But when we contemplate the wonderful results of the labors of the pioneers of the Holland colony, when we see the splendid city of homes, we are moved to be thankful for the splendid work they did. I have kept in close touch with Central and Pella all these years, was a member of the Board of Trustees of Central several years representing the alumni, and it is a pleasure to me to look back over the sixty-five years I have known Pella and to testify to the faithfulness and loyalty of its citizens both then and now. Mrs. Adriana Maria Hasselman-Van Horsen With my parents, Adam Peter Hasselman and Alida Christina Gerdesse Timmermans, and seven brothers and sisters, I came to America in the sailing vessel, the Maastroom, which left the Netherlands early in April, 1847. As others have already described the voyage up to the arrival in St. Louis, I will begin my narrative at that point. While we left Holland with a family of ten members, there were but nine when we arrived in America. My infant sister, Anna Susanna, died at sea. In St. Louis we lived for some three months in a large room in a two-story building on River street. Living at that time was very cheap. I well remember that mother would go to the market to buy the material for our dinner, and that twenty-five cents was sufficient to buy meat, potatoes and vegetables enough for a dinner for nine persons. While we had no ice cream, cake or pie, we could buy a bucket full of delicious peaches for ten cents. I will never forget the time when father came home with a huge, round object which, when he laid it down on the floor, burst open and exposed to our astonished eyes a deep red interior. We children had seen so many turtles crawling about in St. Louis that when we saw the object with its red interior, we ran away in fear, thinking it was some kind of new and fearsome river beast. But when father cut a generous slice for each of us, we soon concluded that our adopted country produced more luscious fruit than any we had ever enjoyed in the home land. It has already been recorded in the history of that time how the good Christian people of St. Louis vied with each other in open-hearted hospitality toward the strangers within their gates, and how one of their largest church buildings was offered, rent free, for the use of our people during their entire slay in the city. In harmony with that spirit an American Sunday school teacher called on us the first Sabbath morning of our stay and asked that all the children should come to the school where he taught. Upon learning from father that we were afraid to go far from the house because of the many negroes, none of whom we had ever seen before coming to America, he offered to take us with him and promised to bring us safely back after the services. Not only did he do this, but from that time until we left for Pella, this Godly man came for us every Sabbath morning. This was not only for our spiritual good, but it was a great help to us in mastering the English language. When the Commission finally sent word that a suitable location for the colony had been secured, our household goods were packed back into the nine large boxes in which they had made the journey from Holland, and in the last part of September we started by steamboat for Keokuk. The trip lasted about twenty-four hours, and the scenes along the mighty Father of Waters made an impression on us that remains to this day. At Keokuk a fortunate incident occurred that enabled us to start for Pella the next morning after our arrival at Keokuk. Father met a man who had just