Mareah Scholte
Hendrik Scholte's second wife, Mareah, has become a very colorful part of Pella's history.
Hendrik Scholte and Mareah Henrietta Elizabeth Kranz met through a curious chain of
events. Mareah, 15 years younger than Hendrik, was studying at a girl's school in Paris
where her father was teaching astronomy. Mother Kranz had been called back to the
Netherlands to care for her sick mother and had gone there with Mareah's younger sister,
Hubertina.
Mother Kranz heard Dominie Scholte, recently
widowed, preach and was very impressed. Father Kranz, having completed his two-year stint
in Paris, with Mareah, came home. Mother urged Mareah to accompany her to hear the
exceptional Scholte. (It was said that Mareah had little if any interest in religion.)
Mareah agreed to go and soon after was converted and courted by the minister.
They has a June wedding in 1845. The three Scholte
daughters had a new mother. Mareah was just thirteen years older than Sara, the Dominie's
oldest daughter.
Although Mareah surely heard discussions about the
emigration, she had not thought much about herself becoming an emigrant. She was happily
pregnant and did not realize what this move could mean to her.
It was only after her son was born that a servant
burst into her room to excitedly announce that the Dominie and all of them were going to
America. Mareah became very emotional. On the third day of life, the tiny baby died,
leaving Mareah in a state of shock and depression. She was ill for a long time. The
October departure Scholte had planned was put on hold until spring.
Even though the Scholte family traveled by
steamship, a relatively luxurious way to cross the ocean, Mareah still became very ill
during the journey. She was glad to reach New York where the Scholtes were warmly welcomed
as they waited for the other ships to arrive. This and the time spent in St. Louis did not
prepare Mareah for the disappointment she felt when she arrived in Pella, her husband's
dream.
She was shocked to see that Pella was little more
than a patch of trampled prairie grass with a dilapidated log cabin that was to be her new
home. Mareah became very homesick and Scholte immediately promised to build her a grand
house with many of the comforts of their Utrecht home.
Gradually, the new home was built near the log
cabin. The Scholte House stood out as an enormous structure in the new town, and Mareah
enjoyed filling the rooms with fashionable furnishings sent from St. Louis, and also
shipped from The Netherlands. Many of these treasures are still on display at the Scholte
House Museum. Entertaining helped her survive the early days in the young town. Being a
mother to her three stepdaughters also kept her mind and time occupied. While in America,
Mareah and Hendrik had eight more children. Henry, David, and Dora were the only children
to survive early childhood.
After Hendrik's death of a heart attack in August
1868, Mareah took Dora to Detroit to attend school. While in Michigan, Mareah once again
took interest in her music and made friends within Detroit's music circle.
In the spring of 1870, Dora came down with typhoid
fever. Robert Beard, a twenty-four year old musician, befriended the sick girl. When it
appeared that Dora was recovering it was decided they would return to Pella because she
missed it so much.
On the way home she became very ill and died one
week after returning to Pella. Robert, who had accompanied them to Pella, asked Mareah to
marry him. Mareah, now forty-nine, did marry him, even though he was several months
younger than her first son would have been had he lived.
Mareah seemed so young that no one gave much
thought to the age difference of the couple.
She and Robert enjoyed music, entertaining and
traveling together. The two were happily married for twenty years before Mareah died in
September, 1892. She was seventy-one.
Mareah is buried in the vault with her beloved
Dominie and daughter Dora.
Robert Beard remarried and continued to live in
the Scholte House until his death October 31, 1920. He is buried elsewhere in Oakwood
Cemetery in the plot with his second wife's family.
Mareah's three stepdaughters and her own two sons
were the only Scholte children who lived to adulthood.
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