- This article is about the settlement in present-day New York City. For alternate usages, see New Amsterdam (disambiguation)
New Amsterdam (Dutch: Nieuw Amsterdam) was
the name of the 17th century fortified settlement in the New Netherland colony that would eventually become New
York City. Founded in 1625 by the Dutch West India Company, the city was located on the strategic, fortifiable southern tip of the
island of Manhattan and intended to defend the company's fur trade opeartions in the Hudson
Valley. New Amsterdam developed into the largest Dutch colonial settlement in North America and remained a Dutch possession
until 1664, when it fell to the English. The
Dutch regained it briefly in 1673, renaming it "New Orange", then ceded it permanently to the English in 1674. The 1625 date of the foundation of the city is commemorated in the Official Seal of the City of New York (formerly, the year on the seal the was 1664,
the year of English incorporation).
See: Dutch colonization of
the Americas, History of New York City
History
Early Settlement (1609-1625)
The first recorded exploration by the Dutch of area around what is now called New York Bay was in 1609 with the voyage of Henry Hudson, who was attempting to find the Northwest Passage. Instead he brought back news about the possible exploitation of beaver pelts in the area,
leading interest by the Dutch in sending further missions to the area. At the time, beaver pelts were highly prized in Europe, because the fur could be "felted" to make waterproof hats. A by-product of the trade in beaver pelts was castoreum — the
secretion of the animals' anal glands — for its supposed medicinal properties. Several expeditions followed in the next few
years, and in 1614, an expedition by Adriaen Block established the first year-round presence in the New Netherland colony.
In the first decade and a half of the colony, the island of Manhattan was used
only sparingly by the Dutch. Since the colony was intended strictly as a profit-making enterprise, and not as a means to
transplant Dutch culture. In this respect, the mouth of the Hudson River
soon paled in comparison with the beaver-rich unexploited forests farther inland, where the company's traders could be in close contact with the Native American hunters who
supplied them with pelts in exchange for cheap European-made trade goods and wampum, which was soon being "minted"
under Dutch auspices on Long Island.
Thus in 1624 when the first group of families arrived to operate the trading posts, they were mostly sent inland ot the Hudson Valley. The early
settlement on Manhattan was confined to several plantations, as well as for the cattle that were released on the
island.
Fortification (1625)
In 1625, the ongoing threat of attack from other European colonial powers prompted the
Directors of the Dutch West India Company to
formulate a plan to protect the entrance to the Hudson River, and to gather
the trading post operations into the vicinity of the new fort.
There is evidence that the Dutch West India Company was interested in building such a fort as early as 1620, based on a letter dated that year from the English architect Inigo Jones, who had probably been contacted by the
company to design the fort. In the letter, Jones advises the company to avoid constructing a timber fort out of haste, but rather to build a moated fortification with stone and lime. Jones' drawing illustrates the traditional star-design that had become prevalent because of its
ability to deflect cannon fire.
For the location of the masonry fort, company
director Willem Verhulst and engineer Cryn Fredericks chose a site just above the
southern tip of Manhattan. The new fortification was to be called Fort Amsterdam. By the end of the year, the site had been staked out directly
south of Bowling Green on the site of
the present U.S. Custom House; west of the fort's site, later
landfill has now created Battery
Park.
1626-1673
Verhulst was an unpopular director, however, mainly because of his mismanagement of the colony's finances and his poor treatment of the settlers, whom he viewed simply as company employees. In early 1626, Verhulst was replaced by Peter Minuit. As part of the fort-building operation, Minuit began a policy of
"purchasing" Manhattan from the local Lenape peoples for 60 guilders worth of trade goods.
This was the foundation of the legend that Minuit had "purchased" Manhattan from the
Native Americans for 24 dollars worth of trinkets. Most historians now agree that
the Lenape had no concept of permanent
ownership of land, since they moved encampments on a seasonal basis, and lived off whatever land they inhabited. At best, they probably believed they were granting
hunting and fishing rights to the Dutch, who would eventually relinquish them when they desired to move on to other grounds.
While the fort was being constructed, the growing Mohawk-Mohican War in the Hudson Valley lead the company to relocate the settlers there to the vicinity of the new Fort Amsterdam. The urgency of the need for the fortification, as well as the
fact that the colony as a whole was not making money, led a scaling back of the original plans. Instead of the original masonry
fort, a simple blockhouse was constructed surrounded by a palisade of wood and sod. A sawmill was built on what is now Governors
Island. The new settlement had a population of approximately 270 people,
including infants. A watercolor
discovered in map collection of the Austrian
National Library, Vienna,
in 1992 (see link below) provides a unique view of mid-17th century Nieuw Amsterdam as it appeared from Governor's Island.
New Amsterdam was incorporated on February 2, 1653. On April 20, 1657, New
Amsterdam granted freedom of religion to Jews. Nieuw Haarlem was formally
recognized in 1658.
In the Second Anglo-Dutch War, between England and the United
Netherlands, the New Netherlands were seized by the English, with director general Peter Stuyvesant surrendering New Amsterdam on September
24, 1664. The colony was subsequently renamed New York, after the Duke of York—brother of the
English King Charles II—who had been granted the
lands.
In 1667, the Dutch withdrew their claims on the colony in the Treaty of Breda, and were granted the rights to Suriname in return. However, in a subsequent war between the English and the Dutch, the Dutch recaptured the
colony briefly in 1673 before handing it over for good after the signing of the Treaty of Westminster on February 19, 1674.
External links
References
- Hugh Morrison, Early American Architecture ISBN 0-486-25492-5 (Oxford University Press, 1952) [Dover Ed. 1987]
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