (www.altlaw.com....tchbap.htm)

Engelbert I's other titles were Lord of Polanen; Lord of Grimbergen (1/2 title); Lord of Geertruiden, N iervaart, Klundert, Oosterhout , Naaldwijk , Steenbergen, Castricum, Monster , Rijswijk, Princenhage, Sprundel, Dongen , and the Lek on August 1, 1403 (from his wife's side)' Lord of Drimmelen in 1411; Count of Nassau in Siegen, Dillenburg , Hadamar, and Herborn (with his brothers) on September 4, 1416 August 1, 1425); Count of Vianden, Lord of Sankt-Vith, Butgenbach, Daasberg, 1/2 Grimberger, Corry, Frasnes, and Londerzed in 1417; Count of Nassau in Herborn (soley) on August 1, 1425; Member of the Council in Brabant (1405-1406)(1409-1418)(1421-1442); a Member of the Council of Holland from 1405-1420 (www.angelfire.com....assau.html)

177Fix.Sally ROSENKRANS-3016 was born about 1752.178Fx.Flora ROSENKRANS-3017 was born 1760.179Fxi.Jemima ROSENKRANS-3018 was born 1760.180Fxii.1 ROSENKRANS-3019 was born about 1758.127.Herman ROSENKRANS-481 was christened 28 Mar 1703 in Kingston, Ulster, NY. He died in Rosetown, PA.Herman married (1) Arreantie OSTERHOUT-686 on 29 Apr 1725 in Ulster, NY. Arreantie was born 29 Sep 1706 in Ulster, NY. She died in Rosetown, PA.OSTERHOUT = OOSTERHOUT . PROBABLY BROTHER TO ALBERT OR OLDERT OSTERHOUT.Herman and Arreantie had the following children:181Mi.Dirk ROSENKRANS-2646 was born 6 Jul 1726 in Kingston, NY. He died in Port Jervis, New York .Dirk married (1) Catrina VAN AUKEN-2793 on 21 Aug 1747 in Rosetown, PA. Catrina was born about 1726. She died in Port Jervis, NY.+182Fii.Catrina ROSENKRANS-2647 was born 16 Jun 1728.183Miii.PETRUS ROSENKRANS-2648 was born 25 Dec 1732 in Kingston, NY.+184Fiv.Arreantie ROSENKRANS-2649 was born 18 May 1736.+185Mv.Jacobus ROSENKRANS-2650 was born 21 Apr 1745.186M (familytreemaker.genealogy.com....42text.txt)

, NY. Her father was "Jacobus" Brink bp. July 05, 1747 (same RDC), her mother was Arriantje Rosenkrans bp. March 11, 1753 (same RDC) to Dirck Rosenkrans and Catrina Van Auken.The Arriantje Rosenkrans bp. May 18, 1736 was the dau of Herman Rosenkrans and Arriantje Oosterhout but this Arriantje was not married to any Brink. Her 2 spouses were Petrus Westfall in 1754 and John Leyde in 1757. Both marriages occured in the Machackemack RDC. John Leyde died in 1810.Happy Hunting, CynthiaArreantie married (1) Jacobus BRINK-2800 about 1778 in Rosetown, PA. Jacobus was born 5 Jul 1747 in Hurley, NY. He died about 1812 in Sandyston, NJ.They had the following children:284Mi.John BRINK-2801 was born about 1778.285Fii.Lydia BRINK-2802 was born about 1780.286Miii.James BRINK-2803 was born about May 1782.287Miv.Derick BRINK-2804 was born about 1783.288Fv.Abigail BRINK-2805 was born about 1785.289Fvi.Helena BRINK-2806 was born about 1787.+290Fvii.Polly BRINK-1252 was born 18 Jun 1781 and died about 185 (familytreemaker.genealogy.com....42text.txt)

Jacob,baptized 16 September 1696, died 17 May 1760; married first on 14 January1726 in Albany, New York , Sara De Wandelear; married second Maritie Oosterhout . They settled with his brother Daniel near Half Moon, and in the vicinityof what is now Stillwater, Saratoga County. Jacob was captured atSaratoga and taken to the military prison at Quebec , but he escaped. Jacob was father of: (homepages.rootsweb.com..../fort.html)

We turned the cornerat Oosterhout and were on the home stretch along the Waal dike. I fell in with a group ofmiddle aged women singing bawdy ballads. With 5K to go, I stopped at a stand and had anExtran sports drink while babying my foot the blister on the ball had now fullydeveloped. I passed the monument to the 82nd Airborne who established theirWaal crossing site here in 1944. (walking.about.com....4delst.htm)

Rank and organization: Private, U.S. Army, Company C, 504th Parachute Infantry, 82d Airborne Division. Place and date: Near Oosterhout , Holland, 21 September 1944. Entered service at: Cleveland , Ohio. Birth: Cleveland , Ohio. G.O. No.: 18, 15 March 1945. Citation. For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of life above and beyond the call of duty on 21 September 1944, near Oosterhout , Holland. The rifle company in which Pvt. Towle served as rocket launcher gunner was occupying a defensive position in the west sector of the recently established Nijmegen bridgehead when a strong enemy force of approximately 100 infantry supported by 2 tanks and a half-track formed for a counterattack. With full knowledge of the disastrous consequences resulting not only to his company but to the entire bridgehead by an enemy breakthrough, Pvt. Towle immediately and without orders left his foxhole and moved 200 yards in the face of Intense small-arms fire to a position on an exposed dike roadbe (www.history.army.mil....I-t-z.html)



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