A Family Name

Oudkerk Pool

Five centuries of one family — Poland in the 1500s, Friesland, the Dutch East Indies, and the modern Netherlands.

Est. 16th c. Friesland · Enkhuizen · Amsterdam Today: everywhere
I. The Name

Two surnames, one family

The hyphenation Oudkerk Pool isn't decorative — it's a record of a 1500s marriage between a Polish refugee musician and a woman of the Friesland Oudkerk line. From that union forward, the children carried both names.

Oudkerk
Out-kerk · Old Church · Friesland

A Dutch surname meaning old church — from the village of Oudkerk in Friesland (West Frisian: Aldtsjerk). The name identifies someone who lived near the village's ancient parish church. The word kerk descends from Old Norse kirkja, which traces to Greek kyriakon.

Today roughly 1,850 people worldwide carry the Oudkerk name. The Friesland line includes a clerical branch — Reformed ministers and poets named Scipio Oudkerk traced back to the early 1700s in Leeuwarden.

Pool
Polish refugee · 1500s · a musician who became Pool

The Pool line does not start in the Netherlands — it begins with a Polish refugee. In the 1500s, a musician from a town in what is now eastern Germany (then Poland — Rhett's family oral history places this origin near Hildburghausen or a neighbouring Silesian/Polish town) emigrated west and changed his name to Pool.

He married a woman of importance from the Oudkerk line. From that marriage forward, the children carried both names: Oudkerk from their mother, Pool from their father. The hyphenation is not decorative — it's a record of that union.

The family coat of arms of Oudkerk Pool is said to resemble the coat of arms of that Polish town of origin — a visual echo of where the family came from.

II. Five Centuries

From Poland to the Pacific

The Oudkerk Pool lineage traces from 1500s Poland, through Friesland, the colonial Indies, and into the modern Dutch diaspora.

1500s · Poland
A Polish Musician Crosses the Border
The earliest layer of the family tree is a Polish musician from a town near Hildburghausen — today in Thuringia (eastern Germany), then on the Polish side of the border. He emigrated west and changed his name to Pool. The town coat of arms would later surface in the Oudkerk Pool family arms.
1500s · Friesland
The Marriage
The musician married a woman of importance from the Oudkerk line — the surname already established in Friesland from the village of Oudkerk (Aldtsjerk) near Leeuwarden. From that marriage, children carried both names: Oudkerk from the mother, Pool from the father. The hyphenation has been the family identity ever since.
1700s · Texel
A Later Generation: Antoni Pool at Texel
By the 1700s the family was well-established in the Netherlands. Antoni Pool, a descendant of the original Polish refugee line, served as Equipagemr (Equipment Master) at Texel — the launch point for VOC fleets to Asia. Antoni married Amelia Jaqueline Oudkerk; their children continued the Oudkerk Pool name.
1771 · Bommel (Zaltbommel)
Scipio Oudkerk Pool, Captain at Sea
Antoni and Amelia's son Scipio Oudkerk Pool is born 1771 in Zaltbommel — a Waal river port in Gelderland. He becomes a Kapitein en Kolonel ter Zee (Captain and Colonel at Sea), marries Margaretha Joanna van Bleyswijk (1775–1851) of the Enkhuizen regent class, and settles in Enkhuizen, the historic port city. He dies in 1807 in Enkhuizen at age 36.
1808 · Enkhuizen
Scipio Pieter Oudkerk Pool, Poet & Merchant
Born 5 January 1808 in Enkhuizen, the year after his father's death. He becomes a koopman (merchant) in Amsterdam and a published poet under the initials S.P. Oudkerk Pool. He marries twice: Alida van der Velden (1829, who died 1831), then Dieuwtje Geertruijda van der Velden (1833). He dies in Amsterdam, 5 March 1882.
19th c. · Dutch East Indies
The Indies Years
Multiple generations of the family had ties to the Dutch East Indies — the colonial territory that would become Indonesia. Dutch patrician families routinely sent sons and daughters to the Indies for trade, administration, and plantation work through the 1800s and early 1900s, and the Oudkerk Pool name appears in the Indies record.
c. 1910s–1920s · Java or Sumatra
The Family Photograph
A black-and-white portrait from the Dutch colonial period — six figures in a household that reads as Indo-Dutch: men in white dinner jackets and military-style tunics, boys in sailor suits with striped collars, a peaked cap on the table. The clothing, hairstyles, and the cap's insignia point to a household in the East Indies during the late colonial era.
1942–1949 · WWII & Aftermath
Incarceration and Repatriation
The Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies (1942) and Indonesian independence (1945, recognised 1949) ended three centuries of Dutch colonial presence. Indo-European families — many of mixed Dutch-Indonesian heritage — faced Japanese incarceration, then post-war displacement. Many returned to the Netherlands; others stayed and built new lives in the new Indonesia.
20th–21st c. · Netherlands & Beyond
The Modern Diaspora
The name persists across the Netherlands and into the wider world: academics (Marinka Oudkerk Pool, AMC cardiovascular research; Inge Oudkerk Pool, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences), policy work (Chantal Oudkerk Pool, National Adaptation Strategy), and entrepreneurship (Rhett Oudkerk Pool, EOS Amsterdam, Zamforge).
III. The Poet

Scipio Pieter Oudkerk Pool
(1808–1882)

The earliest well-documented bearer of the name was a published poet. His works survive in the Digitale Bibliotheek voor de Nederlandse Letteren (Digital Library of Dutch Literature) and on the antiquarian book market.

"Wel vond de taal dier kindersmarte,
Een weerklank nog in veler harte,
Wel morde men — of liet een' traan;
Maar echter trokken ze immer verder;
Als lam'ren, zonder schaap of herder,
Men slaakt' een zucht — doch liet hen gaan." — From the Enkhuizen poem-cycle; cited in Kroniek van Enkhuizen

Born 5 January 1808 in Enkhuizen — the year after his father Captain Scipio Oudkerk Pool died. He trained as a merchant (koopman) and lived most of his adult life in Amsterdam, registered at quarter A, OZ Voorburgwal 177. But alongside the merchant life, he published a body of patriotic, religious, and historical verse.

Published Works

The naming pattern in the line — Scipio, repeated across at least four generations — was typical of Dutch patrician families who reused forenames to mark lineage continuity.

IV. Indonesia Years

The Indies Household

A household portrait from the late Dutch colonial period in Java or Sumatra — six figures in a domestic interior, clothing and bearing characteristic of the Indo-Dutch patrician class of the early 20th century.

Oudkerk Pool family portrait, Dutch East Indies, early 20th century

Family portrait · Dutch East Indies · c. 1910s–1920s

The photograph captures what was by then a thoroughly Indo-Dutch pattern: a household rooted in the Indies for one or two generations, connected by letter, trade, and kinship to the Netherlands. The clothing — white dinner jackets, a braided tunic, sailor suits with striped collars — is the wardrobe of a family that moved between worlds.

Most Dutch families in the Indies at this point were second- or third-generation arrivals: administrators, planters, merchants, teachers. The men in the photograph carry the dress of civil and military life. The boys in sailor suits were the next generation of that arc.

The peaked cap on the table is the kind of detail a genealogist notices first — its insignia, if legible, would name the regiment or service. For this family, that detail matters: it would pin the photograph to a specific place and date in the Indies timeline.

V. Enkhuizen

The Regent City

Enkhuizen was once one of the wealthiest cities in the Netherlands. The Oudkerk Pool family was part of the regent class — the patrician families who governed Dutch cities in the 17th and 18th centuries.

A Historic Port

Enkhuizen was a major port of the Admiralty of Amsterdam and a key node in the 17th- and 18th-century maritime supply chain. The city sent ships to the Baltic for grain, to the Indies for spices, and to the herring grounds of the North Sea. By the late 1700s, the maritime trade's decline had drained cities like Enkhuizen, and many regent families — the Oudkerk Pools among them — relocated to Amsterdam.

The pattern of the family — Enkhuizen roots, Amsterdam life — was the standard trajectory of the Dutch patrician class in the 19th century. Scipio Pieter Oudkerk Pool (1808–1882) followed it precisely: born in Enkhuizen, died in Amsterdam.

VI. The Family Today

Living bearers of the name

The Oudkerk Pool name persists in the Netherlands and internationally — across medicine, academia, policy, and entrepreneurship.

Rhett Oudkerk Pool
CEO, EOS Amsterdam · Founder, Zamforge
Chantal Oudkerk Pool
National Adaptation Strategy lead, Netherlands
Inge Oudkerk Pool
Researcher, Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences
Marinka Oudkerk Pool
PhD candidate, AMC cardiovascular research
Sabrina Oudkerk Pool
Teacher, ALO Amsterdam
Luciën Adriaan Oudkerk Pool
Living descendant
Pieter Oudkerk Pool
Living descendant

This list is not exhaustive. If you share the Oudkerk Pool name and want to be included, get in touch.

VII. Sources

Where to read more

The primary sources behind the family tree are Dutch genealogy archives, the DBNL literary database, and the Enkhuizen patrician families register compiled by Thijs Postma.

VIII. Get in Touch

If you share this name

This site is a living document. If you're an Oudkerk Pool, or you have records, photographs, or corrections to add, get in touch. The family tree is a work in progress, and the more voices the better.

hello@oudkerkpool.com