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- Huibert Dirkszoon Duijvenvoorden farmer at the "Duinpoort"
Huibert, the eldest son of Dirk Gerritszoon Duijvenvoorden, lived from 1754 to 1825 and is mentioned as a farmer in the Langeveld. According to land registry data, Huibert and later his only son Job Duivenvoorden owned a farm at the end of the Langevelderweg, against the dune. Huibert bought this farm, now known as the Duinpoort, in 1793 from the well-known Amsterdam family Six. He married Mijntje de Winter, daughter of Job de Winter, she is ten years older than Huibert and the couple will therefore only have one child, Job. With this son, Huibert managed to expand the farm considerably, among other things by purchasing the farm opposite the Duinpoort, which included large plots of pasture on the south side of the Langevelderweg. Job in turn significantly expanded the family estate and can be considered one of the largest farmers in Noordwijkerhout and the surrounding area. In the Langeveld he owned in the mid-19th century a total of about 110 hectares of geestland, fields and pasture. This included large plots on what is now the camping site (formerly de Wit) on the Randweg.
The Langeveld as we know it today, did not look so nicely parcelled at that time, but consisted of strips of land between the young dune and the older beach ridges, including for example the Oosterduin, which was only excavated halfway through the 20th century and was largely forested before that. Noordwijkerhout even had several "mountains", such as the Boekhorsterberg (at the height of current football fields).
https://www.noortigerhout.nl/stamboom-in-duinzand/jacob-dirckszoon/jacobus-dirkszoon-duijvenvoorden-1763-1834/
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