Background
Scholte Hendrik Pieter was born on September 25, 1805, in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Scholte Hendrik Pieter was born on September 25, 1805, in Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Hendrik Scholte educated at Leiden University’s theological school (now Leiden University).
Scholte Hendrik figured prominently among a small group of Calvinist clergy who broke away from the Her vormde Kerk, the Dutch national church, as part of a spiritual awakening that culminated in the Secession of 1834. The Seceders' initial efforts to gain recognition for their free church movement met stiff state opposition. Scholte's civil disobedience earned him fines and court costs totaling $3,200 as well as an 18-month prison sentence in 1834, although he was soon released on bond. As official persecution gave way to reluctant tolerance, Scholte Hendrik was able to forge the "Christian Seceded Church" from his Utrecht congregation in 1838, but thereafter Seceders continued to struggle under social ostracism, economic boycotts, and job discrimination. In the spring of 1846 Scholte Hendrik, after much deliberation, concluded that emigration from the Netherlands to the United States offered Seceders the only meaningful chance for religious liberty and economic opportunity.
By year's end, Scholte Hendrik had formally organized the Christian Association for Emigration, and he served as president of the society that numbered about 1,300 members. Scholte Hendrik and a governing board chartered four sailing vessels and handled financial arrangements for the departure of nearly 900 emigrants from Rotterdam to Baltimore in the spring of 1847. He and his family traveled separately by steamship. Scholte Hendrik joined the immigrants in Baltimore, and the entourage moved by train, canal boat, and riverboat to St. Louis. There most of the immigrants acquired temporary residences and jobs while Scholte Hendrik and four committeemen traveled to Iowa, where, with the help of a local Baptist circuit rider familiar with the area's land market, Scholte's group examined the region between the South Skunk and Des Moines rivers and purchased 18,000 acres in Marion County. Scholte Hendrik and his committee returned to St. Louis to escort a vanguard of about 600 Dutch pioneers to Marion County; the remaining immigrants arrived the next spring. The relocation was not, however, without sacrifice amid risks. Death claimed 24 immigrants during the journey from Rotterdam to St. Louis, 126 in St. Louis, and 3 on arrival in Iowa, 1 out of 6 of the original 900 immigrants. Nonetheless, this historic ethnic transplantation under Scholte's leadership rooted a robust Dutch cultural enclave on Iowa soil.
For the next 20 years, Hendrik Scholte remained a pivotal ecclesiastical and political personality within the Pella settlement. He worked diligently to foster community growth but also at times engendered sharp controversy. He served as one of five elders/preachers for the first community church steeped in the Calvinist tradition but professing nondenominational affiliation. The Seceders experienced recurrent internecine religious squabbles. One of the most serious erupted in 1854. Since the late 1840s, some critics within the colony had distrusted Scholte's land and financial dealings, accusing him of paying too much for initial land claims, reselling them to immigrants at prices set too high, and generally failing to keep an accurate accounting of association funds. When Hendrik Scholte continued to transact land sales contrary to what some detractors thought reflected the colony's public interest, congregants suspended his right to preach. He and his supporters subsequently left the central church body to form a separate Second Christian Church that survived largely on the strength of Scholte's driving personality and, according to some, his "fanatical zeal," until Hendrik Scholte died, when it disbanded.
At first, Hendrik Scholte identified with the pro-immigrant Democratic Party, but he gradually distanced himself from the Democrats' proslavery position. He took up the antislavery cause, writing editorials that he published in book form and that garnered statewide attention.
By 1859 Hendrik Scholte had publicly switched party loyalty and participated as a delegate-at-large from Iowa in the 1860 Republican National Convention in Chicago, where he urged the Iowa delegation to support Abraham Lincoln for the presidency. Hendrik Scholte wrote campaign endorsements for Lincoln and later attended his inauguration in Washington, D.C. Hendrik Scholte likewise championed the Unionist cause during the Civil War. He pledged a free house lot near Pella to every returning war veteran. When hostilities ceased, 129 Dutch Civil War veterans received their promised claims.
Hendrik Scholte married Sara Maria Brandt, the daughter of a wealthy Amsterdam sugar refiner. The couple had five daughters, but only three, Sara, Maria, and Johanna, survived infancy. Scholte’s wife, Sara Maria, died on January 23, 1844, shortly following the birth of their youngest daughter, when she was only 38 years old.
On June 23, 1845, Hendrik Scholte married his second wife, Maria Krantz, but only three of the eight children survived infancy. The children were Henry, David, and Dora.