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H.J. Gorter
Hendrikus Jacobus Gorter
Born
Hendrikus Jacobus Gorter

(1874-06-19)19 June 1874
Zwolle, the Netherlands
Died13 September 1918(1918-09-13) (aged 44)
Amsterdam, the Netherlands
Nationality Netherlands
Other names'Henri'
Occupation(s)Dutch cycling champion, speed skater and ice skates manufacturer
Known forCycling, 'Hercules' ice skates manufacturing factory, Zwolle
Spouse(s)Elisabeth Mackenzie, Christina Hendriksen

Hendrikus Jacobus Gorter (1874-1918) was a Dutch cyclist, speed skater and ice skates manufacturer from Zwolle. He passed away prematurely during the 2018 Weesp train disaster.

Early life[edit]

Hendrikus Gorter grew up in Zwolle, Overijssel, in the eastern part of the Netherlands. His father Jacob Gorter (1834-1875) was a bookseller at Hoogstraten & Gorter in Zwolle. The Gorter family came from Friesland. Jacob was a son of Durk Jans Gorter and Hendrica Posthuma, and born in Harlingen. Hendrikus' mother Henrietta Muller (1847-1937), was born in Utrecht, and a daughter of Michiel Muller and Henrietta Buys. Hendrikus' parents married in Utrecht in 1872. Their first son died shortly after birth. Hendrikus, their second son, was born in Zwolle on 19 June 1874. Not long after, in March 1875, Hendrikus' father passed away.[1][2]

Hendrikus, colloquially known as 'Henri', attended the state high school in Zwolle. In 1890 he was admitted to the Machinist College at the Plantage Muidergracht in Amsterdam, where he was taught metalworking, forging and other technical skills. He did not finish the school and in 1892 he moved from Amsterdam to Utrecht, the birth place of his mother. His passions included ice skating and cycling and he enjoyed participating in competitions. In 1892 he competed on a Simplex bicycle manufactured by the Automatic Machine Company in Utrecht. After six months in Utrecht, Henri moved back to Zwolle in October 1892.[3]

Cycling career[edit]

Hendrikus Gorter, age 15, with a Rudge bicycle (1889).
Hendrikus Gorter, age 15, with a Rudge bicycle (1889).

It is likely that Henri started cycling at a young age. He is pictured with a British Rudge solid bicycle in 1889, at the age of fifteen.[3]

While living in Amsterdam he became a member of the local cycle club. In the following years he participated in competitions across the country and became a member of several cycling clubs, including in Zwolle and Rotterdam. In 1891 he finished in second place on the track in Arnhem. In the following years he won many races including in Amsterdam, Scheveningen, Sittard and Antwerp.[4][5]

In 1896, he became Dutch track cycling champion in the English mile, five kilometre and ten kilometre categories. One of his main competitors was cyclist and speed ice skater Jaap Eden (1973-1925). During one of the last races of his career, the Grand Prix of Amsterdam on 16 August 1898, Henri finished in the second place after Guus Schilling, and Jaap Eden came third.[3]

Ice skates manufaturing[edit]

The Rodenhuis-Kingma skates (1896).
The Rodenhuis-Kingma skates (1896). Source: H.J. Gorter, Zwolle 1874-1918. Aad van den Ouweelen en Frits Locher. De poolster, 2018.

Henri participated in several Dutch ice skating competitions and, although he wasn't as successful as on the bicycle, he earned silver and bronze medals in the winter of 1884-1895.[3]

In 1894 he opened the first machine-driven ice skates manufacturing factory in the Netherlands. The factory was located at Thomas à Kempisstraat 157 in Zwolle. Initially, the main products were nordic skates with attached boots, used for tour skating and speed skating.[6]

In 1895 the factory buildings were extended and an eight horsepower steam engine and boiler installed to drive the manufacturing machinery. The factory was named 'Hercules'. From 1895 Henri began producing a wide range of ice skates, often with beech wood platforms attached to metal blades (or 'runners'), including the Wichers-de Salis skates, Queens skates and Go-ahead skates. In February 1895, ice skater Ype Rodenhuis from Harlingen, set the 25 kilometer world record on Gorter skates.[3]

In 1896, Henri developed a new model, called the Rodenhuis-Kingma skates, in collaboration with Ype Rodenhuis and sprinter Marten Kingma, although it is unclear if this design was originally from the Hercules factory. Another new model were his detachable Duplex skates with multifunctional blades. From 1897, Henri also produced Pierce bicycles in his factory, and eventually sold a wide range of brands in 'Gorter's sport store' in the Diezenstraat, Zwolle.[3]

Around the turn of the century the winters were mild, which meant less frozen waterways to skate on. Sales went down and the ice skates manufacturing industry went through a recession. In 1906, Henri had to let go of about thirty workers. The factory was put up for sale in February 1907 and the doors finally closed in the same year.[4]

Marriage and divorce[edit]

Marriage certificate Hendrikus Gorter and Christina Hendriksen (1916)
Marriage certificate of Hendrikus Gorter and Christina Hendriksen (1916).

On 22 May 1902 Henri married Elisabeth Mackenzie (1879-1969), daughter of Paulus Mackenzie and Maria Reugers. Elisbeth's father Paulus was a coffee and tea trader from Rotterdam. Her brother was a well-known Dutch painter, Marie Henry Mackenzie. Henri and Elisabeth had two sons, Henri Martinus Gorter, born in 1907, and Paulus Gorter, born in 1910. In 1910 the family moved to Apeldoorn.[2]

In 1905, Henri became board member of the Dutch motor vehicle association (Dutch: Nederlandsche Motorwielrijders Vereeniging), which was awarded the predicate 'Royal' in 1916. He organised races and day trips for members, and later became vice-president of the organisation until his death in 1918.[3]

From 1908 Henri worked as representative for the cash register firm Cord and Van Erk. In 1915 Henri and Elisabeth divorced. He remarried a year later, on 31 May 1916 in The Hague, with Christina Hendriksen (1881-1939), daughter of Johannes Hendriksen and Stijntje Konst. In 1918 Henri and Christina had a son, Christiaan Gorter.[2][3]

Weesp train disaster[edit]

On 13 September 1918 Hendrikus Gorter died during the Weesp train disaster.
On 13 September 1918, Hendrikus Gorter died during the Weesp train disaster.

On the morning of 13 September 1918, Henri took the train from Apeldoorn to Amsterdam. At the railway bridge over the Merwede canal near Weesp, the train derailed when an embankment collapsed over a length of 95 metres due to prolonged rainfall and a poor construction. The locomotive tipped on the bridge and the wooden carriages dropped off the bank. At the Weesp train disaster, 41 people died and 42 were injured. Henri was brought to the Binnengasthuis hospital in Amsterdam and passed away around nine o'clock that evening. He was 44 years old.[4]

Hendrikus Jacobus left behind his wife Christina and 7-month old son, and two sons from his previous marriage. He was buried at the Soerenseweg cemetery in Apeldoorn.

References[edit]

  1. ^ Wie was wie?. Centrum voor familiegeschiedenis, Den Haag.
  2. ^ a b c "Open Archives. Genealogical data of Dutch and Belgian archives and societies.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h "H.J. Gorter, Zwolle 1874-1918. Sportman, Schaatsen- en rijwielfabrikant. Aad van den Ouweelen en Frits Locher. De Poolster, 2018.
  4. ^ a b c "Treinramp bij Weesp van 1918 trof ook de sportwereld. Wim Zonneveld, sportgeschiedenis.nl (13 October 2022).
  5. ^ Waarom kent u deze beroemde Zwollenaar niet?. Marco van den Berg, De Stentor, 4 January 2019.
  6. ^ Schaatsenfabriek Hercules H.J. Gorter. Schaatshistorie.nl.