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An
advertisement in the personal section of the newspaper caught
M’greet’s eye. It read: “Officer on home leave from
Dutch East Indies would like to meet girl of pleasant character
– object matrimony.” That ad and another like it had
been put in by a friend of Rudolph MacLeod -- without the
latter’s knowledge. MacLeod was a 38-year-old career man
in the Dutch military that had courageously fought in combat and
received an officer’s cross. He was thickly muscular, had a
large nose with a bump in the bridge, and sported thick, white
whiskers curling at both ends. A heavy drinker, he was aging
ungracefully, troubled also by both diabetes and rheumatism.
These health problems had brought the officer home to Holland.
Some of his ancestors had immigrated to the Netherlands from
Scotland, hence a name unusual for the Dutch.
Although MacLeod had not put the ad in the newspaper or even
OK’d it, the lifelong bachelor agreed to meet the young lady,
Margaretha Zelle, who answered it. Despite the vast
difference in both age and experience, the two were soon mutually
smitten. Perhaps, as she once claimed, M’greet had a thing
for men in uniform and was charmed by MacLeod’s military bearing
along with the extensive array of medals he so proudly wore.
It is also likely that, as a daddy’s girl, she was attracted to
a man about her father’s age. The captain proposed
marriage and M’greet eagerly accepted.
However, they soon hit a snag. The law in Holland said
that a female could marry at sixteen with a parent’s consent but
not until thirty without it. M’greet had previously told
Rudolph that both her parents were deceased because she was not
proud of the deteriorating and impoverished old man who was now
her father. However, M’greet had no intention of waiting
until she was in her third decade of life before she heard wedding
bells so she ‘fessed up to her beau that she had fibbed.
Adam Zelle gave his consent to a marriage that the couple
announced would take place only three months after the engagement.
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Margaretha Zelle and
husband Rudolph MacLeod |
The brief engagement caused a good deal of gossip. It was
widely expected that M’greet would deliver the first MacLeod
baby within a few months of the wedding. However, the gossip
was mistaken. They were wed on July 11, 1895 and M’greet gave
birth to their first child, Norman John, over a year later on
January 30, 1897. Their haste in marrying appears to have
been the result of genuine ardor rather than pregnancy. |
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Unfortunately, that ardor cooled even before little Norman was
a gleam in his Daddy’s eye. Rudolph did not give up his
bachelor ways because he was married. Instead, he stuck to
his old habits of staying out late with various women and coming
home drunk in the wee hours of the morning. M’greet did
her best to cope with her new domestic duties while putting up
with her husband’s infidelities and alcoholism. She also
had to cope with his jealousy for, even as he indulged himself to
his lust’s content, he would fly into a rage when another man
paid what he considered too much attention to the lovely and
personable M’greet. He took to slapping his wife around
and continued to abuse her even when she was several months
pregnant.
Rudolph MacLeod informed the new mother that the family would
have to move because he was going to be stationed in Java.
Far from being upset by this news, M’greet was delighted at the
prospect of a change of scenery. It is also possible that
she especially looked forward to seeing Java since so many people
had speculated that the dusky-skinned Dutchwoman might have
Javanese ancestry. She happily bundled up little Norman and
the family’s possessions for the trip to this foreign land about
which she had heard so much.
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