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Zwaagwesteinde (The Netherlands)
Dantumadeel municipality, Fryslân province
Last modified: 2003-09-20 by jarig bakker
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by Jarig Bakker, 23 Aug 2003
See also:
Zwaagwesteinde village
Zwaagwesteinde - Frisian: De Westerein (in their own vernacular: de Westereen)
is a village in Dantumadeel, Fryslân. The name signifies: the western
end of Kollumerzwaag. It was a peat-diggers
village, in which Salomon Levy, a Jew from Hessen, Germany, settled at
the end of the 18th century. It is said that Salomon brought trade to Zwaagwesteinde
- however he was at the time seen as one of the people organizing the "Kollumer
Oproer" (Kollum revolt) in 1797, and executed.
In the good old days De Westereen boasted 36 pubs. In the Second Worldwar
the village was known as "unoccupied territory".
In 1954 there were 3594 inhabitants; in 1973 4617.
In my youth it was a poor village, with a high level of unemployment.
The main labor the male population could find was in the Coöperatieve
Condensfabriek of Frico in Leeuwarden. In order to get there they had to
jump on the train, which slowed down a bit near Westereen, and at 't
febryk the train slowed down again for them to jump off. In the 1960's
the Dutch Railways presented the village with a real railwaystation. De
Westereen was also known for the local custom of "stekke mei de punt
fan 'e bûsdoek" - (wanna fight with the point of the handkerchief?)
- and in the point was a hidden knife...
Nickname (surp