ee tig Ya ZILLI TE LE DL LTTEM LL Ye i COLONIAL MONOGRAPHS HOW THE DUTCH CAME TO MANHATTAN ws Other books in the atta wie .'. Sertes of Colonial Monographs .'. by Blanch McManus are .°. THE VOYAGE OF THE MAYFLOWER Small 4to, with 80 illustrations, $1.25 THE QUAKER COLONY Small 4to, with 80 illustrations, $1.25 THREE FRENCH EXPLORERS Small 4to, with 80 illustrations, $1.25 YE, New York WE-R:-HERRICK & CO Fifth Avenue Lan 40 \ SATE SS (a Hay S&S LEN ! Gf Dow rT a . Az i SN Fix yy) RQ Lo PA MUS a Nae x Cnr eo BRS Ot Nes S WM, aS SS KS SS SY <( »> RX x YK i S CoPpyRIGHT, 1897, BY E. R. HERRICK & Co, INTRODUCTION. HE Story or tHe DutcH or New AMSTERDAM has often been told in scholarly prose, but the picturesque feature of romantic fact has seldom, if ever, received the acknowledgment which it seems to deserve and require. | As a nation of sea-farers and traders, the Dutch acquired an enviable reputation, and for them to have so successfully founded a commercial colony was but to have been expected. The history of the city of New York has been ably and exhaustively treated by many notable writers, and to them, as well as to other prolific sources, we are indebted for the verification of our facts. The arrangement herein follows no_ previously conceived plan or outline, except that it supplements the first book of the series, ‘The Voyage of the Mayflower,” but forms in itself a true chronicle of the events of the early Dutch occupation of Man- hattan Island from its beginnings to its final reversion into English hands. Personalities have been avoided, except so far as 5 has seemed necessary and advisable in order to retain the point and purpose of the text; namely, that it shall appear pleasing and attractive as well as truthful and correct; for the same reason general- ities mostly have been dealt with, and a detailed statement only expressed where it commemorates some especially significant event. Supplementing this, the drawings have been made with a like regard for fidelity and authenticity, and idealized only where deemed permissible and ap- propriate. As is true of the other older cities in America, abundant evidence still exists in New York to remind one of the early days; the peculiar formation of the island has made any radical change in the laying out of the city impossible, hence any _his- torical account must bespeak with praise in reference to the judgment and foresight of its founders and organizers. “A noble tale well told, of valiant deeds well done,” is an epigram from an ancient tome, which it is to be hoped will be merited in some measure by the contents of this book, CONTENTS PAGE Tur Discovery OF MANHATTAN 9 THE SETTLEMENT 23 THE DutTcH GOVERNORS 29 ENGLISH CONTROL 65 THE SECOND OCCUPATION OF THE DuTCH 75 THE DISCOVERY Ole MANHATTAN ws HE crory or Manuattan || has ever been its prestige in the world of commerce and of trade ; a metropolis where the }} . merchants of the world might find a market for their wares, Amid these conditions and the | influences acquired at the de- mands of commerce, a mighty and glorious city has arisen. Relatively, it was the same state of affairs which existed in the early days when the traffic with the Netherlands, in the furs and skins of the Indian trader, made necessary its rise from a mere trading post to the leading city of the American continent. Its dealings with the foreign world made its aspect truly cos- II mopolitan, a condition which did not exist in reference to any of the other colonies then estab- © lished. Jamestown was practically a farming, home-making settle- ment, and Plymouth at that time merely a refuge for a per- secuted people. Hence it is but small wonder that a city of trade should be established and prosper in a location midway between the two. Geographically Manhattan Island occupies the natural loca- tion where such a commercial venture could but prosper, and which has since received the recognition, as was its due—a fact which, shorn of all its view of sentiment, is still romantic: Pe from the days of Hendrik Hud- son’s venture-seeking voyage ; through the occupation of the {[- various Dutch governors; the || ge a4k rule of Great Britain; the sec- ond tenure of the Dutch; again to revert to English con- |k trol; and, finally, the era of |feg American independence, under which the present city of New York has thriven and advanced. The island of Manhattan was, at this time, a mass of wood- crowned hills and grassy valleys, extending northward from the bay through a gently rolling region of marsh and glade, and peopled by Indians who, although savages, were supposed to be of a superior class to the average CTR Ry 3 Se z= Ss i Ly SZxeialaley “to search for nothing but a |BeaSs saw northwest passage.” If he failed |= in this, he can hardly be said to have erred in his final judgment |/ss= and report to the Company in |= reference to Mannahatta, which was, in the tongue of that day: “This a good land to fall in Ae i 19 with, lads, and a pleasant land to see.” Meeting with many hardships and near approach to disaster, Hudson sought diligently for the hoped-for channel, but, finally, after severe buffeting about in northern waters, he was blown southward as far as the coast of Virginia. From here he cruised northward until was sighted the hills of Neversink. Here he an- chored, at the portals of the ‘gateway to New York, on Sep- tember 2, 1609. On the following day the ship was cautiously propelled up into the lower bay. At some distance Indians were observed paddling {| about in canoes; then were the first introductions to the original settlers of Manhattan. The In- dians soon drew near in their canoes, and in an attempt at parley offered tobacco as a peace- offering. On the eleventh of September the craft came up through the Narrows, and anchored in full view of Manhattan Island, with the great river stretching north- Z ward even beyond the gaze or | Nie knowledge of the explorers, and which they believed was the long- looked-for pathway to Cathay. The following days were occu- pied by the voyage up the river, and on the seventeenth they ar- rived opposite the present city of Hudson. which they reached is a mooted question, although it is generally admitted that they got as far as Castle Island, just below Albany, and in an open boat proceeded thence to the head of navigation. On the twenty-third of the month the ship dropped down toward Manhattan Island, and eleven days later sailed from the mouth of the great North River for Holland. Upon his arrival Hudson reported to the officers of the Company the results of his discoveries, which inspired those worthy officials to further extend their interests and pro- vince, and, if possible, to open up trading relations with the natives. (Gs DG J AT THE SETTLEMENT te —— SSS w HROUGH the result some years negotiation a |i plan for the development of the [fii trade was finally put into opera- tion by the Dutch West India Company, which was formed for the purpose. One Adrian Block in 1613 suffered the loss of his vessel by fire as she was lying off Manhattan Island loaded with skins and about to set sail for || Holland. Block and his men were forced, therefore, to spend the winter on shore in huts, which they erected from the timber at hand, sur- rounding the hamlet bya palisade. |] He named the settlement New | Amsterdam, in honor of the first city of Holland. This is the first 25 knowledge we have of actual set- tlement on the island, and which, it may be said, formed the begin- nings of the present city. Hitherto Manhattan Island had been looked upon merely as || a trading post, but now, With a ]| full appreciation of its value and importance as a settlement and a province, attention was turned in that direction, and immigration =| set in soon after; a charter being =~|| granted to the Dutch West India \| Company for purposes of trade HI}; and colonization, the foundations \| of the city were laid in earnest. In 1623 the Mew Netherland, a ship of two hundred and sixty tons, brought over thirty Wal- =| loon families, who were distrib- 26 uted at various points along the Hudson River and the shores of Long Island Sound, thereby ex- tending and increasing the Dutch occupation, under whose direc- tion and rule they had emigrated. The following year a treaty |h alliance was formed between Hol- land and Great Britain, which en- couraged Holland to strengthen her political, commercial, and social status in the New World | by sending over still other bands |S of settlers. i In this relation it is to be re- corded, even unto the present day, the preservation of the Dutch characteristics of nomen- clature, manners, and customs noticeable alike in architecture, furniture, and dress—in strong contradistinction to the Eng- lish influences so marked and prevalent in the plantations of Virginia and Plymouth. Ae DUTCH GOVERNORS ¥ (CRA ERDITD} rs YY ITHIN a twelvemonth Peter Minuit was com- missioned Director-General of the province, and was granted |h, By power to preside over a council 2 of five to be appointed to assist him in the government thereof. Minuit arrived off New Am- sterdam in May, 1626, in the ship Sea Mew, and immediately upon setting foot on shore inaugu- rated what appeared at the time to be a vigorous administration. |L& [ly Up to now the Dutch had held Gag possession of Manhattan by right ||| @aemeaei of occupation only, but Minuit, jf with due loyalty and energy, sought to establish the right be- yond assail, and accordingly con- summated a treaty with the honorable than that of William Penn with the Indians from be- yond the Delaware. The price paid for the full title to the twenty-two thousand acres, comprising Manhattan Island, was sixty guilders, about twenty- four dollars, in merchandise, con- sisting of clothing and trinkets. The territory acquired, with the surrounding region already claimed by the Dutch, was now created a province and county of Holland, and granted Armorial. distinction, that of an Earl or Count—a beaver enclosed in a shield and surmounted by an Earl’s coronet. The provisional civil government was organized in 1626, and from this time dates the actual official recognition and patronage toward the support of the colony. In Minuit’s administration was Kermete built a stone fort on the site of|| /QYpeiBh, the present Battery, where the Lined YNZ wooden palisade and earthwork is then stood. This fortification oe was rectangular in form, built of fi ; earth, and faced with stone hewn ~ from the extensive deposits in the |N vicinity, and of sufficient size as |py># to be capable of harboring the} entire population in case of need. |i Occupying such a strategic po- sition at the confluence of the North (Hudson’s) and East |@ rivers, the site could hardly have NZ been improved upon for the pur- N TAX pose. In the waters adjacent |f thereto was the anchorage for 4| ships and the general rendezvous of the Indians and traders from oe roundabout—the Manna-hattoes from the north, the Hackensacks and Raritans from the west, the Rockaways, Canarsees, Shinne- gicocks, and Missiqueeges from Rf Long Island and the eastward. Ke Around this redoubt grew up 27 the little village, log huts at first, 2 Z and later stone or brick cottages, which, with the advent of Petrus Stuyvesant, was incorporated as New Amsterdam — the name under which the settlement had been known since first given it S| by Adrian Block in 1613-14. 4, The Director also caused to be built a horse-mill for grinding All corn, a staple article of food with — N March, 1664, Charles II. granted to his brother James, then Duke of York, ‘the terri- tory comprehending Long Island and the islands in the neighbor- hood, and all the lands and rivers | from the west side of the Con-|ffll necticut River to the eastern shore of Delaware Bay.” The English equipped four} vessels, with 450 men, under |g Colonel Richard Niccolls, to lf" "A take possession of the Province. |ftmeaws Niccolls with his ‘ red-coats” x \ ay arrived off the Fort on 30th off August, and to the consternation and dismay of the inhabitants as- sembled on the Bowling Green, as well as to Stuyvesant himself, = immediately sent ashore a sum- |, a 67 L mons to surrender, promising life, liberty and estate to all who 4| would peacefully accept of its wl| Conditions. aij} The Governor read the letter “i 1} to the Council, and fearing assent by the people should the tenor i} of it become known, he tore it | into shreds and crushed it be- a| neath his feet. os; Meanwhile the people them- Kai} Selves, in anticipation of some de- ~\ cisive move, had assembled out- || side the building and were shout- ing clamorously for information as to the contents of the letter. Returning to the Council chamber, Stuyvesant gathered 2yq| up the torn fragments and gave them to the Burgomasters in ses- sion to do with as they pleased, at the same time, of his own accord sending a defiant answer to Nic- colls, and ordering the garrison of the Fort to prepare for an attack. In an unguarded moment the |EeaiWl warring Governor yielded to the bl wiser counsel and entreaty of | popular sentiment, not to shed in- || j nocent blood in what could prove but a vain attempt at defense, \Wags and withheld immediate action. After some days, although it galled him bitterly to consent, Stuyvesant signed the treaty at his Bouwerie house, and within a {5 ey few hours a legion of British soldiery marched into the Fort and formally took possession of the city, the name being changed |\@are..; “WA y GES KC ae See ee 69 to New York in compliment to its Royal Patron. Hy on A After the surrender Stuyvesant Be eAN = was, by order of the State’s Gen- eral, recalled to Holland to tender a report of his administration in person. He arrived at The Hague in October, 1667, where | || he remained until his return to pi; America a year later. Here the supplanted Governor settled on his Bouwerie, and until || his. death proved to be an alto- gether more valuable citizen and pleasing a neighbor than was V-] thought to be at all likely from ‘his previous reputation, He in- MA\K || terested himself amiably in $94 church and municipal affairs, but succumbed in a few years to Pa a 7O the ravages of time and advanc- |[f ing age in an attack of cholera |/¥ morbus, -Thus, as the chroniclers have said, “ died a loyal, upright, and honest man.” His funeral was conducted |f with a grandeur hitherto un-|P& known in the New World, and his body entombed in his private |g chapel, which stood on the site of || the present Saint Mark’s Church, | and where the following record of his burial may yet be seen : = los eaten 2 So SIN va A Ti am (| iS / : 1A In this vault lies buried Wr 5 PETRUS STUYVESANT, yaNs\ Late Captain-General and Governor-in-Chief of New Amsterdam, | In New Netherland, now called New York, and the Dutch West India Islands, Died A.D. 1673, Aged 80 years. Sows ONG Ge we (|Get Uh Ven ALS eh O Ria Ds AK C-- USSU 7I 4| Another memorial, which up alto a generation ago had proved | equally lasting, was the so-called @| Stuyvesant Pear Tree, which "| stood surrounded by an_ iron fence at Thirteenth street and Third avenue. Governor Niccolls immedi- ately set about reconstructing the civil government of the city, replacing the former Burgo- masters and Schepens by a Mayor, Aldermen and Sheriffs, Was was the English form. The administration was peace- | fully conducted in the main, Nic- Hi colls meeting with but little oppo- sition from the Dutch residents, who seemed ready to fall in with the affairs of the new régime. out anew between England and Holland, and bethinking some attempt might be made by the Dutch to reclaim the city, the Governor made vigorous prepa- row rations for its defense. The = Oy e Dutch fleet, however, failed to]l- put in an appearance, and the serene period of Governor Nic- colls’ rule continued until 1668, when at his own request he was recalled to England. His suc- cessor was Colonel Francis Love- lace, who held the office until 1673, when the truce between the two countries again suffered dis- rupture, the city reverting finally | to the Dutch. THE SECOND OCCUPATION OF WHE DUTCH ws | | | eA HL i ity N a2gth July, 1673, two Dutch vessels sailed into the harbor, and the commander ae of the expedition presented the L following message to the Eng- lish Governor: ip e “Sir—The force of war now ps i. . . . . ° We = lying within your sight is sent by Wh = ZEN the High and Mighty States and Ey LT HL ° } 4 if his Serene Highness, the Prince |g Be of Orange, for the purpose of destroying their enemies. Welt have sent you, therefore, this let- ter, together with our trumpeter, | to the end that upon sight thereof you surrender unto us the fort called James, promising good quarter, or by refusal, we shall be obliged to proceed both by land and by water in such manner as we shall find most advantageous for the High and Mighty States.” Dated: The Ship Swanen- burgh, anchored betwixt Staaten and Longe Islands, gth August CZ (30th July, O. S.), 1673. ff Signed : * CoRNELIS EVERTSEN, * Jacos BENCKES. No immediate reply being forthcoming, a cannonading was begun, killing and wounding many men, and resulting in the final capitulation of the city, which was surrendered upon two conditions: “J, That Officers and Soldiers nee - with their arms, colors flying and a a ae ae 78 drums beating, without hindrance or molestation. “TI. Thereupon the Fort would be delivered with all mili- tary arms and ammunition re-| maining therein.” These terms being quickly ac- |Agay ceded to, the Dutch once more |@ZiCX found themselves in possession. [247% Public opinion was divided in|#y'E® its sympathies, but all naturally Pp obeyed the mandate, and the ie) Orange insignia again flew above 9 the fort. The city had mean- while improved greatly in appear- ance, increased in value, and more than doubled in population. The name New York was now|*, = changed to New Orange, or at | We least so it was known to the loyal NN Dutch, although the English nomenclature may be said never to have been separated from its memory since first given in 1664. The Dutch only enjoyed their PeMfea| Second period of rule for a few x months, as on the goth February ] in the following year (1674) a SS] new Treaty of Peace was signed 283] which restored to Great Britain the territory wrested from her the YAei| year before, and on the roth No. vember the new English Gov- Nj ernor, Sir Edmund Andros, entered upon the scene. So passed away the Dutch do- minion in North America, step by step, from the early establish- ment of the customs of Hol- land, its system of township and SS wae ° municipal government, the trans- |fA ; planting of the Old World names |['Uj and terms, the beginnings and growth of commerce, the friend |f and enemy, the Indian, and the | progress of foreign encroach- |B ment, which culminated in the ascendency and final supremacy | of an alien power. The annals. of New York are surpassed by no other city in America in topics | of varied character, romantic in- | cident, general interest, instruct- ive lesson, or dignified distinc- [Fs tion. The pioneers left their j]. — deep impress on the face and depth alike of the natural attri- butes of the Empire City. The settlers who first planted the flag of Holland in the empire Sam Us. Us Us Us th Us as Lt ee as a AW Tee Wy i eT as of the Indian were plain-spoken, earnest men, who left their native land to extend and enrich her || power and possession, and bind another province in a new quar- ter of the globe to the United wa! Netherland. Traders, chiefly, al- | though they never ignored the principles of religion, education and good government, and the early accounts published by some of their historians, and the ad- mirably written records and cor- respondence left by the Stuy- vesants, Beekmans, and Van Rensselaers. attest fully as to their erudition and scholarship. 23hRZe! 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