George Pieter Willem Boers

Summary

George Pieter Willem Boers (born 3 February 1811 – 30 August 1884) was a colonel of the Royal Netherlands East Indies Army, who after his retirement served as Governor of the Dutch Gold Coast.[1]

George Pieter Willem Boers
Governor of the Dutch Gold Coast
In office
17 April 1867 – 15 May 1869
MonarchWilliam III of the Netherlands
Preceded byWillem Hendrik Johan van Idsinga
Succeeded byCornelis Johannes Marius Nagtglas
Personal details
Born(1811-02-03)3 February 1811
Hazerswoude, Netherlands
Died30 August 1884(1884-08-30) (aged 73)
Salatiga, Java, Dutch East Indies
SpouseJohanna Sophia Catharina van Reede van Oudtshoorn

Biography edit

George Boers was born in Hazerswoude to Charles Guillaume Boers and Henriette Marie Gertrude l'Honore.

After the Belgian Revolution, Boers was mobilised for the Ten Days' Campaign, becoming second lieutenant with the Second Battalion of the First Division of the South Holland schutterij.[2][3] In 1842, Boers sailed to the Dutch East Indies to join the Royal Dutch East Indies Army. The journal he kept during his journey from Hellevoetsluis to Batavia was posthumously published by a relative. Boers retired from the Dutch East Indies Army as a colonel.[4]

In 1867, after his retirement from the army, Boers was installed governor of the Dutch Gold Coast. His most important task was to ensure the smooth transition of power on the forts interchanged with the United Kingdom on 1 January 1868. The trade proved a disaster, however, and Boers was blamed for not dealing with the situation well.[5] After the wealthy Elmina merchant George Emil Eminsang and military commander L.H. Meijer went on a mission to The Hague to discuss the situation, the Dutch Minister of the Colonies Engelbertus de Waal recalled Boers and replaced him with the experienced Cornelis Nagtglas, who had been governor of the Dutch Gold Coast before.[6]

Publication edit

  • Dagboek Hellevoetsluis 11-5-1842 - Batavia 20-9-1842 van George Pieter Willem Boers (1811-1887) (Posthumously published by H.R. van der Woude)

Personal life edit

Boers married Johanna Sophia Catharina van Reede van Oudtshoorn on 27 March 1850 in Semarang in the Dutch East Indies. They had three sons and four daughters.

Boers died on 30 August 1884 in Salatiga on the island of Java in the Dutch East Indies.[7]

Notes edit

  1. ^ "Benoemingen en besluiten". Middelburgsche courant. 23 March 1869. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
  2. ^ Houtman 1833.
  3. ^ Olivier 1834.
  4. ^ Engelberts Gerrits 1845.
  5. ^ Baesjou 1979, p. 30.
  6. ^ Baesjou 1979, p. 31.
  7. ^ "Familiebericht". Java-bode: nieuws, handels- en advertentieblad voor Nederlandsch-Indië. 11 September 1884. Retrieved 22 November 2018.

References edit

  • Baesjou, René (1979). An Asante Embassy on the Gold Coast. The Mission of Akyempon Yaw to Elmina 1869-1872. Leiden/Cambridge: Afrikastudiecentrum/African Studies Centre. ISBN 90-70110-25-3.
  • Houtman, J.P. (1833). Dagorders en legerberigten gedurende den tiendaagschen veldtogt in 1831: naamlijsten van den generalen staf, hoofd- en stafofficieren bij de divisiën, brigades en in de vestingen: eindelijk die van hoofd, staf en subalterne officieren bij de vrijwillige jagerkorpsen en schutterijen alsmede der vrijwilligers aan de hooge scholen en athenaea. Utrecht: J.P. Houtman.
  • Engelberts Gerrits, Gerrit (1845). Het leven en de regering van Z. M. Willem I, koning der Nederlanden, groot-Hertog van Luxemburg enz., enz., enz. Amsterdam: P.N. van Kampen.
  • Olivier, J. (1834). Merkwaardigheden uit den tiendaagschen veldtogt der Nederlanders in België. Amsterdam: G.J.A. Beijerinck.