Evangeline Maurits, February 22, 1935, Grand Rapids Press

Evangeline Maurits

Life Dates: b. July 31, 1901, d. March 26, 1986

Full Name: Evangeline “Gene” Maurits

Birthplace: Grand Rapids, MI

Tags: Arts, Community Organizations, Women’s Clubs, Oral History

Evangeline “Gene” Maurits was a Grand Rapids native and a musician. Her father, Ruben Maurits, was one of the first doctors in Grand Rapids. He was an anesthesiologist and practiced mostly at Blodgett Hospital. Her mother, Angeline DeBey Maurits, was a soloist in “all the churches . . . in town.” Both her mother and she eventually became soloists in “all the oratorios at Fountain St. Church. After her mother retired, Evangeline remained a soloist at the church.

Her family attended Fountain St. Church, according to Evangeline, because “her family was a little more liberal than the Dutch at that time. They were interested in advancing their thoughts on the liberal side of life.” Both sides of Evangeline’s family were Dutch. Her mother’s grandparents came from Utrecht, the Netherlands, and settled in Chicago. Her mother’s great grandfather had been a “famous Dominie [minister]” in the Windy City. Her father’s grandparents came from Nimveisen, the Netherlands, and settled in Ottawa County, MI.

When Evangeline was no more than three years old, her father brought home one of the first cars in Grand Rapids. They had no garage, so her father parked it across the street in a vacant lot. The car had no steering wheel, recalled Evangeline, “just a rod that every time it turned around, it [would] hit you.”

For her education, Evangeline went first to Congress St. Elementary School, then Miss Eastman’s School, next to Fountain St. School, and last to Ferry Hall in Lake Forest, IL.

As a child, Evangeline took dance classes with Miss Calla Travis at St. Cecilia Music Society. Her mother was also active at St. Cecilia. Evangeline remembered, “We all as children took parts in . . . dancing plays.” She added that there was “hardly a day went by that we didn’t have some music” in the house. With her mother’s singing and her father’s violin playing, they were “a musical family.” They also had musicians as friends, so after St. Cecilia programs or symphony programs, there were many musical “gatherings at the house.”

When asked about the importance of St. Cecilia, Evangeline said, “It’s about one of the only buildings in the United States that was put up by women and paid for by women. . . . It was an opportunity for women who were musicians and had no place to perform. . . . It’s [also] important to young artists that are coming up and growing up, that they have a place to perform before an audience.”

Evangeline was a member of the Grand Rapids Symphony, St. Cecilia Music Society, Women’s City Club, Center Board of Blodgett Hospital, and Fountain Street Church.

Sources

This biography is adapted from a summary of a transcript of an oral history interview with Evangeline Maurits. Learn more about Grand Rapids women’s oral histories here.

“Evangeline Maurits.” Grand Rapids Press. March 26, 1986. America’s News – Historical and Current.