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Settlement of New York
It has been shown that Holland was more anxious to secure trade than territory. Soon after the discovery of the Hudson, by Captain Henry Hudson, the Dutch traders sent vessels to Manhattan Island, now constituting the city of New York, and began bartering with the Indians. In 1621 Holland granted the territory from Delaware Bay to the Connecticut River to the Dutch West India Company. The name given to the territory was New Netherland, while the settlement, which grew in time into the metropolis of America, was called New Amsterdam. The whole island was bought from the Indians for sixty guilders, equal to about twenty-four dollars, a price which is considerably less than would be demanded to-day for the site of Greater New York.
New Netherland was governed successively by Peter Minuet, Walter Van Twiller, William Kieft, and Peter Stuyvesant, who were sent out by the Dutch West India Company, and whose rule extended from 1626 to 1664. Of these, Stuyvesant was by far the ablest, and he made a strong impression on the social and political life of New Netherland. He was severe and stubborn, however, and many of the Dutchmen found his rule so onerous that they were rather pleased than otherwise, when the English, in 1664,, claimed the territory by right of discovery and sent out a fleet which compelled Stuyvesant to surrender the town. The doughty old governor stamped about New Amsterdam with his wooden leg, calling upon his countrymen to rally and drive back the rascals, but little or no heed was paid to his appeals.
Charles II had granted the territory to his brother the Duke of York, who soon after ascended the throne, thus making the colony, which included that of New Jersey, a royal one. The Connecticut people had settled a large part of Rhode Island, which they claimed, but the duke was too powerful to be resisted, and Long Island became a part of New York, as the city and province were named.
In 1673, while at war with England, Holland sent a fleet which recaptured New York, but it was given back to England, upon the signing of a treaty in 1674. The manner in which New Netherland was settled by the Dutch was quite different from that of New England. Wealthy men, termed "patroons," were granted immense tracts of land and brought over settlers, whose situation was much like that of the serfs of Russia. Traces of the patroon system remained long after the Revolution, and, in 1846, caused the "Anti-Rent War," which resulted in the death of a number of people.
The province of New York suffered greatly from misrule. The people were not permitted to elect their own assembly until 1683, and two years later, when the Duke of York became king, he took away the privilege. William and Mary, however, restored it in 1691, and it remained to the Revolution.
As a proof of the bad governorship of New York, it may be said that there is good reason to believe that one of its rulers was interested with the pirates who infested the
coast.
William Kidd, The
Pirate
The piracy alluded to became such a scandalous
blight that strenuous measures were taken to crush it. In 1697 Captain
William Kidd, a New York shipmaster and a brave and skillful navigator,
was sent to assist in the work. After he had cruised for a while in
distant waters, he turned pirate himself. He had the effrontery to
return home three years later, believing his friends would protect him;
but, though they would have been willing enough to do so, they dared
not. He was arrested, tried in England, convicted, and hanged. Piracy
was finally driven from the American waters in 1720.
The fine harbor and noble river emptying into it
gave New York such advantages that, by 1750, it had become one of the
most important cities on the coast, though its population was less than
that of Philadelphia. At the time named, its inhabitants numbered about
12,000, which was less than that of Philadelphia. The province itself
contained 90,000 inhabitants. The chief towns were New York, Albany, and
Kingston. Brooklyn, which attained vast proportions within the following
century, was merely a ferry station.
Source:
A New History of the United States, The Greater Republic by Charles
Morris, LL.D., W. E. Scull, 1899.
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