Peter Stuyvesant
John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot) Abbott
17 chapters
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17 chapters
PETER STUYVESANT, THE LAST DUTCH GOVERNOR OF NEW AMSTERDAM
PETER STUYVESANT, THE LAST DUTCH GOVERNOR OF NEW AMSTERDAM
It is impossible to understand the very remarkable character and career of Peter Stuyvesant, the last, and by far the most illustrious, of the Dutch governors of New Amsterdam, without an acquaintance with the early history of the Dutch colonies upon the Hudson and the Delaware. The Antiquarian may desire to look more fully into the details of the early history of New York. But this brief, yet comprehensive narrative, will probably give most of the information upon that subject, which the busy,
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CHAPTER I.—DISCOVERY OF THE HUDSON RIVER.
CHAPTER I.—DISCOVERY OF THE HUDSON RIVER.
On the 12th of October, 1492, Christopher Columbus landed upon the shores of San Salvador, one of the West India islands, and thus revealed to astonished Europe a new world. Four years after this, in the year 1496, Sebastian Cabot discovered the continent of North America. Thirty-three years passed away of many wild adventures of European voyagers, when, in the year 1539, Ferdinand de Soto landed at Tampa Bay, in Florida, and penetrating the interior of the vast continent, discovered the Mississ
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CHAPTER II.—THE PROGRESS OF DISCOVERY.
CHAPTER II.—THE PROGRESS OF DISCOVERY.
The Half Moon was detained in England eight months, and did not reach Amsterdam until the summer of 1610. The Dutch Directors, though disappointed in not finding in the region they had explored the much hoped-for Northwest Passage to the Indies, were somewhat elated by the magnificent discoveries which had been made. The territory they claimed, by virtue of these discoveries, extended from the mouth of the Delaware on the South, to Cape Cod on the Northeast. The grand river of Canada, the St. La
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CHAPTER III.—THE COMMENCEMENT OF COLONISATION.
CHAPTER III.—THE COMMENCEMENT OF COLONISATION.
In the year 1620 the Puritans founded their world-renowned colony at Plymouth, as we have minutely described in the History of Miles Standish. It will be remembered that the original company of Puritans were of English birth. Dissatisfied with the ritual and ceremonies which the Church of England had endeavored to impose upon them, they had emigrated to Holland, where they had formed a church upon their own model. Rev. John Robinson, a man of fervent piety and of enlightened views above his time
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CHAPTER IV.—THE ADMINISTRATION OF VAN TWILLER.
CHAPTER IV.—THE ADMINISTRATION OF VAN TWILLER.
De Vrees very wisely decided that it would be but a barren vengeance to endeavor to retaliate upon the roaming savages, when probably more suffering would be inflicted upon the innocent than upon the guilty. He therefore, to their astonishment and great joy, entered into a formal treaty of peace and alliance with them. Any attempt to bring the offenders to justice would of course have been unavailing, as they could easily scatter, far and wide, through the trackless wilderness. Arrangements were
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CHAPTER V.—WAR AND ITS DEVASTATIONS.
CHAPTER V.—WAR AND ITS DEVASTATIONS.
The year 1643 was a year of terror and of blood in nearly all of the American colonies. New England was filled with alarm in the apprehension of a general rising of the Indians. It was said that a benighted traveller could not halloo in the woods without causing fear that the savages were torturing their European captives. This universal panic pervaded the Dutch settlements. The wildest stories were circulated at the firesides of the lonely settlers. Anxiety and terror pervaded all the defencele
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CHAPTER VI.—GOVERNOR STUYVESANT.
CHAPTER VI.—GOVERNOR STUYVESANT.
It is estimated that the whole population of New Netherland, in the year 1646, amounted to about one thousand souls. In 1643, it numbered three thousand. Such was the ruin which the mal-administration of Kieft had brought upon the colony. The male adult population around Amsterdam was reduced to one hundred. At the same time the population of the flourishing New England colonies had increased to about sixty thousand. On the 11th of May, 1647, Governor Stuyvesant arrived at Manhattan. He was appo
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CHAPTER VII.—WAR BETWEEN ENGLAND AND HOLLAND.
CHAPTER VII.—WAR BETWEEN ENGLAND AND HOLLAND.
Governor Stuyvesant having removed the obnoxious vice-director, had another, Johannes Dyckman, who he thought would be more subservient to his wishes, appointed in his stead. The commissary of the patroons, whom he had imprisoned at Manhattan, secreted himself on board a sloop and escaped up the river to Beaverwyck. The enraged governor seized the skipper of the sloop on his return, and inflicted upon him a heavy fine. The patroons were now fearful that the governor would fulfill his threat of e
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CHAPTER VIII.—ANOTHER INDIAN WAR.
CHAPTER VIII.—ANOTHER INDIAN WAR.
There was a brief but bitter controversy between the governor and the convention, when the governor ordered the body to disperse, "on pain of our highest displeasure." "We derive our authority," said he, "from God, and from the Company, not from a few ignorant subjects. And we alone can call the inhabitants together." These decisive measures did not stifle the popular voice. Petitions were sent to the Company in Holland, full of complaints against the administration of Stuyvesant, and imploring
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CHAPTER IX.—AN ENERGETIC ADMINISTRATION.
CHAPTER IX.—AN ENERGETIC ADMINISTRATION.
War would doubtless have arisen, between Sweden and Holland, in view of transactions on South river, had not all the energies of Sweden been then called into requisition in a war with Poland. The Swedish government contented itself with presenting a vigorous memorial to the States-General, which for eight years was renewed without accomplishing any redress. The vice-governor resided at fort Orange, in a two story house, the upper floor of which was used as a court-room. This station was the prin
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CHAPTER X.—THE ESOPUS WAR.
CHAPTER X.—THE ESOPUS WAR.
The exploring party from Massachusetts, which had ascended the North river, found a region around the Wappinger Kill, a few miles below the present site of Poughkeepsie, which they pronounced to be more beautiful than any spot which they had seen in New England. Here they decided to establish their settlement. Stuyvesant, informed of this, resolved to anticipate them. He wrote immediately to Holland urging the Company to send out at once as many Polish, Lithuanian, Prussian, Dutch and Flemish pe
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CHAPTER XI.—THE DISASTROUS YEAR.
CHAPTER XI.—THE DISASTROUS YEAR.
In the year 1661, the Company purchased of Melyn, the patroon, for about five hundred dollars, all his rights to lands on Staten Island. Thus the whole island became the property of the Company. Grants of lands were immediately issued to individuals. The Waldenses, and the Huguenots from Rochelle in France, were invited to settle upon the island. A block-house was built which was armed with two cannon and garrisoned by ten soldiers. Fourteen families were soon gathered in a little settlement sou
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CHAPTER XII.—ENCROACHMENTS OF THE ENGLISH.
CHAPTER XII.—ENCROACHMENTS OF THE ENGLISH.
All but three of the captives carried away by the Esopus Indians, were eventually recovered. The fate of those three is lost in hopeless obscurity. The revelations of the day of Judgment can alone make known their tragic doom. To them, as to thousands of others, this earthly life, if this be all, must have been an unmitigated calamity. But this is not all. After death cometh the judgment. It will be easy for God, in the future world, to compensate his children a thousand-fold for all the ills th
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CHAPTER XIII.—HOSTILE MEASURES COMMENCED.
CHAPTER XIII.—HOSTILE MEASURES COMMENCED.
Governor Stuyvesant, with much anxiety of mind, kept a vigilant eye upon the proceedings of John Scott, on Long Island. Some praised the governor for the forbearance he had exhibited under the provoking circumstances. Others severely blamed him for his course, which they pronounced to be cowardly and disgraceful to the nation. By the terms of the Convention, concluded between the Dutch delegates and John Scott, it was agreed that the English villages, on the western part of Long Island, should r
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CHAPTER XIV.—THE CAPTURE OF NEW AMSTERDAM.
CHAPTER XIV.—THE CAPTURE OF NEW AMSTERDAM.
The only response which Colonel Nicholls deigned to make to the remonstrance of Governor Stuyvesant, was to put his fleet in motion. A party of soldiers, infantry and cavalry, was landed on Long Island, and they advanced rapidly through the forest, to the little cluster of huts which were scattered along the silent and solitary shores of Brooklyn. These troops were generally volunteers from Connecticut and from the English settlements on Long Island. The fleet then ascended through the Narrows,
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CHAPTER XV.—THE FINAL SURRENDER.
CHAPTER XV.—THE FINAL SURRENDER.
The Dutch ships, having anchored and prepared themselves for the immediate opening of the bombardment, a boat was sent on shore with a flag of truce, to demand the surrender of the city. At the same time a boat was sent by Colonel Manning, from the fort to the ships. The boats passed each other without any interchange of words. Colonel Manning's boat bore simply the message to the Dutch Admirals, "Why do you come in such a hostile manner to disturb his Majesty's subjects in this place?" As Engla
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NOTES:
NOTES:
1 ( return ) [ Winslow in Young (p. 371).] 2 ( return ) [ Bradford in Prince, 248.] 3 ( return ) [ Dutch miles, equal to sixteen English miles.] 4 ( return ) [ Morton's memorial, page 176.] 5 ( return ) [ Hist. of New York, by John Romeyn Brodhead. Vol. I, p 257.] 6 ( return ) [ History of the State of New York, p. 203.] 7 ( return ) [ History of the State of New York, By John Romeyn Brodhead Vol I. p. 473.] 8 ( return ) [ John Romeyn Brodhead, Vol. 1. p. 521. E.B. O'Callaghan. M D Vol 2. p. 157
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