Frisian American
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A Frisian American is an inhabitant of the United States with full or partial Frisian ancestry.
The Frisians are the people from the Dutch province Friesland (Frisian: Fryslân). The Frisian are closely related to the Dutch, but have their own language and are sometimes considered an ethnic group. Frisia was never independent during the existence of the United States, and hence Frisian Americans are often included within Dutch Americans.[1]
[edit] Notable Frisian-Americans
- Jonas Bronk - immigrant after which the New York borough The Bronx was named. [1]
- Reynier Jansen - printer [1]
- Henry K. Pasma - writer [1]
- David Peterson de Vries - founder of New Amsterdam [1]
- Alvin Plantinga - philosopher [2]
- Peter Stuyvesant - Director-General of New Netherland [1]
- Geerhardus Vos - Frisian-born theologian, professor of biblical theology at Princeton Theological Seminary.
- Lenny Dykstra - former Major League Baseball player
[edit] References
- ^ a b c d e f Dr. F. Paulsen, ""Frisians in the History of the United States", Rootsweb.com, accessed 15 September 2007.
- ^ Wikipedia, ""Alvin Plantinga", Wikipedia.org, accessed 15 September 2007.
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