Woesthoven was born in
Dantumawoude, the daughter of military Johannes Woesthoven. She was a member of the academy
Amsteldamse Dicht- en Letteroefenend Genootschap (1786), and the
Kunst Wordt door Arbeid Verkregen. She participated in the board meetings in 1790–94 and was a member of the
executive committee in 1793–94 and as such she received the highest position in the hierarchy awarded to any non-royal Dutch woman at the time. She was awarded a gold
medal for her poem
Amsteldamse (1787), and
silver medals for
Kunstliefde Spaart Geen Vlijt (1788), and
De invloed van een vast geloof aan de voorzienigheid (1789). She was married in 1785 to the
clerk Samuel Elter; at the
divorce in 1803 she was judged as the guilty party after her husband claimed she had intercourse with other men, but was awarded custody of their son, which was unusual for similar cases. She died, aged 69, in
Amsterdam. == Sources ==