Jules van den Bossche

Jules Félicien Romain Stanislas van den Bossche (born 4 September 1819 – 12 January 1889) was a Dutch military officer and colonial government official. He was governor of the Dutch Gold Coast between 1857 and 1858 and member of the Council of the Dutch East Indies, the government of the Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies.

Jules Félicien Romain Stanislas van den Bossche
Member of the Council of the Dutch East Indies
In office
24 April 1868  January 1871
Governor GeneralPieter Mijer
Governor of the West Coast of Sumatra
In office
6 November 1862  28 July 1868
Governors GeneralPieter Mijer
L. A. J. W. Sloet van de Beele
Preceded byCornelis Albert de Brauw
Succeeded byNicolaas Anne Theodoor Arriëns
Resident of Besuki
In office
1861–1862
Preceded byHendricus Albertus van der Poel
Succeeded byPetrus Theodorus Couperus
Resident of Bangka
In office
1859–1861
Governor of the Dutch Gold Coast
In office
29 April 1857  9 September 1857
MonarchWilliam III of the Netherlands
Preceded byWillem George Frederik Derx
Succeeded byCornelis Nagtglas
Assistant Resident of Tebing Tinggi
In office
1852–1857
Personal details
Born(1819-09-04)4 September 1819
Mons, United Kingdom of the Netherlands
Died12 January 1889(1889-01-12) (aged 69)
Aden, Yemen

Biography

Van den Bossche was born in Mons, which was then situated in the United Kingdom of the Netherlands, to Jean Bernard van den Bossche and Marie Cathérine Navéau.[1] He moved to the Dutch East Indies at age two, when his father was appointed President of the Orphans' and Probate Court of Surabaya.[2]

Van den Bossche joined the Dutch East Indies Army and later made a career in the colonial government of the Dutch East Indies, becoming a clerk in the office of the assistant resident of Pontianak and later in the office of the resident at Palembang. While stationed at the latter place, he was promoter to controller and took part in the Palembang Highlands Expeditions. Between 1852 and 1857, Van den Bossche served as assistant resident in Tebing Tinggi.[1]

When he was on home leave in the Netherlands in 1857, Van den Bossche was appointed governor of the Dutch Gold Coast, where he only served for four months. In 1859, Van den Bossche returned to the colonial administration of the Dutch East Indies, serving as resident of consecutively Bangka Island and Besuki, before becoming governor of Sumatra's West Coast in late 1862. In 1868, he was appointed a member of the Council of the Dutch East Indies, the cabinet of the Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies.[1]

Van den Bossche retired from service in 1871, and lived his later years in The Hague. Together with several Dutch partners, he involved himself in private business in the Dutch East Indies. While on his way to oversee the building and exploitation of a coal mine and railway line in Central Sumatra, he died aboard the French mail ship Djemnah near Aden, Yemen.[1]

Personal life

Van den Bossche never married, but had children with at least five women. In Batavia he fathered Julie Clementine van den Bossche (1842–1896) with a woman named Kendo. While assistant resident of Tebing Tinggi, he fathered Victor Albert van den Bossche (1853–1916) and Marie Eugenie van den Bossche (1855–1940) with a woman named Badima, whom he legally recognized as his.[2] Marie Eugenie van den Bossche would later marry the Dutch painter Evert Pieters. During this time he also fathered Albert Felix van den Bossche (1853) with an unknown woman.

During his service on the Gold Coast between 1857 and 1858, he fathered a son named John van den Bossche.[1]

After his return to the Dutch East Indies in 1858, he fathered Albertine Felicie van den Bossche (1861) with an unknown woman.

Publications

Decorations

Notes

  1. Michel Doortmont. "van den Bossche, Jules François Romain Stanislas R.M.W.O.4, R.N.L." GoldCoastDataBase. Retrieved 28 September 2013.
  2. Zimmerman 1978, p. 7.

References

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