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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ Narrative New Netherland, by Various
+ </title>
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+
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
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+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Narrative of New Netherland, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Narrative of New Netherland
+
+Author: Various
+
+Editor: J. F. Jameson
+
+Release Date: October 14, 2009 [EBook #3161]
+Last Updated: January 15, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NARRATIVE OF NEW NETHERLAND ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Tony Adam Anthony, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ NARRATIVE NEW NETHERLAND
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ By Various
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ J.F. Jameson, Editor
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> LETTER OF REVEREND JONAS MICHAELIUS, 1628.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> "NOVUM BELGIUM" 1646 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> "JOURNAL OF NEW NETHERLAND" 1647 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> BY WHOM AND HOW NEW NETHERLAND WAS PEOPLED.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE CAUSES OF THE NEW NETHERLAND WAR AND THE
+ SEQUEL THEREOF. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW NETHERLAND, 1650
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> Of The Fresh River. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> Of the Right of the Netherlanders to the Fresh
+ River. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> Of the South River and the Boundaries there.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> Of the South Bay and South River. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> Of the Situation and Goodness of the Waters.
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> Of the Reasons and Causes why and how New
+ Netherland is so Decayed. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> The Administration of Director Kieft in
+ Particular. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> The Administration of Director Stuyvesant in
+ Particular </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> In what Manner New Netherland should be
+ Redressed. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> ANSWER TO THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW
+ NETHERLAND, 1650 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> LETTER OF JOHANNES BOGAERT TO HANS
+ BONTEMANTEL, 1655 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> LETTERS OF THE DUTCH MINISTERS TO THE CLASSIS
+ OF AMSTERDAM, 1655-1664 </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER OF REVEREND JONAS MICHAELIUS, 1628.
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and source.
+
+ Michaelius, Reverend Jonas. "Letter of Reverend Jonas
+ Michaelius, 1628." In J. Franklin Jameson, ed., Narratives
+ of New Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original Narratives of Early
+ American History). NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE established church in the United Netherlands was the Reformed Church.
+ Its polity was that of Geneva or of Presbyterianism. The minister and
+ ruling or lay elders of the local church formed its consistory,
+ corresponding to the Scottish or American kirk session. The next higher
+ power, administrative or judicial, resided in the classis, consisting of
+ all the ministers in a given district and one elder from each parish
+ therein, and corresponding to the presbytery. It had power to license and
+ ordain, install and remove ministers. Above this body stood the provincial
+ synod, and above that the (occasional) national synods. In 1624 the synod
+ of North Holland decreed that supervision over the churches in the East
+ Indies should belong to the churches and classes within whose bounds were
+ located the various "chambers" of the East India Company. The same rule
+ was applied in the case of the West India Company's settlements. Under
+ this rule the first minister sent out to New Netherland was placed under
+ the jurisdiction of the Classis of Amsterdam, since the colony was under
+ the charge of the Amsterdam Chamber. Many extracts from the minutes of
+ that classis, and what remains of its correspondence with the ministers in
+ New Netherland, are printed in the volumes published by the State of New
+ York under the title <i>Ecclesiastical Records, State of New York</i> (six
+ volumes, Albany, 1901-1905). From 1639, if not earlier, a committee of the
+ classis, called "Deputati ad Res Exteras," was given charge of most of the
+ details of correspondence with the Dutch Reformed churches in America,
+ Africa, the East and foreign European countries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As mentioned by Wassenaer, "comforters of the sick," who were
+ Ecclesiastical officers but not ministers, were first sent Out to New
+ Netherland. The first minister was Reverence Jonas Jansen Michielse, or,
+ to employ the Latinized form of his name which he, according to clerical
+ habit, was accustomed to use, Jonas Johannis Michaelius. Michaelius was
+ born in North Holland in 1577, entered the University of Leyden as a
+ student of divinity in 1600, became minister at Nieuwbokswoude in 1612 and
+ at Hem, near Enkhuizen, in 1614. At some time between April, 1624, and
+ August, 1625, he went out to San Salvador (Bahia, Brazil), recently
+ conquered by the West India Company's fleet, and after brief service there
+ to one Of their posts on the West African coast. Returning thence, He was,
+ early in 1628, sent out to Manhattan, where he arrived April 7. It is not
+ known just when he returned to Holland, but he appears to have been under
+ engagement for three years. In 1637-1638 we find the classis vainly
+ endeavoring to send him again to New Netherland, but prevented by the
+ Company, which had a veto upon all such appointments in its dominions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About half a century ago the following precious letter of Michaelius,
+ describing New Netherland as it appeared in its earliest days to the eyes
+ of an educated clergyman of the Dutch Church, was discovered in Amsterdam,
+ and printed by Mr. J.J.Bodel Nijenhuis in the <i>Kerk-historisch Archief</i>,
+ part I. An English translation of it, with an introduction, was then
+ privately printed in a pamphlet by Mr. Henry C. Murphy, an excellent
+ scholar in New Netherland history, who was at that time minister of the
+ United States to the Netherlands. This pamphlet, entitled <i>The First
+ Minister of the Dutch Reformed Church in the United States</i> (The Hague,
+ 1858), was reprinted in 1858 in <i>Documents relative to the Colonial
+ History of the State of New York</i>, II. 757-770, in 1881 in the <i>Collections
+ of the New York Historical Society</i>, XIII, and in 1883, at Amsterdam,
+ by Frederik Muller and Co., who added a photographic fac-simile of full
+ size and a transcript of the Dutch text. In 1896 a reduced fac-simile of
+ the original letter, with an amended translation by Reverence John G.
+ Fagg, appeared in the <i>Year Book</i> of the (Collegiate) Reformed
+ Protestant Dutch Church of New York City, and also separately for private
+ circulation, and in 1901 the Dutch text with Reverend Mr. Fagg's
+ translation was printed in <i>Ecclesiastical Records</i>, I. 49-68, which
+ also contains a photographic fac-simile of the concluding portion of the
+ manuscript. Another is in <i>Memorial History</i>, I. 166. The original is
+ in the New York Public Library (Lenox Building). Reverend Adrianus
+ Smoutius, to whom the letter was addressed, was an ultra-Calvinist
+ clergyman, who led a stormy life, but from 1620 to 1630 was a minister of
+ the collegiate churches of Amsterdam, and as such a member of the classis
+ under whose charge Michaelius served.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For many years this letter of August 11, 1628, was supposed to be the
+ earliest extant letter or paper written at Manhattan. But a letter of
+ three days earlier was recently discovered, which Michaelius wrote on
+ August 8 to Jan Foreest, a magistrate of Hoorn and secretary to the
+ Executive Council (Gecommitteerde Raden) of the States of the Province of
+ Holland. This letter mentions epistles also sent to two clergymen in
+ Holland and to the writer's brother. It was printed by Mr. Dingman
+ Versteeg in <i>Manhattan in 1628</i> (New York, 1904). All these letters
+ were presumably prepared to be sent home on the same ship. The two which
+ are extant parallel each other to a large extent. That which follows,
+ though second in order of time, is intrinsically a little more interesting
+ than the other. Mr. Fagg's translation has in the main been followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LETTER OF REVEREND JONAS MICHAELIUS, 1628
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Reverend, Learned and Pious Mr. Adrianus Smoutius, Faithful Minister
+ of the Holy Gospel of Christ in his Church, dwelling upon the
+ Heerengracht, not far from the West India House at Amsterdam. By a friend,
+ whom God Preserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Peace of Christ to You.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverend Sir, Well Beloved Brother in Christ, Kind Friend!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE favorable opportunity which now presents itself of writing to your
+ Reverence I cannot let pass, without embracing it, according to my
+ promise. And, first to unburden myself in this communication of a
+ sorrowful circumstance, it pleased the Lord, seven weeks after we arrived
+ in this country, to take from me my good partner, who had been to me, for
+ more than sixteen years, a virtuous, faithful, and altogether amiable
+ yoke-fellow; and I now find myself alone with three children,(1) very much
+ discommoded, without her society and assistance. But what have I to say?
+ The Lord himself has done this, against whom no one can oppose himself.
+ And why should I even wish to, knowing that all things must work together
+ for good to them that love God? I hope therefore to bear my cross
+ patiently, and by the grace and help of the Lord, not to let the courage
+ fail me which in my duties here I so especially need.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Two daughters and a son, Jan, whom he had placed in the
+ house and custody of skipper Jan Jansen Brouwer.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The voyage was long, namely, from the 24th of January till the 7th of
+ April, when we first set foot upon land here. Of storm and tempest which
+ fell hard upon the good wife and children, though they bore it better as
+ regards sea-sickness and fear than I had expected, we had no lack,
+ particularly in the vicinity of the Bermudas and the rough coasts of this
+ country. Our fare in the ship was very poor and scanty, so that my blessed
+ wife and children, not eating with us in the cabin, on account of the
+ little room in it, had a worse lot than the sailors themselves; and that
+ by reason of a wicked cook who annoyed them in every way; but especially
+ by reason of the captain himself,(1) who, although I frequently complained
+ of it in the most courteous manner, did not concern himself in the least
+ about correcting the rascal; nor did he, even when they were all sick,
+ given them anything which could do them any good, although there was
+ enough in the ship: as he himself knew very well where to find it in
+ order, out of meal times, to fill his own stomach. All the relief which he
+ gave us, consisted merely in liberal promises, with a drunken head; upon
+ which nothing followed when he was sober but a sour face; and he raged at
+ the officers and kept himself constantly to the wine, both at sea and
+ especially here while lying in the river; so that he daily walked the deck
+ drunk and with an empty head, seldom coming ashore to the Council and
+ never to Divine service. We bore all with silence on board the ship; but
+ it grieves me, when I think of it, on account of my wife; the more,
+ because she was so situated as she was&mdash;believing that she was with
+ child&mdash;and the time so short which she had yet to live. On my first
+ voyage I roamed about with him a great deal, even lodged in the same hut,
+ but never knew that he was such a brute and drunkard. But he was then
+ under the direction of Mr. Lam,(2) and now he had the chief command
+ himself. I have also written to Mr. Godyn(3) about it, considering it
+ necessary that it should be known.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Evert Croeger, with whom, prior to this, I had made
+ long voyages, but never before did I know him well."&mdash;Letter
+ of August 8 to Jan Foreest.
+
+ (2) Admiral Jan Dirckszoon Lam, who in 1625 and 1626 was in
+ command of a Dutch squadron on the west coast of Africa.
+
+ (3) Probably Samuel Godyn, a prominent director of the
+ company.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our coming here was agreeable to all, and I hope, by the grace of the
+ Lord, that my service will not be unfruitful. The people, for the most
+ part, are rather rough and unrestrained, but I find in almost all of them
+ both love and respect towards me; two things with which hitherto the Lord
+ has everywhere graciously blessed my labors, and which in our calling, as
+ your Reverence well knows and finds, are especially desirable, in order to
+ make our ministry fruitful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the beginning we established the form of a church; and as Brother
+ Bastiaen Crol(1) very seldom comes down from Fort Orange, because the
+ directorship of that fort and the trade there is committed to him, it has
+ been thought best to choose two elders for my assistance and for the
+ proper consideration of all such ecclesiastical matters as might occur,
+ intending the coming year, if the Lord permit, to let one of them retire,
+ and to choose another in his place from a double number first lawfully
+ proposed to the congregation. One of those whom we have now chosen is the
+ Honorable Director(2) himself, and the other is the storekeeper of the
+ Company, Jan Huygen,(3) his brother-in-law, persons of very good
+ character, as far as I have been able to learn, having both been formerly
+ in office in the Church, the one as deacon, and the other as elder in the
+ Dutch and French churches, respectively, at Wesel.(4)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Sebastian Janszoon Krol came out to New Netherland in
+ 1626 as a "comforter of the sick" at Manhattan, but before
+ long went up to Fort Orange, where he was chief agent for
+ the company most of the time to March, 1632. Then, on
+ Minuit's recall, he was director-general till Wouter van
+ Twiller's arrival in April, 1633.
+
+ (2) Peter Minuit, born of Huguenot parentage in 1550 in
+ Wesel, west Germany, was made director general of New
+ Netherland in December, 1625, arrived in May, 1626, bought
+ Manhattan Island of the Indians that summer, and remained in
+ office till recalled early in 1632. In 1636-1637 he made
+ arrangements with Blommaert and the Swedish government, in
+ consequence of which he conducted the first Swedish colony
+ to Delaware Bay, landing there in the spring of 1638, and
+ establishing New Sweden on territory claimed by the Dutch.
+ During the ensuing summer he perished in a hurricane at St.
+ Christopher, in the West Indies.
+
+ (3) Probably the ame as Jan Huych, comforter of the sick.
+
+ (4) Jan Huyghens was deacon of the Dutch Reformed church at
+ Wesel in 1612; and probably Minuit was elder in the French
+ church there.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At the first administration of the Lord's Supper which was observed, not
+ without great joy and comfort to many, we had fully fifty communicants&mdash;Walloons
+ and Dutch; of whom, a portion made their first confession of faith before
+ us, and others exhibited their church certificates. Others had forgotten
+ to bring their certificates with them, not thinking that a church would be
+ formed and established here; and some who brought them, had lost them
+ unfortunately in a general conflagration, but they were admitted upon the
+ satisfactory testimony of others to whom they were known, and also upon
+ their daily good deportment, since one cannot observe strictly all the
+ usual formalities in making a beginning under such circumstance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We administer the Holy Supper of the Lord once in four months,
+ provisionally, until a larger number of people shall otherwise require.
+ The Walloons and French have no service on Sundays, otherwise than in the
+ Dutch language, for those who understand no Dutch are very few. A portion
+ of the Walloons are going back to the Fatherland, either because their
+ years here are expired, or else because some are not very serviceable to
+ the Company. Some of them live far away and could not well come in time of
+ heavy rain and storm, so that they themselves cannot think it advisable to
+ appoint any special service in French for so small a number, and that upon
+ an uncertainty. Nevertheless, the Lord's Supper is administered to them in
+ the French language, and according to the French mode, with a sermon
+ preceding, which I have before me in writing, so long as I can not trust
+ myself extemporaneously.(1) If in this and in other matters your Reverence
+ and the Reverend Brethren of the Consistory, who have special
+ superintendence over us here, deem it necessary to administer to us any
+ correction, instruction or good advice, it will be agreeable to us and we
+ shall thank your Reverence therefor; since we must all have no other
+ object than the glory of God in the building up of his kingdom and the
+ salvation of many souls. I keep myself as far as practicable within the
+ pale of my calling, wherein I find myself sufficiently occupied. And
+ although our small consistory embraces at the most&mdash;when Brother Crol
+ is down here&mdash;not more than four persons, all of whom, myself alone
+ excepted, have also public business to attend to, I still hope to separate
+ carefully the ecclesiastical from the civil matters which occur, so that
+ each one will be occupied with his own subject.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) That is, to preach extempore in French.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And though many things are mixti generis, and political and ecclesiastical
+ persons can greatly assist each other, nevertheless the matters and
+ officers proceeding together must not be mixed but kept separate, in order
+ to prevent all confusion and disorder. As the Council of this place
+ consists of good people, who are, however, for the most part simple and
+ have little experience in public affairs, I should have little objection
+ to serve them in any difficult or dubious affair with good advice,
+ provided I considered myself capable and my advice should be asked; in
+ which case I suppose that I should not do amiss nor be suspected by any
+ one of being a polupragmov or allotrioepiskopos.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) I Peter iv. 15; a meddler or "busy-body in other men's
+ matters."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In my opinion it would be well that the Honorable Directors should furnish
+ this place with plainer and more precise instructions to the rulers, that
+ they may distinctly know how to conduct themselves in all possible public
+ difficulties and events; and also that I should some time have here all
+ such <i>Acta Synolalia</i>, as have been adopted in the synods of Holland;
+ both the special ones of our quarter,(1) and those which are provincial
+ and national, in relation to ecclesiastical difficulties; or at least such
+ of them as in the judgment of the Honorable Brethren at Amsterdam would be
+ most likely to be of service to us here. In the meantime, I hope matters
+ will go well here, if only on our part we do our best in all sincerity and
+ honest zeal; whereunto I have from the first entirely devoted myself, and
+ wherein I have also hitherto, by the grace of God, had no just cause to
+ complain of any one. And if any dubious matters of importance come before
+ me, and especially if they will admit of any delay, I shall refer myself
+ to the good and prudent advice of the Honorable Brethren, to whom I have
+ already wholly commended myself.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) I.e., acts of the synod of North Holland. North Holland
+ was not at this time a province, but merely a part of the
+ province of Holland, the chief of the seven United
+ Provinces. The national <i>Acta</i> would probably be those of
+ the six fundamental synodical conventions of 1568-1586 and
+ the Synod of Dort.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As to the natives of this country, I find them entirely savage and wild,
+ strangers to all decency, yea, uncivil and stupid as garden poles,
+ proficient in all wickedness and godlessness; devilish men, who serve
+ nobody but the Devil, that is, the spirit which in their language they
+ call Menetto; under which title they comprehend everything that is subtle
+ and crafty and beyond human skill and power. They have so much witchcraft,
+ divination, sorcery and wicked arts, that they can hardly be held in by
+ any bands or locks. They are as thievish and treacherous as they are tall;
+ and in cruelty they are altogether inhuman, more than barbarous, far
+ exceeding the Africans.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) He had served on the west coast of Africa; see the
+ introduction.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I have written concerning this matter to several persons elsewhere, not
+ doubting that Brother Crol will have written sufficient to your Reverence,
+ or to the Honorable Directors; as also of the base treachery and the
+ murders which the Mohicans, at the upper part of this river, had planned
+ against Fort Orange, but which failed through the gracious interposition
+ of our Lord, for our good&mdash;who, when it pleases Him, knows how to
+ pour, unexpectedly, natural impulses into these unnatural men, in order to
+ prevent them. How these people can best be led to the true knowledge of
+ God and of the Mediator Christ, is hard to say. I cannot myself wonder
+ enough who it is that has imposed so much upon your Reverence and many
+ others in the Fatherland, concerning the docility of these people and
+ their good nature, the proper principia religionis and vestigia legis
+ naturae which are said to be among them; in whom I have as yet been able
+ to discover hardly a single good point, except that they do not speak so
+ jeeringly and so scoffingly of the godlike and glorious majesty of their
+ Creator as the Africans dare to do. But it may be because they have no
+ certain knowledge of Him, or scarcely any. If we speak to them of God, it
+ appears to them like a dream; and we are compelled to speak of him, not
+ under the name of Menetto, whom they know and serve&mdash;for that would
+ be blasphemy&mdash;but of one great, yea, most high, Sackiema, by which
+ name they&mdash;living without a king&mdash;call him who has the command
+ over several hundred among them, and who by our people are called
+ Sackemakers; and as the people listen, some will begin to mutter and shake
+ their heads as if it were a silly fable; and others, in order to express
+ regard and friendship for such a proposition, will say Orith (That is
+ good). Now, by what means are we to lead this people to salvation, or to
+ make a salutary breach among them? I take the liberty on this point of
+ enlarging somewhat to your Reverence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their language, which is the first thing to be employed with them,
+ methinks is entirely peculiar. Many of our common people call it an easy
+ language, which is soon learned, but I am of a contrary opinion. For those
+ who can understand their words to some extent and repeat them, fail
+ greatly in the pronunciation, and speak a broken language, like the
+ language of Ashdod.(1) For these people have difficult aspirates and many
+ guttural letters, which are formed more in the throat than by the mouth,
+ teeth and lips, to which our people not being accustomed, make a bold
+ stroke at the thing and imagine that they have accomplished something
+ wonderful. It is true one can easily learn as much as is sufficient for
+ the purposes of trading, but this is done almost as much by signs with the
+ thumb and fingers as by speaking; and this cannot be done in religious
+ matters. It also seems to us that they rather design to conceal their
+ language from us than to properly communicate it, except in things which
+ happen in daily trade; saying that it is sufficient for us to understand
+ them in that; and then they speak only half sentences, shortened words,
+ and frequently call out a dozen things and even more; and all things which
+ have only a rude resemblance to each other, they frequently call by the
+ same name. In truth it is a made-up, childish language; so that even those
+ who can best of all speak with the savages, and get along well in trade,
+ are nevertheless wholly in the dark and bewildered when they hear the
+ savages talking among themselves.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) An allusion to Nehemiah xiii. 24.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It would be well then to leave the parents as they are, and begin with the
+ children who are still young. So be it. But they ought in youth to be
+ separated from their parents; yea, from their whole nation. For, without
+ this, they would forthwith be as much accustomed as their parents to the
+ heathenish tricks and deviltries, which are kneaded naturally in their
+ hearts by themselves through a just judgment of God; so that having once,
+ by habit, obtained deep root, they would with great difficulty be
+ emancipated therefrom. But this separation is hard to effect. For the
+ parents have a strong affection for their children, and are very loth to
+ part with them; and when they are separated from them, as we have already
+ had proof, the parents are never contented, but take them away stealthily,
+ or induce them to run away. Nevertheless, although it would be attended
+ with some expense, we ought, by means of presents and promises, to obtain
+ the children, with the gratitude and consent of the parents, in order to
+ place them under the instruction of some experienced and godly
+ schoolmaster, where they may be instructed not only to speak, read, and
+ write in our language, but also especially in the fundamentals of our
+ Christian religion; and where, besides, they will see nothing but good
+ examples of virtuous living; but they must sometimes speak their native
+ tongue among themselves in order not to forget it, as being evidently a
+ principal means of spreading the knowledge of religion through the whole
+ nation. In the meantime we should not forget to beseech the Lord, with
+ ardent and continual prayers, for His blessing; who can make things which
+ are unseen suddenly and opportunely to appear; who gives life to the dead;
+ calls that which is not as though it were; and being rich in mercy has
+ pity on whom He will; as He has compassionated us to be His people; and
+ has washed us clean, sanctified us and justified us, when we were covered
+ with all manner of corruption, calling us to the blessed knowledge of His
+ Son, and out of the power of darkness to His marvellous light. And this I
+ regard so much the more necessary, as the wrath and curse of God, resting
+ upon this miserable people, is found to be the heavier. Perchance God may
+ at last have mercy upon them, that the fulness of the heathen may be
+ gradually brought in and the salvation of our God may be here also seen
+ among these wild savage men. I hope to keep a watchful eye over these
+ people, and to learn as much as possible of their language, and to seek
+ better opportunities for their instruction than hitherto it has been
+ possible to find.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to what concerns myself and my household affairs: I find myself by the
+ loss of my good and helpful partner very much hindered and distressed&mdash;for
+ my two little daughters are yet small; maid servants are not here to be
+ had, at least none whom they can advise me to take; and the Angola slave
+ women(1) are thievish, lazy, and useless trash. The young man whom I took
+ with me, I discharged after Whitsuntide, for the reason that I could not
+ employ him out-of-doors at any working of the land, and in-doors he was a
+ burden to me instead of an assistance. He is now elsewhere at service
+ among the farmers.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Slavery was introduced into New Netherland two or three
+ years before this, a number of negroes, some of them from
+ Angola, having been imported in 1625 or 1626.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The promise which the Honorable Directors of the Company had made me of
+ some morgens or acres of land for me to sustain myself, instead of a free
+ table which otherwise belonged to me, is void and useless. For their
+ Honors well knew that there are no horses, cows, or laborers to be
+ obtained here for money. Every one is short in these particulars and wants
+ more. I should not mind the expense if the opportunity only offered, for
+ the sake of our own comfort, although there were no profit in it (the
+ Honorable Directors nevertheless remaining indebted to me for as much as
+ the value of a free table), for refreshment of butter, milk, etc., cannot
+ be here obtained; though some is indeed sold at a very high price, for
+ those who bring it in or bespeak it are jealous of each other. So I shall
+ be compelled to pass through the winter without butter and other
+ necessities, which the ships do not bring with them to be sold here. The
+ rations, which are given out here, and charged for high enough, are all
+ hard stale food, such as men are used to on board ship, and frequently not
+ very good, and even so one cannot obtain as much as he desires. I began to
+ get considerable strength, by the grace of the Lord, but in consequence of
+ this hard fare of beans and gray peas, which are hard enough, barley,
+ stockfish, etc., without much change, I cannot fully recuperate as I
+ otherwise would. The summer yields something, but what is that for any one
+ who does not feel well? The savages also bring some things, but one who
+ has no wares, such as knives, beads, and the like, or seewan, cannot come
+ to any terms with them. Though the people trade such things for proper
+ wares, I know not whether it is permitted by the laws of the Company. I
+ have now ordered from Holland almost all necessaries; and I hope to pass
+ through the winter, with hard and scanty food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The country yields many good things for the support of life, but they are
+ all too unfit and wild to be gathered. Better regulations should be
+ established, and people brought here who have the knowledge and implements
+ for seeking out all kinds of things in their season and for securing and
+ gathering them. No doubt this will gradually be done. In the meanwhile, I
+ wish the Honorable Directors to be courteously enquired of, how I can best
+ have the opportunity to possess a portion of land, and (even at my own
+ expense) to support myself upon it. For as long as there is no more
+ accommodation to be obtained here from the country people, and I shall be
+ compelled to order everything from the Fatherland at great expense and
+ with much risk and trouble, or else live here upon these poor and hard
+ rations alone, it will badly suit me and my children. We want ten or
+ twelve more farmers with horses, cows and laborers in proportion, to
+ furnish us with bread, milk products, and suitable fruits. For there are
+ convenient places which can be easily protected and are very suitable,
+ which can be bought from the savages for trifling toys, or could be
+ occupied without risk, because we have more than enough shares which have
+ never been abandoned but have been always reserved for that purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The business of furs is dull on account of the new war of the
+ Maechibaeys(1) against the Mohicans at the upper end of this river. There
+ have occurred cruel murders on both sides. The Mohicans have fled and
+ their lands are unoccupied and are very fertile and pleasant. It grieves
+ us that there are no people, and that there is no order from the Honorable
+ Directors to occupy the same. Much timber is cut here to carry to the
+ Fatherland, but the vessels are too few to take much of it. They are
+ making a windmill to saw lumber and we also have a gristmill. They bake
+ brick here, but it is very poor. There is good material for burning lime,
+ namely, oyster shells, in large quantities. The burning of potash has not
+ succeeded; the master and his laborers are all greatly disappointed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Mohawks.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We are busy now in building a fort of good quarry stone, which is to be
+ found not far from here in abundance. May the Lord only build and watch
+ over our walls. There is good opportunity for making salt, for there are
+ convenient places, the water is salt enough, and there is no want of heat
+ in summer. Besides, what the waters yield, both of the sea and rivers, in
+ all kinds of fish; and what the land possesses in all kinds of birds,
+ game, and woods, with vegetables, fruits, roots, herbs and plants, both
+ for eating and medicinal purposes, and with which wonderful cures can be
+ effected, it would take too long to tell, nor could I yet tell accurately.
+ Your Reverence has already obtained some knowledge thereof and will be
+ able to obtain from others further information. The country is good and
+ pleasant, the climate is healthy, notwithstanding the sudden changes of
+ cold and heat. The sun is very warm, the winter is fierce and severe and
+ continues fully as long as in our country. The best remedy is not to spare
+ the wood, of which there is enough, and to cover one's self with rough
+ skins, which can also easily be obtained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The harvest, God be praised, is in the barns, and is larger than ever
+ before. There ha been more work put on it than before. The ground is
+ fertile enough to reward labor, but they must clear it well, and till it,
+ just as our lands require. Until now there has been distress because many
+ people were not very industrious, and also did not obtain proper
+ sustenance for want of bread and other necessaries. But affairs are
+ beginning to go better and to put on a different appearance, if only the
+ Directors will send out good laborers and exercise all care that they be
+ maintained as well as possible with what this country produces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had intended and promised [to write] to the Honorable Brethren,
+ Rudolphus Petri, Joannes Sylvius and Domine Cloppenburg, who, with your
+ Reverence, were charged with the superintendence of these regions;(1) but
+ as this would take long and the time is short, and my occupations at the
+ present time many, your Reverence will please to give my friendly and kind
+ regards to their Reverences, and to excuse me, on condition that I remain
+ their debtor to fulfill my promise&mdash;God willing&mdash;the next time.
+ Be pleased also to give my sincere respects to the Reverend Domine
+ Triglandius, and to all the Brethren of the Consistory(2) besides, to all
+ of whom I have not thought it necessary to write particularly at this
+ time, as they are made by me participants in these tidings, and are
+ content to be fed from the hand of your Reverence. If it shall be
+ convenient for your Reverence or any of the Reverence Brethren to write to
+ me a letter concerning matters which might be important in any degree to
+ me, it would be very interesting to me, living here in a wild country
+ without any society of our order, and would be a spur to write more
+ assiduously to the Reverend Brethren concerning what may happen here. And
+ especially do not forget my hearty salutations to the beloved wife and
+ brother-in-law of your Reverence, who have shown me nothing but friendship
+ and kindness above my deserts. If there were anything in which I could in
+ return serve or gratify your Reverence, I should be glad to do so, and
+ should not be delinquent in anything.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) This duty had been committed to them by the synod of
+ North Holland. The preachers named in the text were all at
+ this time active in Amsterdam; Sylvius and Triglandius since
+ 1610, and Johannes Cloppenburg since 1621.
+
+ (2) Of Amsterdam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Concluding then herewith, and commending myself to your Reverence's favor
+ and to your holy prayers to the Lord,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverence and Learned Sir, Beloved Brother in Christ, and Kind Friend:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heartily commending your Reverence and all of you to Almighty God, to
+ continued health and prosperity, and to eternal Salvation, by His Grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the island of Manhatas in New Netherland, this 11th of August, Anno
+ 1628, by me, your Reverence's very obedient servant in Christ,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JONAS MICHAELIUS. <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ "NOVUM BELGIUM" 1646
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and source.
+
+ Jogues, Father Isaac. "Novum Belgium, 1646." In J. Franklin
+ Jameson, ed., Narratives of New Netherland, 1609-1664
+ (Original Narratives of Early American History). NY:
+ Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR_">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At some time before his death in 1800, Father Jean Joseph Casot, the last
+ of the old race of Jesuits in Canada, seeing his order about to expire
+ under the restrictions then imposed by the British government, and
+ determined that all the materials for its history should not perish by
+ reason of his death, made a selection from among its papers, and placed
+ the portion thus preserved in the custody of the Augustinian nuns of the
+ Hotel Dieu of Quebec. There they remained safe till in 1843 they were
+ restored to the Society, then revived and under the charge of Father
+ Martin, as superior of the Jesuits in Canada. Among these papers was the
+ following, in which Father Jogues, at the time of his last sojourn in New
+ France, described New Netherland as he had seen it three years before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Father Martin presented a transcript of the document, accompanied with an
+ English translation, to the regents of the University of the State of New
+ York. The translation was then published, in 1851, in volume IV. of
+ O'Callaghan's <i>Documentary History of the State of New York</i> (pp.
+ 21-24 of the octavo edition, pp. 15-17 of the edition in quarto). The
+ French original was printed for the first time in 1852 in an appendix to
+ Father Martin's translation of Bressani's <i>Breve Relatione</i>. In 1857,
+ Dr. John Gilmary Shea printed in the <i>Collections of the New York
+ Historical Society</i>, second series, III. 215-219, a translation which,
+ after revision by the present editor, is printed in the following pages.
+ Dr. Shea made separate publication of the French text in his Cramoisy
+ series in 1862, and in the same year published another edition of original
+ and translation. Both likewise appear in Thwaites's <i>Jesuit Relations</i>,
+ XXVIII. 105-115. Dr. Thwaites also gives a facsimile of the first page of
+ the original manuscript which Father Jogues wrote at Three Rivers, with
+ hands crippled by the cruel usage of the Mohawks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NOVUM BELGIUM, BY FATHER ISAAC JOGUES, 1646
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ NEW HOLLAND, which the Dutch call in Latin Novum Belgium,&mdash;in their
+ own language, Nieuw Nederland, that is to say, New Low Countries&mdash;is
+ situated between Virginia and New England. The mouth of the river, which
+ some people call Nassau, or the Great North River, to distinguish it from
+ another which they call the South River, and which I think is called
+ Maurice River on some maps that I have recently seen, is at 40 deg. 30
+ min. The channel is deep, fit for the largest ships, which ascend to
+ Manhattes Island, which is seven leagues in circuit, and on which there is
+ a fort to serve as the commencement of a town to be built here, and to be
+ called New Amsterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This fort, which is at the point of the island, about five or six leagues
+ from the [river's] mouth, is called Fort Amsterdam; it has four regular
+ bastions, mounted with several pieces or artillery. All these bastions and
+ the curtains were, in 1643, but mounds, most of which had crumbled away,
+ so that one entered the fort on all sides. There were no ditches. For the
+ garrison of the said fort, and another which they had built still further
+ up against the incursions of the savages, their enemies, there were sixty
+ soldiers. They were beginning to face the gates and bastions with stone.
+ Within the fort there was a pretty large stone church,(1) the house of the
+ Governor, whom they called Director General, quite neatly built of brick,
+ the storehouses and barracks.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) See De Vries, p. 212, supra, and the <i>Representation of
+ New Netherland</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the island of Manhate, and in its environs, there may well be four or
+ five hundred men of different sects and nations: the Director General told
+ me that there were men of eighteen different languages; they are scattered
+ here and there on the river, above and below, as the beauty and
+ convenience of the spot invited each to settle: some mechanics however,
+ who ply their trade, are ranged under the fort; all the others were
+ exposed to the incursions of the natives, who in the year 1643, while I
+ was there, actually killed some two score Hollanders, and burnt many
+ houses and barns full of wheat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The river, which is very straight, and runs due north and south, is at
+ least a league broad before the fort. Ships lie at anchor in a bay which
+ forms the other side of the island, and can be defended by the fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly before I arrived there, three large ships of 300 tons each had
+ come to load wheat; two found cargoes, the third could not be loaded,
+ because the savages had burnt a part of the grain. These ships had come
+ from the West Indies, where the West India Company usually keeps up
+ seventeen ships of war.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No religion is publicly exercised but the Calvinist, and orders are to
+ admit none but Calvinists, but this is not observed; for besides the
+ Calvinists there are in the colony Catholics, English Puritans, Lutherans,
+ Anabaptists, here called Mnistes,(1) etc.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Mennonistes, Mennonites.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ When any one comes to settle in the country, they lend him horses, cows,
+ etc.; they give him provisions, all which he returns as soon as he is at
+ ease; and as to the land, after ten years he pays in to the West India
+ Company the tenth of the produce which he reaps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This country is bounded on the New England side by a river they call the
+ Fresche River,(1) which serves as a boundary between them and the English.
+ The English, however, come very near to them, choosing to hold lands under
+ the Hollanders, who ask nothing, rather than depend on the English
+ Milords, who exact rents, and would fain be absolute. On the other side,
+ southward, towards Virginia, its limits are the river which they call the
+ South River, on which there is also a Dutch settlement,(2) but the Swedes
+ have one at its mouth extremely well supplied with cannons and men.(3) It
+ is believed that these Swedes are maintained by some Amsterdam merchants,
+ who are not satisfied that the West India Company should alone enjoy all
+ the commerce of these parts.(4) It is near this river that a gold mine is
+ reported to have been found.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Connecticut.
+
+ (2) Fort Nassau, at the mouth of Timber Creek.
+
+ (3) He probably means Fort Nya Elfsborg, on the Jersey side
+ of Delaware Bay, below Salem.
+
+ (4) The reference is to aid rendered by Samuel Blommaert, an
+ Amsterdam merchant, formerly a director of the Dutch West
+ India Company, in fitting out the first Swedish expedition
+ in 1637, and in engaging Peter Minuit to command it.
+ Blommaert's letters to the Swedish chancellor, Count Axel
+ Oxenstjerna, thirty-eight in number, 1635-1641, letters of
+ great importance to the history of New Sweden, have just
+ been published in the <i>Bijdragen en Mededeelingen</i> of the
+ Utrecht Historical Society, vol. XXIX.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ See in the work of the Sieur de Laet of Antwerp, the table and chapter on
+ New Belgium, as he sometimes calls it, or the map "Nova Anglia, Novu
+ Belgium et Virginia."(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) De Laet, <i>Histoire du Nouveau Monde</i>, table of contents,
+ bk. III. ch. XII., and map.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is about fifty years since the Hollanders came to these parts.(1) The
+ fort was begun in the year 1615; they began to settle about twenty years
+ ago, and there is already some little commerce with Virginia and New
+ England.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) An exaggeration. There is no evidence of Dutch visits
+ before Hudson's.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The first comers found lands fit for use, deserted by the savages, who
+ formerly had fields here. Those who came later have cleared the woods,
+ which are mostly oak. The soil is good. Deer hunting is abundant in the
+ fall. There are some houses built of stone; lime they make of oyster
+ shells, great heaps of which are found here, made formerly by the savages,
+ who subsist in part by that fishery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The climate is very mild. Lying at 40 2/3 degrees there are many European
+ fruits, as apples, pears, cherries. I reached there in October, and found
+ even then a considerable quantity of peaches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ascending the river to the 43d degree, you meet the second [Dutch]
+ settlement, which the tide reaches but does not pass. Ships of a hundred
+ and a hundred and twenty tons can come up to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are two things in this settlement (which is called Renselaerswick,
+ as if to say, settlement of Renselaers, who is a rich Amsterdam merchant)&mdash;first,
+ a miserable little fort called Fort Orenge, built of logs, with four or
+ five pieces of Breteuil cannon, and as many pedereros. This has been
+ reserved and is maintained by the West India Company. This fort was
+ formerly on an island in the river; it is now on the mainland, towards the
+ Hiroquois, a little above the said island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Secondly, a colony sent here by this Renselaers, who is the patron. This
+ colony is composed of about a hundred persons, who reside in some
+ twenty-five or thirty houses built along the river, as each found most
+ convenient. In the principal house resides the patron's agent; the
+ minister has his apart, in which service is performed. There is also a
+ kind of bailiff here, whom they call the seneschal,(1) who administers
+ justice. All their houses are merely of boards and thatched, with no mason
+ work except the chimneys. The forest furnishing many large pines, they
+ make boards by means of their mills, which they have here for the purpose.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The schout.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ They found some pieces of ground all ready, which the savages had formerly
+ cleared, and in which they sow wheat and oats for beer, and for their
+ horses, of which they have great numbers. There is little land fit for
+ tillage, being hemmed in by hills, which are poor soil. This obliges them
+ to separate, and they already occupy two or three leagues of country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trade is free to all; this gives the Indians all things cheap, each of the
+ Hollanders outbidding his neighbor, and being satisfied provided he can
+ gain some little profit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This settlement is not more than twenty leagues from the Agniehronons,(1)
+ who can be reached by land or water, as the river on which the Iroquois
+ lie,(2) falls into that which passes by the Dutch; but there are many low
+ rapids, and a fall of a short half league, where the canoe must be
+ carried.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The Mohawks.
+
+ (2) Mohawk River.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There are many nations between the two Dutch settlements, which are about
+ thirty German leagues apart, that is, about fifty or sixty French
+ leagues.(1) The Wolves, whom the Iroquois call Agotsaganens,(2) are the
+ nearest to the settlement of Renselaerswick and to Fort Orange. War
+ breaking out some years ago between the Iroquois and the Wolves, the Dutch
+ joined the latter against the former; but four men having been taken and
+ burnt, they made peace. Since then some nations near the sea having killed
+ some Hollanders of the most distant settlement, the Hollanders killed one
+ hundred and fifty Indians, men, women and children, they having, at divers
+ times, killed forty Hollanders, burnt many houses, and committed ravages,
+ estimated at the time that I was there at 200,000 l. (two hundred thousand
+ livres).(3) Troops were raised in New England. Accordingly, in the
+ beginning of winter, the grass being trampled down and some snow on the
+ ground, they gave them chase with six hundred men, keeping two hundred
+ always on the move and constantly relieving one another; so that the
+ Indians, shut up in a large island, and unable to flee easily, on account
+ of their women and children, were cut to pieces to the number of sixteen
+ hundred, including women and children. This obliged the rest of the
+ Indians to make peace, which still continues. This occurred in 1643 and
+ 1644.(4)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) One hundred and fifty English miles.
+
+ (2) The Mohicans.
+
+ (3) Livres tournois or francs, worth two or three times as
+ much as francs at the time.
+
+ (4) See <i>The Journal of New Netherland</i>.
+
+ From Three Rivers in New France, August 3, 1646.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ "JOURNAL OF NEW NETHERLAND" 1647
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and source.
+
+ "Journal of New Netherland, 1647." In J. Franklin Jameson,
+ ed., Narratives of New Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original
+ Narratives of Early American History). NY: Charles
+ Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR__">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ AN account of the great Indian war which so desolated the province of New
+ Netherland, and of some other actions of Kieft's administration, written
+ from his point of view or that of his supporters, must be regarded as an
+ important piece of evidence. It is the more to be welcomed because on the
+ whole our evidences for New Netherland history come mainly from opponents
+ of the provincial administration and of the West India Company. The
+ archives of the company disappeared almost completely many years ago, the
+ bulk of them having apparently been sold as waste paper not many years
+ before Brodhead went to Holland upon his memorable search. Of Kieft's
+ papers, we may suppose that the greater part were lost when the Princess
+ was shipwrecked on the Welsh coast in September, 1647, and the deposed
+ director and all his possessions were lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The document which follows was found by Broadhead in the Royal Library of
+ the Hague. It is still there and is designated No. 78 H 32. I has an
+ outside cover forming a title-page, with ornamental lettering, but it is
+ not the "book ornamented with water-color drawings" which Kieft is known
+ to have sent home. A photograph of the first page, which the editor has
+ procured, does nothing to show the authorship, for it is written in the
+ hand of a professional scrivener. Mr. Van Laer, archivist of the State of
+ New York, assures the editor that it is not the hand of Keift or that of
+ Cornelis van Tienhoven, the provincial secretary.(1) But that it was
+ either inspired by Kieft, or emanated from one of his supporters, is plain
+ not only from its general tone but from its citations of documents. Of the
+ documents to which its marginal notes refer, some of those that we can
+ still trace are noted in the archives of the Netherlands as "from a
+ copy-book of Director Kieft's." The rest, or the original copy-book, may
+ have perished with him.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Mr. J.H. Innes tells me that it resembles that of
+ Augustin Herrman.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The piece was first printed in 1851, in the <i>Documentary History of the
+ State of New York</i>, IV. 1-17. It was printed for the second time in
+ 1856, in <i>Documents relating to the Colonial History of New York</i>, I.
+ 179-188. For the present issue this early and imperfect translation has
+ been revised with great care by Dr. Johannes de Hullu of the National
+ Archives of the Netherlands, who has used for this purpose the original
+ manuscript in the Royal Library.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOURNAL OF NEW NETHERLAND, 1647
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Journal of New Netherland, 1647, described in the Years
+ 1641, 1642, 1643, 1644, 1645 and 1646.
+
+ Brief Description of New Netherland.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ NEW NETHERLAND (so called because it was first frequented and peopled by
+ the free Netherlanders) is a province in the most northern part of America
+ lying between New England (which bounds it on the northeast side) and
+ Virginia lying to the southwest of it. The ocean washes its whole length
+ along a clean sandy coast, very similar to that of Flanders or Holland,
+ having except the rivers few bays or harbors for ships; the air is very
+ temperate, inclining to dryness, healthy, little subject to sickness. The
+ four seasons of the year are about as in France, or the Netherlands. The
+ difference is, the spring is shorter because it begins later, the summer
+ is warmer because it comes on more suddenly, the autumn is long and very
+ pleasant, the winter cold and liable to much snow. Two winds ordinarily
+ prevail: the N.W. in winter and the S.W. in summer; the other winds are
+ not common; the N.W. corresponds with our N.E. because it blows across the
+ country from the cold point as our N.E. does. The S.W. is dry and hot like
+ our S.E. because it comes from the warm countries; the N.E. is cold and
+ wet like our S.W. for similar reasons. The character of the country is
+ very like that of France; the land is fairly high and level, especially
+ broken along the coast by small rocky hills unfit for agriculture; farther
+ in the interior are pretty high mountains (generally exhibiting great
+ appearance of minerals) between which flow a great number of small rivers.
+ In some places there are even some lofty ones of extraordinary height, but
+ not many. Its fertility falls behind no province in Europe in excellence
+ of fruits and seeds. There are three principal rivers, to wit: the Fresh,
+ the Mauritius and the South River,(1) all three reasonably wide and deep,
+ adapted for the navigation of large ships twenty-five leagues up and of
+ common barks even to the falls. From the River Mauritius off to beyond the
+ Fresh River stretches a channel that forms an island, forty leagues long,
+ called Long Island, which is the ordinary passage from New England to
+ Virginia, having on both sides many harbors to anchor in, so that people
+ make no difficulty about navigating it in winter. The country is generally
+ covered with trees, except a few valleys and some large flats of seven or
+ eight leagues and less; the trees are as in Europe, viz. Oak, hickory,
+ chestnut, vines. The animals are also of the same species as ours, except
+ lions and some other strange beasts, many bears, abundance of wolves which
+ harm nobody but the small cattle, elks and deer in abundance, foxes,
+ beavers, otters, minks and such like. The birds which are natural to the
+ country are turkeys like ours, swans, geese of three sorts, ducks, teals,
+ cranes, herons, bitterns, two sorts of partridges, four sorts of heath
+ fowls, grouse or pheasants. The river fish is like that of Europe, viz.,
+ carp, sturgeon, salmon, pike, perch, roach, eel, etc. In the salt waters
+ are found codfish, haddock, herring and so forth, also abundance of
+ oysters and clams.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Connecticut, Hudson and Delaware.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Indians are of ordinary stature, strong and broad shouldered; olive
+ color, light and nimble of foot, subtle of mind, of few words which they
+ previously well consider, hypocritical, treacherous, vindictive; brave and
+ obstinate in self-defence, in time of need right resolute to die. They
+ seem to despise all the torments that can be inflicted on them without
+ once uttering a sigh&mdash;go almost naked except a lap which hangs before
+ their private parts, and on the shoulders a deer skin or a mantle, a
+ fathom square, of woven Turkey feathers or peltries sewed together. They
+ now make great use of duffel cloths, blue or red, in consequence of the
+ frequent visits of the Christians. In winter they make shoes of deer
+ skins, manufactured after their fashion. Except their chiefs, they have
+ generally but one wife whom they frequently change according to caprice;
+ she must do all the work, as well corn-planting as wood-cutting and
+ whatever else is to be done. They are divided into various nations. They
+ differ even in language, which would be altogether too long to be narrated
+ in this short space. They dwell together in tribes, mostly of one
+ consanguinity, over which commands a chief who is general and is generally
+ called Sackema, possessing not much authority and little advantage, unless
+ in their dances and other ceremonies. They have no knowledge at all of
+ God, no divine worship, no law, no justice; the strongest does what he
+ pleases and the youths are master. Their weapons are the bow and arrow, in
+ the use of which they are wonderful adepts. They live by hunting and
+ fishing in addition to maize which the women plant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ BY WHOM AND HOW NEW NETHERLAND WAS PEOPLED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The subjects of the Lords States General had for a considerable time
+ frequented this country solely for the purpose of the fur trade. Then, in
+ the year 1623, the Chartered West India Company caused four forts to be
+ erected in that country&mdash;two on the River Mauritius and one on each
+ of the other [rivers]; the biggest stands on the point where the Mauritius
+ River begins, and the other one,(1) mentioned heretofore, which their
+ Honors named New Amsterdam; and six and thirty leagues upwards another
+ called Orange. That on the South River is called Nassauw and that on Fresh
+ River, the Good Hope. The Company has since continually maintained
+ garrisons there. In the beginning their Honors had sent a certain number
+ of settlers thither, and at great expense had three sawmills erected,
+ which never realised any profit of consequence, on account of their great
+ heaviness, and a great deal of money was expended for the advancement of
+ the country, but it never began to be settled until every one had liberty
+ to trade with the Indians, inasmuch as up to this time no one calculated
+ to remain there longer than the expiration of his bounden time, and
+ therefore they did not apply themselves to agriculture. Yea, even the
+ colony of Renselaerwyck was of little consequence; but as soon as it was
+ permitted, many servants, who had some money coming to them from the
+ Company, applied for their discharge, built houses and formed plantations,
+ spread themselves far and wide, each seeking the best land, and to be
+ nearest the Indians in order thus to trade with them easily, others bought
+ barks with which to trade goods at the North and at the South, and as the
+ Lords Directors gave free passage from Holland thither, that also caused
+ some to come. On the other hand, the English came also from both Virginia
+ and New England. Firstly, many servants, whose time with their masters had
+ expired, on account of the good opportunity to plant tobacco here,
+ afterwards families and finally entire colonies, forced to quit that place
+ both to enjoy freedom of conscience and to escape from the insupportable
+ government of New England and because many more commodities were easier to
+ be obtained here than there, so that in place of seven farms and two or
+ three plantations which were here, one saw thirty farms, as well
+ cultivated and stocked with cattle as in Europe, and a hundred plantations
+ which in two or three [years] would have become well arranged farms. For
+ after the tobacco was out of the ground, corn was thrown in there without
+ ploughing. In winter men were busy preparing new lands. Five English
+ colonies which by contract had [settled] under us on equal terms as the
+ others. Each of these was in appearance not less than a hundred families
+ strong, exclusive of the colony of Rensselaers Wyck which is prospering,
+ with that of Myndert Meyndertsz(2) and Cornelis Melyn,(3) who began first,
+ also the village New Amsterdam around the fort, a hundred families, so
+ that there was appearance of producing supplies in a year for fourteen
+ thousand souls, without straining the country, and had there been no want
+ of laborers or farm servants twice as much could have been raised,
+ considering that fifty lasts of rye and fifty lasts of peas still remained
+ over around the fort after a large quantity had been burnt and destroyed
+ by the Indians, who in a short time nearly brought this country to nought
+ and had well nigh destroyed this good hope, in manner following&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) East River, apparently.
+
+ (2) The colony of Hackensack, belonging to Meyndert
+ Meyndertsen van Keren and others.
+
+ (3) Cornelis Melyn's colony embraced all Staten Island
+ except De Vries's plantation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE CAUSES OF THE NEW NETHERLAND WAR AND THE SEQUEL THEREOF.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We have already stated that the cause of the population of New Netherland
+ was the liberty to trade with the Indians. We shall now prove that it also
+ is the cause of its ruin, producing two contrary effects, and that not
+ without reason as shall appear from the following.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This liberty then which in every respect should have been most gratefully
+ received, of which use should have been made as of a precious gift, was
+ very soon perverted to a great abuse. For every one thought that now the
+ time had come to make his fortune, withdrew himself from his comrade, as
+ if holding him suspect and the enemy of his gains, and sought
+ communication with the Indians from whom it appeared his profit was to be
+ derived. That created first a division of power of dangerous consequence,
+ in opposition to Their High Mightinesses' motto(1)&mdash;produced
+ altogether too much familiarity with the Indians which in a short time
+ brought forth contempt, usually the father of hate&mdash;not being
+ satisfied with merely taking them into their houses in the customary
+ manner, but attracting them by extraordinary attention, such as admitting
+ them to the table, laying napkins before them, presenting wine to them and
+ more of that kind of thing, which they did not receive like Esop's man,
+ but as their due and desert, insomuch that they were not content but began
+ to hate when such civilities were not shewn them. To this familiarity and
+ freedom succeeded another evil. As the cattle usually roamed through the
+ woods without a herdsman, they frequently came into the corn of the
+ Indians which was unfenced on all sides, committing great damage there;
+ this led to frequent complaints on their part and finally to revenge on
+ the cattle without sparing even the horses, which were valuable in this
+ country. Moreover many of ours took the Indians into service, making use
+ of them in their houses and thus, whilst they were being employed, laying
+ open before those Indians our entire circumstances; and sometimes becoming
+ weary of their work, they took leg-bail and stole much more than the
+ amount of their wages. This freedom caused still great mischief, for the
+ inhabitants of Renselaerswyck who were as many traders as persons,
+ perceiving that the Mohawks were craving for guns, which some of them had
+ already received from the English, paying for each as many as twenty
+ beavers and for a pound of powder as much as ten to twelve guilders, they
+ came down in greater numbers than was their wont where people were well
+ supplied with guns, purchasing these at a fair price, thus realizing great
+ profit; afterwards they obtained some from their Heer Patroon for their
+ self-defence in time of need, as we suppose. This extraordinary gain was
+ not kept long a secret, the traders coming from Holland soon got scent of
+ it, and from time to time brought over great quantities, so that the
+ Mohawks in a short time were seen with firelocks, powder and lead in
+ proportion. Four hundred armed men knew how to use their advantage,
+ especially against their enemies dwelling along the river of Canada,(2)
+ against whom they have now achieved many profitable forays where before
+ they derived little advantage; this causes them also to be respected by
+ the surrounding Indians even as far as the sea coast, who must generally
+ pay them tribute, whereas, on the contrary, they were formerly obliged to
+ contribute to these. On this account the Indians endeavored no less to
+ procure guns, and through the familiarity which existed between them and
+ our people, they began to solicit them for guns and powder, but as such
+ was forbidden on pain of death and it could not remain secret in
+ consequence of the general conversation, they could not obtain them. This
+ added to the previous contempt greatly augmented the hatred which
+ stimulated them to conspire against us, beginning first by insults which
+ they everywhere indiscreetly uttered railing at us as Materiotty (that is
+ to say) the cowards&mdash;that we might indeed be something on water, but
+ of no account on land, and that we had neither a great sachem nor chiefs.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Eendracht maakt macht, union makes strength.
+
+ (2) Father Jogues speaks more than once of the ill effects
+ of the Dutch practice of selling fire-arms to the Indians.
+
+ [Here two pages are wanting.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ...he of Witqueschreek living northeast of the island Manhatans,
+ perpetrated another murderous deed in the house of an old man,(1) a
+ wheelwright, with whom he was acquainted (having been in his son's
+ service) being well received and supplied with food, pretending a desire
+ to buy something and whilst the old man was taking from the chest the
+ cloth the Indian wanted the latter took up an ax and cut his head off,
+ further plundering the house, and ran away. This outrage obliged the
+ Director to demand satisfaction from the sachem, who refused it, saying
+ that he was sorry that twenty Christians had not been murdered(2) and that
+ this Indians had only avenged the death of his uncle who, it was alleged,
+ had been slain by the Dutch twenty-one years before. Whereupon all the
+ commonalty were called together by the Director to consider this affair,
+ who all appeared and presently twelve men delegated from among them(3)
+ answered the propositions, and resolved at once on war should the murderer
+ be refused; that the attack should be made on [the Indians] in the autumn
+ when they were hunting; meanwhile an effort should be again made by
+ kindness to obtain justice, which was accordingly several times sought for
+ but in vain.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Claes Smits Rademaker.
+
+ (2) "Note A [in the original]. Capt. Patricx letter 21
+ August 1641." I do not find this letter in print. Captain
+ Patrick, formerly a soldier under the Prince of Orange, was
+ one of the early members of the colony of Massachusetts Bay,
+ but had left that colony in 1639 and settled with his Dutch
+ wife at Greenwich. Concerning his death, at the hands of a
+ Dutch Trooper, see Winthrop, II. 153-154, in this series.
+
+ (3) "Note B. Their answer and resolution dated the 29th
+ August, 1641." This document, "from Director Kieft's copy-
+ book," is in <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, I. 415.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The time being come many difficulties were alleged and operations were
+ postponed until the year 1642, when it was resolved to avenge the
+ perpetrated outrage. Thereupon spies looked up the Indians who lay in
+ their dwelling-place suspecting nothing, and eighty men were detailed
+ under the command of Ensign Hendrick van Dyck and sent thither. The guide
+ being come with the troops in the neighborhood of the Indian wigwams lost
+ his way in consequence of the darkness of the night. The ensign became
+ impatient, and turned back without having accomplished anything. The
+ journey, however, was not without effect, for the Indians who remarked by
+ the trail made by our people in marching that they had narrowly escaped
+ discovery, sought for peace which was granted them on condition that they
+ should either deliver up the murderer or inflict justice themselves; this
+ they promised, but without any result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some weeks after this Miantonimo, principal sachem of Sloops Bay,(1) came
+ here with one hundred men, passing through all the Indian villages(2)
+ soliciting them to a general war against both the English and the
+ Dutch,(3) whereupon some of the neighboring Indians attempted to set our
+ powder on fire and to poison the Director or to inchant him by their
+ devilry, as their ill will was afterwards made manifest as well in fact as
+ by report. Those of Hackingsack, otherwise called Achter Col, had with
+ their neighbors killed an Englishman, a servant of one David Pietersen,
+ and a few days after shot dead in an equally treacherous manner a
+ Dutchman, who sat roofing a house in the colony of Meyndert Meyndertz,(4)
+ which was established there against he advice of the Director and will of
+ the Indians, and which by the continual damage which their cattle
+ committed caused no little dissatisfaction to the Indians, and contributed
+ greatly to the war. The commonalty began then to be alarmed, and not
+ without reason, having the Indians daily in their houses. The murderers
+ were frequently demanded, either living or dead, even with a promise of
+ reward; they always returned a scoffing answer laughing at us. Finally,
+ the commonalty, very much displeased with the Director, upbraided him for
+ conniving with the Indians, and [declared] that an attempt was making to
+ sell Christian blood;(5) yea, that the will of the entire commonalty was
+ surrendered to him, and in case he would not avenge blood they should do
+ it themselves, be the consequences what they might. The Director advised
+ Pacham the sachem,(6) who interested himself in this matter, warning him
+ that we should wait no longer inasmuch as no satisfaction had been given.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) I.e., of the Narragansetts.
+
+ (2) "Note C. The English Manifest, Page 2." This means
+ that now rare pamphlet, <i>A Declaration of Former Passages
+ and Proceedings betwixt the English and the Narrowgansets</i>
+ (Cambridge, 1645), published by order of the Commissioners
+ of the United Colonies. See its text, and the particular
+ passage here referred To, in <i>Records of Plymouth Colony</i>,
+ IX. 50.
+
+ (3) "Note D. Capt. Patricx letter dated 2 Jan'y, 1642." I
+ have nowhere seen this letter.
+
+ (4) "Note E. The order in the Director's letter and in the
+ deposition thereupon." See De Vries, p. 215, supra.
+
+ (5) "Note F. Resolve of the 12 delegates dated 21 Jan'y,
+ 1642." See <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, I. 414-415.
+
+ (6) Of the Haverstraw Indians.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile God wreaked vengeance on those of Witquescheck without our
+ knowledge through the Mahicanders dwelling below Fort Orange, who slew
+ seventeen of them, and made prisoners of many women and children. The
+ remainder fled through a deep snow to the Christians' houses on and around
+ the island Manhatens. They were most humanely received being half dead of
+ cold and hunger; they supported them for fourteen days, even corn was sent
+ to them by the Director. A short time after, another panic seized the
+ Indians which caused them to fly to divers places in the vicinity of the
+ Dutch. This opportunity to avenge the innocent blood induced some of the
+ Twelve Men to represent to the Director that it was now time, whereupon
+ they received for answer that they should put their request in writing
+ which was done by three in the name of them all,(1) by a petition to be
+ allowed to attack those of Hackingsack in two divisions&mdash;on the
+ Manhatens and on Pavonia. This was granted after a protracted discussion
+ too long to be reported here, so that the design was executed that same
+ night; the burghers slew those who lay a small league from the fort, and
+ the soldiers those at Pavonia, at which two places about eighty Indians
+ were killed and thirty taken prisoners. Next morning before the return of
+ the troops a man and a woman were shot at Pavonia who had come through
+ curiosity either to look at or plunder the dead; the soldiers had rescued
+ a young child which the woman had in her arms.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Note G. Their Petition dated 24th Feb. 1643." <i>N.Y.
+ Col. Doc.</i>, I. 193. Its true date was February 22.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Christians residing on Long Island also requested by petition(1) to be
+ allowed to attack and slay the Indians thereabout; which was refused, as
+ these especially had done us no harm, and shewed us every friendship&mdash;(yea,
+ had even voluntarily killed some of the Raritans, our enemies,
+ hereinbefore mentioned). Yet notwithstanding(2) some Christians attempted
+ secretly with two waggons to steal maize from these Indians, out of their
+ cabins, which they perceiving endeavored to prevent, thereupon three
+ Indians were shot dead, two houses standing opposite the fort were in
+ return forthwith set on fire. The Director knowing nought of this sent at
+ once some persons to enquire the reason of it. The Indians showing
+ themselves afar off, called out&mdash;"Be ye our friends? ye are mere corn
+ stealers"&mdash;forth with behaving as enemies. This induced one of the
+ proprietors of the burnt houses to upbraid therewith one Maryn Adriaenzen,
+ who at his request had led the freemen in the attack on the Indians, and
+ who being reinforced by an English troop had afterwards undertaken two
+ bootless expeditions in the open field. Imagining that the Director had
+ accused him, he being one of the signers of the petition he determined to
+ revenge himself.(3) With this resolution he proceeded to the Director's
+ house armed with a pistol, loaded and cocked, and a hanger by his side;
+ coming unawares into the Director's room, he presents his pistol at him,
+ saying, "What devilish lies art thou reporting of me?" but by the
+ promptness of one of the bystanders, the shot was prevented, and he
+ himself immediately confined. A short time after, Marine's man and another
+ entered the fort, each carrying a loaded gun and pistol. The first fired
+ at the Director who having had notice withdrew towards his house, the
+ balls passing into the wall alongside the door behind him; the sentinel
+ firing immediately on him who had discharged his gun, brought him down.
+ Shortly afterwards some of the commonalty collected before the Director,
+ riotously demanding the prisoner; they were answered that their request
+ should be presented in order and in writing, which about 25 men did; they
+ therein asked the Director to pardon the criminal. The matters were
+ referred to them to decide conscientiously thereupon, in such wise that
+ they immediately went forth, without hearing parties or seeing any
+ complaints or documents. They condemn him in a fine of five hundred
+ guilders, and to remain three months away from the Manhatens, but on
+ account of the importance of the affair and some considerations, it was
+ resolved to send the criminal with his trial to Holland, which...(4)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Note H. Their petition and the answer thereto, dated
+ 27 Feb. 1643." Printed in <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, I. 416-417.
+
+ (2) "Note I. Contains the information thereupon."
+
+ (3) "Note K. His trial therefor."
+
+ (4) Gap in manuscript.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In this confusion mingled with great terror passed the winter away; the
+ season came for driving out the cattle; this obliged many to desire peace.
+ On the other hand the Indians, seeing also that it was time to plant
+ maize, were not less solicitous for peace, so that after some negotiation,
+ peace was concluded in May Ao. 1643 [more] in consequence of the
+ importunity of some than because it was generally expected that it would
+ be durable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Indians kept still after this peace, associating daily with our
+ people; yea, even the greatest chiefs came to visit the Director.
+ Meanwhile Pachem, a crafty man, ran through all the villages urging the
+ Indians to a general massacre. To this was added moreoever that certain
+ Indians called Wappingers, dwelling sixteen leagues up the river, with
+ whom we never had any the least trouble, seized on a boat coming from Fort
+ Orange wherein were only two men, and full four hundred beavers. This
+ great booty stimulated(1) others to join them, so that they seized two
+ boats more, intending to overhaul the fourth also, from which they were
+ driven off with the loss of six Indians. Nine Christians including two
+ women were murdered in these captured barks, one woman and two children
+ remaining prisoners. The other Indians, so soon as their maize was ripe,
+ were likewise roused, and through semblance of selling beavers killed an
+ old man and an old woman, leaving another man with five wounds, who
+ however fled to the fort in a boat with a little child on his arm, who in
+ the first outbreak had lost father and mother, and now grandfather and
+ grandmother, being thus twice through God's merciful blessing rescued from
+ the hands of the Indians, before it was two years old. Nothing was now
+ heard but murders, most of which were committed under pretence of coming
+ to put the Christians on their guard.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Note M. Their acknowledgement made before the English
+ 16 January, 1643, English style."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Finally they took the field and attacked the farms at Pavonia. There were
+ here at the time two ships of war and a privateer who saved considerable
+ cattle and grain. Nevertheless it was not possible to prevent the
+ destruction of four farms on Pavonia, which were burnt, not by open force,
+ but by stealthily creeping through the brush with fire in hand, thus
+ igniting the roofs which are all either of reed or straw; one covered with
+ plan was saved at that time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The commonalty were called together; they were sore distressed. They chose
+ eight, in the stead of the previous twelve(1), persons to aid in
+ consulting for the best; but the occupation every one had to take care of
+ his own, prevented anything beneficial being adopted at that time&mdash;nevertheless
+ it was resolved that as many Englishmen as were to be got in the country
+ should be enlisted, who were indeed now proposing to depart; the third
+ part of these were to be paid by the commonalty; this promise was made by
+ the commonalty but was not followed by the pay.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Note N. Resolve of 13 Sept'r 1643." <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>,
+ I. 194.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Terror increasing all over the land the Eight Men assembled, drew(1) up a
+ proposal in writing wherein they asked that delegates should be sent to
+ the north, to our English neighbors, to request an auxiliary force of one
+ hundred and fifty men, for whose pay a bill of exchange should be given
+ for twenty-five thousand guilders, and that New Netherland should be so
+ long mortgaged to the English as security for the payment thereof. One of
+ the most influential among the Eight Men had by letter(2) enforced by
+ precedents previously endeavored to persuade the Director to this course,
+ as they had also a few days before Resolved(3) that the provisions
+ destined for Curacao should be unloaded from the vessels and the major
+ portion of the men belonging to them detained, and to send the ships away
+ thus empty. This was not yet agreed to nor considered expedient by the
+ Director.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ [Here four pages are wanting.]
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ An expedition was despatched consisting of &mdash;&mdash; regular
+ soldiers] under the command of the sergeant,(4) forty burghers under their
+ Captain Jochem Pietersen,(5) thirty-five Englishmen under Lieutenant
+ Baxter,(6) but to prevent all confusion, Councillor La Montagne(7) was
+ appointed general. Coming to Staten Island, they marched the whole night,
+ finding the houses empty and abandoned by the Indian; they got five or six
+ hundred skepels of corn, burning the remainder without accomplishing
+ anything else.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Note O. Dated 6th Octob. 1643."
+
+ (2) "Note P. Dated 9th March, 1643."
+
+ (3) "Note Q. In their resolution 30th September, 1643."
+
+ (4) Pieter Cock.
+
+ (5) Jochem Pietersen Kuyter, one of the Twelve Men and of
+ the Eight Men.
+
+ (6) George Baxter, an exile from New England, now English
+ secretary under Kieft. The number of English colonists in
+ New Netherland, especially on Long Island, was rapidly
+ increasing.
+
+ (7) Dr. Johannes la Montagne, a Hugeunot physician, who with
+ Kieft constituted the council of the province.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mayane, a sachem, residing eight leagues northeast of us, between
+ Greenwich (that lies within our jurisdiction) and Stantfort,(1) which is
+ English,&mdash;a bold Indian who alone dared to attack with bow and arrows
+ three Christians armed with guns, one of whom he shot dead&mdash;whilst
+ engaged with the other, was killed by the third Christian and his head
+ brought hither. It was then known and understood for the first time, that
+ he and his Indians had done as much injury, though we never had any
+ difference with him. Understanding further that they lay in their houses
+ very quiet and without suspicion on account of the neighborhood of the
+ English, it was determined to hunt them up and attack them, and one
+ hundred and twenty men were went thither under the preceding command. The
+ people landed at Greenwich in the evening from three yachts, marched the
+ entire night but could not find the Indians, either because the guide
+ brought this about on purpose, as was believed, or because he had himself
+ gone astray. Retreat was made to the yachts in order to depart as secretly
+ as possible. Passing through Stantfort some Englishmen were encountered
+ who offered to lead ours to the place where some Indians were. Thereupon
+ four scouts were sent in divers directions to discover them, who at their
+ return reported that the Indians had some notice of our people by the
+ salute which the Englishmen gave us, but without any certainty, whereupon
+ five and twenty of the bravest men were at once commanded to proceed
+ thither to the nearest village. With great diligence they made the
+ journey, killing eighteen or twenty Indians, capturing an old man, two
+ women and some children, to exchange for ours. The other troops found the
+ huts empty, and further came hither with the yachts.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Stamford.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The old Indian captured above having promised to lead us to Wetquescheck,
+ which consisted of three castles, sixty-five men were despatched under
+ Baxter and Pieter Cock, who found them empty, though thirty Indians could
+ have stood against two hundred soldiers since the castles were constructed
+ of plank five inches thick, nine feet high, and braced around with thick
+ balk full of port-holes. Our people burnt two, reserving the third for a
+ retreat. Marching eight or nine leagues further, they discovered nothing
+ but some huts, which they could not surprize as they were discovered. They
+ came back having killed only one or two Indians, taken some women and
+ children prisoners and burnt much corn. Meanwhile we were advised that
+ Pennewitz,(1) one of the oldest and most experienced Indians in the
+ country, and who in the first conspiracy had given the most dangerous
+ advice&mdash;to wit, that they should wait and not attack the Dutch until
+ all suspicion had been lulled, and then divide themselves equally through
+ the houses of the Christians and slaughter all these in one night&mdash;was
+ secretly waging war against us with his tribe, who killed some of our
+ people and set fire to the houses. It was therefore resolved to send
+ thither a troop of one hundred and twenty men. The burghers under their
+ company, the English under the Sergeant Major Van der Hyl(2) (who within a
+ few days had offered his services and was accepted), the veteran soldiers
+ under Pieter Cock, all under the command of Mr. La Montagne, proceed hence
+ in three yachts, land in Scouts Bay on Long Island,(3) and march towards
+ Heemstede(4) (where there is an English colony dependent on us.) Some sent
+ forward in advance dexterously killed an Indian who was out as a spy. Our
+ force was divided into two divisions&mdash;Van der Hil with fourteen
+ English towards the smallest, and eighty men towards the largest village
+ named Matsepe,(5) both which were very successful, killing about one
+ hundred and twenty men; of ours one man remained on the field and three
+ were wounded.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Chief of the Canarsee tribe, in western Long Island.
+
+ (2) John Underhill, whose unctuous piety and profligate life
+ have an important place in Winthrop and other New England
+ historians. With Captain John Mason he had the leading part
+ in the crushing of the Pequots in 1637. Banished from
+ Massachusetts and restored, this amusing reprobate had gone
+ to the Dutch, "having good offers made him by the Dutch
+ governor (he speaking the Dutch tongue and his wife a Dutch
+ woman)," but had now settled at Stamford. Later he lived at
+ Flushing and at Oyster Bay, where he died in 1672.
+
+ (3) Now called Manhasset Bay.
+
+ (4) Now Hempstead, Long Island, where early in 1644 Robert
+ Fordham and other English from Stamford had formed a colony
+ under New Netherland jurisdiction.
+
+ (5) Mespath, now Newtown, Long Island.
+
+ (6) Stamford.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our forces being returned from this expedition, Capt. Van der Hil was
+ despatched to Stantfort,(1) to get some information there of the Indians.
+ He reported that the guide who had formerly served us, and was supposed to
+ have gone astray in the night, had now been in great danger of his life
+ among the Indians, of whom there were about five hundred together. He
+ offered to lead us there, to shew that the former mischance was not his
+ fault. One hundred and thirty men were accordingly despatched under the
+ aforesaid Genl Van der Hil and Hendrick van Dyck, ensign. They embarked in
+ three yachts, and landed at Greenwich, where they were obliged to pass the
+ night by reason of the great snow and storm. In the morning they marched
+ northwest up over stony hills over which some must creep. In the evening
+ about eight o'clock they came within a league of the Indians, and inasmuch
+ as they should have arrived too early and had to cross two rivers, one of
+ two hundred feet wide and three deep, and that the men could not
+ afterwards there rest in consequence of the cold, it was determined to
+ remain there until about ten o'clock. The order was given as to the mode
+ to be observed in attacking the Indians&mdash;they marched forward towards
+ the houses, the latter being set up in three rows, street fashion, each
+ row eighty paces long, in a low recess protected by the hills, affording
+ much shelter from the northwest wind. The moon was then at the full, and
+ threw a strong light against the hills so that many winter days were not
+ brighter than it then was. On arriving there the Indians were wide awake,
+ and on their guard, so that ours determined to charge and surround the
+ houses, sword in hand. They demeaned themselves as soldiers and deployed
+ in small bands, so that we got in a short time one dead and twelve
+ wounded. They were also so hard pressed that it was impossible for one to
+ escape. In a brief space of time there were counted one hundred and eighty
+ dead outside the houses. Presently none durst come forth, keeping within
+ the houses, discharging arrows through the holes. The general perceived
+ that nothing else was to be done, and resolved with Sergeant Major Van der
+ Hil, to set the huts on fire, whereupon the Indians tried every means of
+ escape, not succeeding in which they returned back to the flames
+ preferring to perish by the fire than to die by our hands. What was most
+ wonderful is, that among this vast collection of men, women and children
+ not one was heard to cry or to scream. According to the report of the
+ Indians themselves the number then destroyed exceeded five hundred. Some
+ say, full seven hundred, among whom were also twenty-five Wappingers, our
+ God having collected together there the greater number of our enemies, to
+ celebrate one of their festivals in their manner, from which escaped no
+ more than eight men in all, and three of them were severely wounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight ended, several fires were built in consequence of the great
+ cold. The wounded, fifteen in number, among whom was the general, were
+ dressed, and the sentinels being posted the troops bivouacked there for
+ the remainder of the night. On the next day, the party set out very early
+ in good order, so as to arrive at Stantfort in the evening. They marched
+ with great courage over that wearisome range of hills, God affording
+ extraordinary strength to the wounded, some of whom were badly hurt; and
+ came in the afternoon to Stantfort after a march of two days and one night
+ and little rest. The English received our people in a very friendly
+ manner, affording them every comfort. In two days they reached here. A
+ thanksgiving was proclaimed on their arrival.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ [The remainder is wanting.]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Stamford.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW NETHERLAND, 1650
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and sources.
+
+ Adriaen van der Donck, The Representation of New Netherland,
+ 1650. In J. Franklin Jameson, ed., Narratives of New
+ Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original Narratives of Early American
+ History). NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR___">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The fussy incompetence of Kieft and the disastrous results of the Indian
+ war he had aroused led at last to his removal, and in May, 1647, a new
+ director-general arrived, Petrus Stuyvesant, who had made a good record as
+ governor of Curacao in the West Indies. Stuyvesant, the last of the Dutch
+ governors, was a man of character, brave, honest, capable and energetic;
+ but he was proud, headstrong and tyrannical, and had such high notions of
+ a governor's prerogative that from the first he conceived a prejudice
+ against the opponents of Kieft, and presently Kuyter and Melyn were
+ condemned to severe punishment for attempting to bring the latter to
+ justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new director-general was bent on pursuing a vigorous policy toward
+ encroaching English and Swedish neighbors, on repressing the high claims
+ of the patroon's officers at Rensselaerswyck, on putting the province in
+ good condition for defence, on suppressing illegal trading, especially the
+ supplying of fire-arms to the Indians, and on regulating with a strong
+ hand all the doings of his small body of subjects. But such a policy costs
+ money, and to obtain it by taxation he found himself compelled in August,
+ 1647, like many another arbitrary ruler, to summon reluctantly the
+ representatives of the people. Carefully as the functions of the Nine Men
+ were limited, they constituted a permanent element in the governmental
+ system, as the Twelve Men and Eight Men had not. It was inevitable that
+ sooner or later they should become the mouthpiece of popular discontent,
+ which was rapidly increasing under the unprosperous condition of the
+ province and the burdensome taxes, customs and other restrictions imposed
+ upon its economic life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In December, 1648, the board was partly renewed. One of the new members,
+ Adriaen van der Donck, a lawyer from Breda, who from 1641 to 1646 had been
+ schout for the patroon at Renssellaerwyck, soon became the leading spirit
+ of the new board. Their sense of popular grievances increasing, they
+ planned to send a deputation to the mother country to remonstrate.
+ Stuyvesant opposed, arrested Van der Donck, seized some of his papers, and
+ expelled him from the board. Nevertheless, a bold memorial to the States
+ General was prepared, and was signed on July 26, 1649, "in the name and on
+ the behalf of the commonalty of New Netherland," by Van der Donck and ten
+ others, present or former members of the board of Nine Men. In this
+ memorial, which is printed in <i>Documents relating to the Colonial
+ History of New York</i>, I. 259-261, the representatives request the Dutch
+ government to enact measures for the encouragement of emigration to the
+ province, to grant "suitable municipal [or civil] government, ...somewhat
+ resembling the laudable government of the Fatherland," to accord greater
+ economic freedom, and to settle with foreign governments those disputes
+ respecting colonial boundaries and jurisdiction the constant agitation of
+ which so unsettled the province and impeded its growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following document accompanied the memorial, bearing date two days
+ later, July 28, 1649, and was signed by the same eleven men. It is
+ considered probable that Adriaen van der Donck was its main author. Its
+ first part, descriptive of the province, reads like a preliminary sketch
+ for his <i>Beschryvinge van Nieuw-Nederlant</i> ("Description of New
+ Netherland"), a very interesting work published at Amsterdam six years
+ later (1665, second edition 1656), and of which a translation appears in
+ the <i>Collections of the New York Historical Society</i>, second series,
+ I. 125-242.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With respect to the remaining, or political portion of its contents, it is
+ only fair for the reader to remember that it is a body of ex parte
+ statements, and should be compared with those made on behalf of the
+ administration by Secretary van Tienhoven in his <i>Answer</i>, the
+ document immediately following this. Stuyvesant, whatever his faults of
+ temper&mdash;love of autocratic power, lack of sympathy with the life of a
+ community already far from austere, vindictiveness even&mdash;conceived of
+ his province as a political community, not solely as a commercial
+ possession, and honestly tried to govern it with an eye to its own best
+ interest. The directors, moreover, could truthfully say that many of their
+ narrowest actions were prescribed by their instructions from the West
+ India Company. While the States General were often capable of taking a
+ statesmanlike view of New Netherland, and as it lost control of the former
+ found itself involved in greater and greater financial embarrassments,
+ which made it increasingly difficult to do justice to the latter. We may
+ also set down on the credit side of the account that though the
+ administration was slow to concede representative institutions to the
+ province, it did not a little to organize local self-government, Kieft
+ granting village rights, with magistrates and local courts of justice, to
+ Hampstead in 1644, to Flushing in 1645, to Brooklyn in 1646, while
+ Stuyvesant bestowed such rights on a dozen towns during his seventeen
+ years' rule and gave New Amsterdam a somewhat restricted municipal
+ government in 1653.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of those whose signatures follow Van der Donck's at the end of the <i>Representation</i>,
+ Augustin Herrman was a Bohemian of Prague, who had served in Wallenstein's
+ army, had come out to New Netherland in 1633 as agent of a mercantile
+ house of Amsterdam, and had become an influential merchant. A man of
+ various accomplishments, he probably made the drawing of New Amsterdam
+ which is reproduced at the foot of Van der Donck's map in this volume.
+ Later he made for Lord Baltimore a fine map of Maryland, and received as
+ his reward the princely estate of Bohemia Manor. Arnoldus van Hardenberg,
+ another merchant, had been a victim of judicial oppression by both Kieft
+ and Stuyvesant. Jacob van Couwenhoven had come out in 1633 and resided at
+ first at Rensselaerswyck; he was afterward of note as speculator and
+ brewer in New Amsterdam. Oloff Stevensz van Cortlant had been store-keeper
+ for the Company and deacon of the church; later he was burgomaster of New
+ Amsterdam. Michiel Jansz and Thomas Hall were farmers, the latter, the
+ first English settler in New York State, having come to Manhattan as a
+ deserter from George Holmes's abortive expedition of 1635 against Fort
+ Nassau on South River. Elbert Elertsz was a weaver, Hendrick Kip a tailor.
+ Govert Loockermans, on the other hand, brother-in-law to both Couwenhoven
+ and Cortlandt, was the chief merchant and Indian trader of the province,
+ often in partnership with Isaac Allerton the former Pilgrim of Plymouth.
+ Lastly, Jan Everts Bout, a farmer, had formerly been superintendent for
+ Pauw at Pavonia. Characterizations of these men, by an unfriendly hand,
+ may be seen at the end of Van Tienhoven's <i>Answer</i> to this <i>Representation</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three of the signers, Van der Donck, Couwenhoven and Bout, were deputed to
+ go to the Netherlands and present the <i>Representation</i> to the States
+ General, while Stuyvesant sent Secretary van Tienhoven to counteracat
+ their efforts. The Voluminous papers which both parties presented to their
+ High Mightinesses were referred to a committee, which in April, 1650,
+ submitted a draft of a reformed and more liberal government for the
+ province. The delegates caused their <i>Representation</i> to be printed,
+ in a pamphlet of forty-nine pages, now very rare, under the title, <i>Vertoogh
+ van Nieu-Neder-Land, Weghens de Ghelegentheydt, Vruchtbaerheydt, en
+ Soberen Staet desselfs</i> (Hague, 1650), i.e., "Representation of New
+ Netherland, concerning its Location, Productiveness and Poor Condition."
+ Much discussion was aroused. "The name of New Netherland," wrote the
+ Amsterdam chamber of the Company to Stuyvesant, "was scarcely ever
+ mentioned before, and now it would seem as if heaven and earth were
+ interested in it." So effective an exposition of the colony's value and of
+ its misgovernment could not fail to awaken consideration and sympathy.
+ Nevertheless, the company, aided by the <i>Answer</i> which Van Tienhoven
+ submitted in November, 1650, were able to ride out the storm, and to
+ temporize until the outbreak of the war of 1652-1654 with England put a
+ new face on colonial affairs. A few concessions were made&mdash;the export
+ duty on tobacco was taken off, and a municipal government allowed to New
+ Amsterdam, now a town of 700 or 800 inhabitants (1653). But no serious
+ alteration in the provincial government resulted. "Our Grand Duke of
+ Muscovy," wrote one of Stuyvesant's subordinates to Van der Donck, "keeps
+ on as of old." Disaffection among the Dutch settlers never ceased till the
+ English conquest, though on the other hand the English settlers on Long
+ Island were much better disposed toward Stuyvesant's government, and were
+ treated by him with more favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van der Donck's two companions returned to New Netherland before long. He,
+ however, remained in the old country until the summer of 1653, occupied
+ with the business of his mission, with legal studies, taking the degree of
+ doctor of laws at he University of Leyden, and with the preparation of his
+ <i>Beschryvinge van Nieus-Nederlant</i>. The States General gave him a
+ copyright for it in May, 1653, but the first edition was not published
+ till 1655. In that year the author died, leaving to his widow his estate,
+ or "colonie," which he called Colendonck. The name of Yonkers, where it
+ was situated, perpetuates his title of gentility (Jonkheer van der Donck).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The original manuscript of the <i>Representation</i> is still preserved in
+ the archives of the Netherlands, and a translation of it was printed in
+ 1856 in <i>Documents relating to the Colonial History of New York</i>, I.
+ 271-318, and reprinted in <i>Pennsylvania Archives</i>, second series, V.
+ 124-170. A translation of the printed tract, the text of which differs but
+ very slightly from that of the manuscript, was made by Hon. Henry C.
+ Murphy and printed in 1849 in the <i>Collections of the New York
+ Historical Society</i>, second series, II. 251-329. It exists also in a
+ separate form as a pamphlet, and, combined with the <i>Breeden Raedt</i>,
+ in a volume privately printed in an edition of 125 copies by Mr. James
+ Lenox. It is this translation which, revised by Professor A. Clinton
+ Crowell, is printed in the following pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW NETHERLAND, 1650
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Representation of New Netherland concerning its Location,
+ Productiveness, and Poor Condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ AMONG all the people in the world, industrious in seeking out foreign
+ lands, navigable waters and trade, those who bear the name of
+ Netherlanderse, will very easily hold their place with the first, as is
+ sufficiently known to all those who have in any wise saluted the threshold
+ of history, and as will also be confirmed by the following relation. The
+ country of which we propose to speak, was first discovered in the year of
+ our Lord 1609, by the ship Half Moon, of which Hendrik Hutson was master
+ and supercargo&mdash;at the expense of the chartered East India Company,
+ though in search of a different object. It was subsequently called New
+ Netherland by our people, and very justly, as it was first discovered and
+ possessed by Netherlanders, and at their cost; so that even at the present
+ day, those natives of the country who are so old as to recollect when the
+ Dutch ships first came here, declare that when they saw them, they did not
+ know what to make of them, and could not comprehend whether they came down
+ from Heaven, or were of the Devil. Some among them, when the first one
+ arrived, even imagined it to be a fish, or some monster of the sea, and
+ accordingly a strange report of it spread over the whole land. We have
+ also heard the savages frequently say, that they knew nothing of any other
+ part of the world, or any other people than their own, before the arrival
+ of the Netherlanders. For these reasons, therefore, and on account of the
+ similarity of climate, situation and fertility, this place is rightly
+ called New Netherland. It is situated on the northerly coast of America,
+ in the latitude of 38, 39, 40, 41 and 42 degrees, or thereabouts,
+ coast-wise. It is bounded on the northeast by New England, and on the
+ southwest by Virginia. The coast runs nearly southwest and northeast, and
+ is washed by the ocean. On the north is the river of Canada, a large river
+ running far into the interior. The northwest side is still partially
+ unknown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The land is naturally fruitful, and capable of supporting a large
+ population, if it were judiciously allotted according to location. The air
+ is pleasant here, and more temperate than in the Netherlands. The winds
+ are changeable, and blow from all points, but generally from the southwest
+ and northwest; the former prevailing in summer, and the latter in winter,
+ at times very sharply, but constituting, nevertheless, the greatest
+ blessing to the country as regards the health of the people, for being
+ very strong and pure, it drives far inland or consumes all damps and
+ superfluous moisture. The coast is generally clean and sandy, the beach
+ detached and broken into islands. Eastward from the North River lies Long
+ Island, about forty leagues in length, forming a fine wide river, which
+ falls at either end into the ocean, and affording a very convenient
+ passage between the shores which is protected from the dangers of the sea
+ by a great number of good bays and other places of anchorage, so that
+ vessels even in winter can readily pass east and west. Towards the south
+ approaching the South River, there are several inlets, but they are muddy
+ and sandy, though after proper experiments they could be used. Inside
+ these again there are large streams and meadows, but the waters are for
+ the most part shallow. Along the seacoast the land is generally sandy or
+ gravelly, not very high, but tolerably fertile, so that for the most part
+ it is covered over with beautiful trees. The country is rolling in many
+ places, with some high mountains, and very fine flats and maize lands,
+ together with large meadows, salt and fresh, all making very fine hay
+ land. It is overgrown with all kinds of trees, standing without order, as
+ in other wildernesses, except that the maize lands, plains and meadows
+ have few or no trees, and these with little pains might be made into good
+ arable land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The seasons are the same as in the Netherlands, but the summer is warmer
+ and begins more suddenly. The winter is cold, and further inland, or
+ towards the most northerly part, colder than in the Netherlands. It is
+ also subject to much snow, which remains long on the ground, and in the
+ interior, three, four and five months; but near the seacoast it is quickly
+ dissolved by the southerly winds. Thunder, lightning, rain, showers, hail,
+ snow, frost, dew and the like, are the same as in the Netherlands, except
+ that in the summer sudden gusts of wind are somewhat more frequent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The land is adapted to the production of all kinds of winter and summer
+ fruits, and with less trouble and tilling than in the Netherlands. It
+ produces different kinds of woods, suitable for building houses and ships,
+ whether large or small, consisting of oaks of various kinds, as post-oak,
+ white smooth bark, white rough bark, gray bark, black bark, and still
+ another kind which they call, from its softness, butter oak, the poorest
+ of all, and not very valuable; the others, if cultivated as in the
+ Netherlands, would be equal to any Flemish or Brabant oaks. It also yields
+ several species of nut wood, in great abundance, such as oil-nuts, large
+ and small; walnut of different sizes, in great abundance, and good for
+ fuel, for which it is much used, and chestnut, the same as in the
+ Netherlands, growing in the woods without order. There are three varieties
+ of beech&mdash;water beech, common Beech, and hedge beech&mdash;also
+ axe-handle wood, two species of canoe wood, ash, birch, pine, fir, juniper
+ or wild cedar, linden, alder, willow, thorn, elder, and many other kinds
+ useful for many purposes, but unknown to us by name, and which we will be
+ glad to submit to the carpenters for further examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indigenous fruits consist principally of acorns, some of which are
+ very sweet; nuts of different kinds, chestnuts, beechnuts, but not many
+ mulberries, plums, medlars, wild cherries, black currants, gooseberries,
+ hazel nuts in great quantities, small apples, abundant strawberries
+ throughout the country, with many other fruits and roots which the savages
+ use. There is also plenty of bilberries or blueberries, together with
+ ground-nuts and artichokes, which grow under ground. Almost the whole land
+ is full of vines, in the wild woods as well as on the maize lands and
+ flats; but they grow principally near to and upon the banks of the brooks,
+ streams and rivers, which are numerous, and run conveniently and
+ pleasantly everywhere, as if they were planted there. The grapes comprise
+ many varieties, some white, some very fleshy, and only fit to make raisins
+ of, others on the contrary juicy; some are very large and others small.
+ The juice is pleasant, and some of it as white as French or Rhenish wine;
+ some is a very deep red, like Tent,(1) and some is paler. The vines run
+ much on the trees, and are shaded by their leaves, so that the grapes
+ ripen late and are a little sour; but with the intelligent assistance of
+ man, as fine wines would undoubtedly be made here as in any other country.
+ In regard to other fruits, all those which grow in the Netherlands also
+ grow very well in New Netherland, without requiring as much care to be
+ bestowed upon them as is necessary there. Garden fruits succeed very well,
+ yet are drier, sweeter, and more agreeable than in the Netherlands; for
+ proof of which we may easily instance musk-melons, citrons or
+ watermelons,(2) which in New Netherland grow right in the open fields, if
+ the briars and weeds are kept from them, while in the Netherlands they
+ require the close care of amateurs, or those who cultivate them for profit
+ in gardens, and then they are neither so perfect by far, nor so palatable,
+ as they are in New Netherland. In general all kinds of pumpkins and the
+ like are also much drier, sweeter and more delicious, which is caused by
+ the temperateness and amenity of the climate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tame cattle are in size and other respects about the same as in the
+ Netherlands, but the English cattle and swine thrive and grow best,
+ appearing to be better suited to the country than those from Holland. They
+ require, too, less trouble, expense and attention; for it is not necessary
+ in winter to look after such as are dry, or the swine, except that in the
+ time of a deep snow they should have some attention. Milch cows also are
+ much less trouble than they are in Holland, as most of the time, if any
+ care be requisite, it is only for the purpose of giving them occasionally
+ a little hay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wild animals are principally lines,(3) but they are few; bears, of
+ which there are many, elks and deer in great numbers, some of which are
+ entirely white, and others wholly black. The savages say that the white
+ deer are of very great consequence in the estimation of the other deer,
+ and are exceedingly beloved, regarded and honored by the others, but that
+ the reverse is true of the black deer. There are various other large
+ animals in the interior, but they are unknown to the Christians. There are
+ also wolves, dangerous only to small cattle, beavers, otters, weasels,
+ wild cats, foxes, raccoons, minks, hares, musk-rats, about as large as
+ cats, pole-cats and squirrels, some of which can fly. There are also
+ ground-hogs and other small animals, but they are for the most part, as we
+ have said, not known to the Christians.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) A deep-red Spanish wine.
+
+ (2) The original has water-limoenen, water-citrons, for the
+ watermelon, little known in Dutch gardens at this time, was
+ regarded rather as a citron than as a melon.
+
+ (3) Panthers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of birds this country is by no means without its share. There are great
+ numbers of birds of prey, as eagles of two kinds&mdash;the bald-headed,
+ which has the head, tail and principal wing-feathers white, and the common
+ kind; hawks, buzzards, sparrow-hawks, crows, chicken-hawks, and many
+ others, yet all are birds of prey and capable of being trained and used
+ for hunting, though they differ somewhat in shape from those in the
+ Netherlands. There is also a bird which has its head like a cat, and its
+ body like a large owl, colored white.(1) We know no name for it in the
+ Netherlands, but in France it is called grand duc, and is esteemed very
+ highly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The cat-owl or great barred own, bubo Virginianus. It
+ is not white, but neither is the grand duc, the European
+ bubo. Van der Donck, in his <i>Beschryvinge</i>, says, "of a
+ light ash color."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The other birds found in this country are turkies, the same as in the
+ Netherlands, but they are wild, and are plentiest and best in winter;
+ several kinds of partridges, some smaller than in the Netherlands, others
+ larger, curlews, wood and water snipes, pheasants, heath-hens, cranes,
+ herons, bitterns, multitudes of pigeons resembling ringdoves, but a little
+ smaller; quails, merlins, thrushes, shore-runners, but in some respects
+ different from those of the Netherlands. There are other small birds, some
+ of which sing, but the names of most of them are unknown to us, and would
+ take too long to enumerate. Water fowl are found here of different kinds,
+ but all very good and fit to eat; such as the swans, similar to those in
+ Netherlands and full as large; three kinds of geese, gray geese, which are
+ the largest and best, bernicles and white-headed geese, ducks of different
+ kinds, widgeons, divers, coots, cormorants and several others, but not so
+ abundant as the foregoing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The river fish are almost the same as in the Netherlands, comprising
+ salmon, sturgeon, twelves, thirteens,(1) shad, carp, perch, pike, trout,
+ roach, thickhead, suckers, sunfish, eel, nine-eyes or lampreys, both much
+ more abundant and larger than in the Netherlands, besides many other
+ valuable fish which we are unable to name.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Striped bass and drum-fish.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the salt water are caught codfish, haddock, weakfish, herring,
+ mackerel, thornbacks, flounders, plaice, sheepshead, blackfish, sea-dogs,
+ panyns and many others; also lobsters, crabs, great cockles, from which
+ the Indians make the white and black zeewant, oysters and muscles in great
+ quantities with many other kinds of shell-fish very similar to each other,
+ for which we know no names, besides sea and land tortoises.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The venomous animals consist, for the most part, of adders and lizards,
+ though they are harmless or nearly so. There are snakes of different
+ kinds, which are not dangerous and flee before men if they possibly can,
+ else they are usually beaten to death. The rattlesnakes, however, which
+ have a rattle on the tail, with which they rattle very loudly when they
+ are angry or intend to sting, and which grows every year a joint larger,
+ are very malignant and do not readily retreat before a man or any other
+ creature. Whoever is bitten by them runs great danger of his life, unless
+ great care be taken; but fortunately they are not numerous, and there
+ grown spontaneously in the country the true snakeroot, which is very
+ highly esteemed by the Indians as an unfailing cure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The medicinal plants found in New Netherland up to the present time, by
+ little search, as far as they have come to our knowledge, consist
+ principally of Venus' hair, hart's tongue, lingwort, polypody, white
+ mullein, priest's shoe, garden and sea-beach orach, water germander,
+ tower-mustard, sweet flag, sassafras, crowfoot, platain, shepherd's purse,
+ mallows, wild marjoram, crane's bill, marsh-mallows, false eglantine,
+ laurel, violet, blue flag, wild indigo, solomon's seal, dragon's blood,
+ comfrey, milfoil, many sorts of fern, wild lilies of different kinds,
+ agrimony, wild leek, blessed thistle, snakeroot, Spanish figs which grow
+ out of the leaves,(2) tarragon and numerous other plants and flowers; but
+ as we are not skilled in those things, we cannot say much of them; yet it
+ is not to be doubted that experts would be able to find many simples of
+ great and different virtues, in which we have confidence, principally
+ because the Indians know how to cure very dangerous and perilous wounds
+ and sores by roots, leaves and other little things.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (2) Probably the prickly pear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It is certain that the Indigo silvestris grows here spontaneously without
+ human aid. It could be easily cultivated if there were people who would
+ undertake it; at least, the other species would grow very well and yield a
+ good profit. We have seen proof of this in the colony of Renselaerswyck,
+ though it was all sown too late and upon a barren rock where there was
+ little earth. It came up very well, but in consequence of the drought
+ turned very yellow and withered, and was neglected; nevertheless it was
+ evident that if it were well covered it would succeed. Madder plants also
+ would undoubtedly grow well both in field and gardens, and better than in
+ Zeeland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There may be discovered casually or by little search, different minerals,
+ upon some of which tests have been made according to our limited means,
+ and which are found good. We have attempted several times to send
+ specimens of them to the Netherlands, once with Arent van Corenben by way
+ of New Haven and of England, but the ship was wrecked and no tidings of it
+ have ever been received.(1) After that Director William Kieft also had
+ many different specimens with him in the ship the Princess, but they were
+ lost in her with him.(2) The mountains and mines nevertheless remain, and
+ are easily to be found again whenever it may be thought proper to go to
+ the labor and expense. In New England they have already progressed so far
+ as to make castings of iron pots, tankards, balls and the like out of
+ their minerals, and we firmly believe all that is wanting here is to have
+ a beginning made; for there are in New Netherland two kinds of marcasite,
+ and mines of white and yellow quicksilver, of gold, silver, copper, iron,
+ black lead and hard coal. It is supposed that tin and lead will also be
+ found; but who will seek after them or who will make use of them as long
+ as there are not more people?
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Arent Corssen. Van der Donck says that he and Kieft saw
+ an Indian painting his face with a shining mineral. They had
+ it assayed, and it proved to contain gold. Arent Corssen,
+ sent to Holland with a bag of it, embarked early in 1646 in
+ the "great ship" of New Haven, Captain George Lamberton, for
+ whose return into the harbor as a phantom ship, months
+ afterward, see Cotton Mather's <i>Magnalia</i>, I. 84 (ed. of
+ 1853), and Longfellow's poem, "The Phantom Ship."
+
+ (2) In August, 1647, some months after Stuyvesant's arrival,
+ Kieft sailed for Holland. With him sailed his enemy Domine
+ Bogardus, and the chief victims of his and Stuyvesant's
+ persecution, Kuyter and Melyn. The ship was wrecked on the
+ Welsh coast. Kieft was drowned; his opponents escaped.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Fuller's earth is found in abundance, and [Armenian] bole; also white,
+ red, yellow, blue and black clay very solid and greasy, and should be
+ suitable for many purposes; earth for bricks and for tiles,
+ mountain-chrystal, glass like that of Muscovy,(1) green serpentine stone
+ in great abundance, blue limestone, slate, red grindstone, flint, paving
+ stone, large quantities of all varieties of quarry stone suitable for
+ hewing mill-stones and for building all kinds of walls, asbestos and very
+ many other kinds applicable to the use of man. There are different paints,
+ but the Christians are not skilled in them. They are seen daily on the
+ Indians, who understand their nature and use them to paint themselves in
+ different colors. If it were not that explorers are wanting, our people
+ would be able to find them and provide themselves with them.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Mica.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of the Americans or Natives, their Appearance, Occupations, and Means of
+ Support.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The natives are generally well set in their limbs, slender round the
+ waist, broad across the shoulders, and have black hair and dark eyes. They
+ are very nimble and fleet, well adapted to travel on foot and to carry
+ heavy burdens. They are foul and slovenly in their actions, and make
+ little of all kinds of hardship; to which indeed they are by nature and
+ from their youth accustomed. They are like the Brazilians in color, or as
+ yellow as the people who sometimes pass through the Netherlands and are
+ called Gypsies. The men generally have no beard, or very little, which
+ some even pull out. They use very few words, which they consider well.
+ Naturally they are very modest, simple and inexperienced; though in their
+ actions high-minded enough, vigorous and quick to comprehend or learn, be
+ it right or wrong, whenever they are so inclined. They are not
+ straightforward as soldiers but perfidious, accomplishing all their
+ enterprises by treachery, using many strategems to deceive their enemies,
+ and usually ordering all their plans, involving any danger, by night. The
+ desire of revenge appears to be born in them. They are very obstinate in
+ defending themselves when they cannot run, which however they do when they
+ can; and they make little of death when it is inevitable, and despise all
+ tortures which can be inflicted upon them while dying, manifesting no
+ sorrow, but usually singing until they are dead. They understand how to
+ cure wounds and hurts, or inveterate sores and injuries, by means of herbs
+ and roots, which grow in the country, and which are known to them. Their
+ clothing, both for men and women, is a piece of duffels or leather in
+ front, with a deer skin or elk's hide over the body. Some have bears'
+ hides of which they make doublets; others have coats made of the skins of
+ raccoons, wild-cats, wolves, dogs, otters, squirrels, beavers and the
+ like, and also of turkey's feathers. At present they use for the most part
+ duffels cloth, which they obtain in barter from the Christians. They make
+ their stockings and shoes of deer skins or elk's hide, and some have shoes
+ made of corn-husks, of which they also make sacks. Their money consists of
+ white and black zeewant, which they themselves make. Their measure and
+ valuation is by the hand or by the fathom; but their corn is measured by
+ deontas, which are bags they make themselves. Ornamenting themselves
+ consists in cutting their bodies, or painting them with various colors,
+ sometimes even all black, if they are in mourning, yet generally in the
+ face. They hang zeewant, both white and black, about their heads, which
+ they otherwise are not want to cover, but on which they are now beginning
+ to wear hats and caps bought of the Christians. They also put it in their
+ ears, and around their necks and bodies, wherewith after their manner they
+ appear very fine. They have long deer's hair which is dyed red, and of
+ which they make rings for the head, and other fine hair of the same color,
+ to hang from the neck like tresses, of which they are very proud. They
+ frequently smear their skin and hair with difference kinds of grease. They
+ can almost all swim. They themselves make the boats they use, which are of
+ two kinds, some of entire trees, which they hollow out with fire, hatchets
+ and adzes, and which the Christians call canoes; others are made of bark,
+ which they manage very skilfully, and which are also called canoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Traces of the institution of marriage can just be perceived among them,
+ and nothing more. A man and woman join themselves together without any
+ particular ceremony other than that the man by previous agreement with the
+ woman gives her some zeewant or cloth, which on their separation, if it
+ happens soon, he often takes again. Both men and women are utterly
+ unchaste and shamelessly promiscuous in their intercourse, which is the
+ cause of the men so often changing their wives and the women their
+ husbands. Ordinarily they have but one wife, sometimes two or three, but
+ this is generally among the chiefs. They have also among them different
+ conditions of persons, such as noble and ignoble. The men are generally
+ lazy, and do nothing until they become old and unesteemed, when they make
+ spoons, wooden bowls, bags, nets and other similar articles; beyond this
+ the men do nothing except fish, hunt and go to war. The women are
+ compelled to do the rest of the work, such as planting corn, cutting and
+ drawing fire-wood, cooking, taking care of the children and whatever else
+ there is to be done. Their dwellings consist of hickory saplings, placed
+ upright in the ground and bent arch-wise; the tops are covered with barks
+ of trees, which they cut for this purpose in great quantities. Some even
+ have within them rough carvings of faces and images, but these are
+ generally in the houses of the chiefs. In the fishing and hunting seasons,
+ they lie under the open sky or little better. They do not live long in one
+ place, but move about several times in a year, at such times and to such
+ places as it appears best and easiest for them to obtain subsistence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are divided into different tribes and languages, each tribe living
+ generally by itself and having one of its number as a chief, though he has
+ not much power or distinction except in their dances or in time of war.
+ Among some there is not the least knowledge of God, and among others very
+ little, though they relate many strange fables concerning Him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are in general much afraid of the Devil, who torments them greatly;
+ and some give themselves up to him, and hold the strangest notions about
+ him. But their devils, they say, will have nothing to do with the Dutch.
+ No haunting of spirits and the like are heard of among them. They make
+ offerings to the Devil sometimes, but with few solemnities. They believe
+ in the immortality of the soul. They have some knowledge of the sun, moon
+ and stars, of which they are able to name many, and they judge tolerably
+ well about the weather. There is hardly any law or justice among them,
+ except sometimes in war matters, and then very little. The nearest of
+ blood is the avenger. The youngest are the most courageous, and do for the
+ most part what they please. Their weapons formerly were the bow and arrow,
+ which they employ with wonderful skill, and the cudgel, but they now, that
+ is, those who lives near the Christians or have many dealings with them,
+ generally use firelocks and hatchets, which they obtain in trade. They are
+ exceedingly fond of guns, sparing no expense for them; and are so skilful
+ in the use of them that they surpass many Christians. Their food is coarse
+ and simple, drinking water as their only beverage, and eating the flesh of
+ all kinds of animals which the country affords, cooked without being
+ cleansed or dressed. They eat even badgers, dogs, eagles and such like
+ trash, upon which Christians place no value. They use all kinds of fish,
+ which they commonly cook without removing the entrails, and snakes, frogs
+ and the like. They know how to preserve fish and meat until winter, and to
+ cook them with corn-meal. They make their bread of maize, but it is very
+ plain, and cook it either whole or broken in a pestle block. The women do
+ this and make of it a pap or porridge, which some of them call Sapsis,(1)
+ others Enimdare, and which is their daily food. They mix this also
+ sometimes with small beans of different colors, which they plant
+ themselves, but this is held by them as a dainty dish more than as daily
+ food.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Probably a misprint for sapaan. For the next word, the
+ manuscript has Duundare.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ By whom New Netherland was first Possessed and what its Boundaries are.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That New Netherland was first found, claimed and possessed by
+ Netherlanders, has already been stated; but inasmuch as a dispute has
+ arisen, not only with the Swedes (which is of little moment) but
+ especially with the English, who have already entered upon and seized a
+ great part thereof, it is necessary to speak of each claim in particular
+ and somewhat at large. But because this matter has been treated upon by
+ various ingenious minds in its length and breadth, and as those claims are
+ so absurd as to require only a few reasons in answer to them, we will be
+ as brief as in any wise practicable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Their High Mightinesses, the Lords States General, were pleased, in
+ the year of our Lord 1622,(1) to include this province in their grant to
+ the Honorable West India Company, their Honors deemed it necessary to take
+ into possession so naturally beautiful and noble a province, which was
+ immediately done, as opportunity offered, the same as in all similar
+ beginnings. Since the year of our Lord 1623, four forts have been built
+ there by order of the Lords Directors,(2) one on the south point of the
+ Manhatans Island, where the East and North Rivers unite, called New
+ Amsterdam, where the staple-right(3) of New Netherland was designed to be;
+ another upon the same River, six-and-thirty Dutch miles [leagues] higher
+ up, and three leagues below the great Kochoos(4) fall of the Mohawk River,
+ on the west side of the river, in the colony of Renselaerswyck, and is
+ called Orange; but about this river there a been as yet no dispute with
+ any foreigners. Upon the South River lies Fort Nassau and upon the Fresh
+ River, the Good Hope. In these four forts there have been always from the
+ beginning to the present time some garrisons, although they are all now in
+ a very bad condition, not only in themselves but also as regards
+ garrisons.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) 1621.
+
+ (2) Heeren Majores, the managers or directors of the
+ Company.
+
+ (3) Staple-right is a privilege granted to the inhabitants
+ of a place, whereby the masters of vessels or merchants
+ trading along their coasts are compelled to discharge their
+ cargoes there for sale, or else pay duties.
+
+ (4) Cohoes.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ These forts, both to the south and north, are so situated as not only to
+ close and control the said rivers, but also to command the plantations
+ between them, as well as those round about them, and on the other side of
+ the river as far as the ownership by occupation extends. These the
+ Honorable Company declared they owned and would maintain against all
+ foreign or domestic powers who should attempt to seize them against their
+ consent. Yet, especially on the northeast side of New Netherland this has
+ been not at all regarded or observed by the English living to the
+ eastward; for notwithstanding possession was already fully taken by the
+ building and occupation of Fort Good Hope, and there was no neglect from
+ time to time in warning them, in making known our rights, and in
+ protesting against their usurpation and violence, they have disregarded
+ all these things and have seized and possessed, and still hold, the
+ largest and best part of New Netherland, that is, on the east side of the
+ North River, from Cape Cod, (by our people in 1609 called New Holland, and
+ taken possession of [if we are correctly informed] by the setting up of
+ the arms of their High Mightinesses,)(1) to within six leagues of the
+ North River, where the English have now a village called Stamford, from
+ whence one could travel now in a summer's day to the North River and back
+ again, if one knows the Indian path. The English of New Haven also have a
+ trading house which lies east or southeast of Magdalen Island, and not
+ more than six leagues from the North River, in which this island lies, on
+ the east bank twenty-three and a half leagues above Fort Amsterdam.(1)
+ This trading post was established for no other purpose than to divert the
+ trade of the North River or to destroy it entirely, for the river is now
+ quite free. They have also endeavored several times, during eight or nine
+ years past, to buy of the Indians a large quantity of land, (which would
+ have served more than any other thing to draw off the trade), as we have
+ understood from the Indians; for the post is situated not more than three
+ or four leagues from the eastern bounds of the colony of Renselaerswyck.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) See De Laet, p. 37, supra. The words in square brackets
+ appear in the manuscript, but not in the printed pamphlet.
+
+ (2) Magdalen Island is in the Hudson near Annandale. It
+ appears that the nearest post to the lower Hudson possessed
+ hitherto by the New Englanders was that which the New Haven
+ people established in 1646 on the Housatonic near the
+ present Derby, Connecticut; and that their nearest post to
+ the upper Hudson was that which Governor Hopkins, of
+ Connecticut, set up in 1641 at Woronoco, now Westfield,
+ Massachusetts.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This and similar difficulties these people now wish to lay to our charge,
+ all under the pretence of a very clear conscience, notwithstanding King
+ James, of most glorious memory, chartered the Virginia Companies upon
+ condition that they should remain an hundred miles from each other,
+ according to our reckoning.(1) They are willing to avail themselves of
+ this grant, but by no means to comply with the terms stipulated in it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The hundred miles of the Virginia patent of 1606 were
+ English miles.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All the islands, bays, havens, rivers, kills and places, even to a great
+ distance on the other side of New Holland or Cape Cod, have Dutch names,
+ which our Dutch ship-masters and traders gave to them.(1) These were the
+ first to discover and to trade to them, even before they had names, as the
+ English themselves well know; but as long as they can manage it and
+ matters go as they please, they are willing not to know it. And those of
+ them who are at the Fresh River have desired to enter into an agreement
+ and to make a yearly acknowledgement or an absolute purchase, which indeed
+ is proof positive that our right was well known to them, and that they
+ themselves had nothing against it in conscience, although they now, from
+ time to time, have invented and pretended many things in order to screen
+ themselves, or thereby to cause at least delay.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) An exaggeration, yet the number of such names is
+ considerable, as may be seen by consulting the appendix to
+ Asher's <i>Bibliography of New Netherland</i>.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Moreover the people of Rhode Island, when they were at variance with those
+ of the Bay,(1) sought refuge among the Dutch, and sojourn among them. For
+ all these things, and What we shall relate in the following pages, there
+ are Proofs and documents enough, either with the secretary of the Company
+ or with the directors.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Massachusetts Bay. The most conspicuous instance is
+ Mrs. Anne Hutchinson.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In short, is it just this with the English, they are willing to know the
+ Netherlanders, and to use them as a protection in time of need, but when
+ that is past, they no longer regard them, but play the fool with them.
+ This happens so only because we have neglected to populate the land; or,
+ to speak more plainly and truly, because we have, our of regard for our
+ own profit, wished to scrape all the fat into one or more pots, and thus
+ secure the trade and neglect population.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long Island, which, on account of its convenient bays and havens, and its
+ good well situated lands, is a crown of the province, they have also
+ seized at once, except on the west and two Dutch villages&mdash;Breuckelen
+ and Amersvoort,(1) not of much importance&mdash;and some English villages,
+ as Gravesande, Greenwich and Mespat, (from which(2) the people were driven
+ off during the war, and which was afterwards confiscated by Director
+ Kieft; but as the owners appealed therefrom, it remains undecided.) There
+ are now a very few people in the place. Also, Vlissengen, which is a
+ pretty village and tolerably rich in cattle. The fourth and last village
+ is Heemstede, which is superior to the rest, for it is very rich in
+ cattle.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Brooklyn and Flatlands.
+
+ (2) I.e., from Mespath or Newtown. Gravesend had been
+ settled by Lady Deborah Moody, Greenwich in 1639 by Captain
+ Daniel Patrick and Robert Feake, Mespath by Francis Doughty
+ in 1642, Flushing and Hempstead by other English in 1645 and
+ 1644.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As we are now on the subject of Long Island, we will, because the English
+ claim it, speak of it somewhat particularly. The ocean on the south, and
+ the East River on the north side of it, shape this island; and as we have
+ said, it is, on account of its good situation, of its land, and of its
+ convenient harbors, and anchoring places, a crown of New Netherland. The
+ East River separates it from Manathans Island as far as the Hellegat. It
+ is tolerably wide and convenient; and has been inhabited by our freemen
+ from the first, according as opportunities offered. In the year 1640 a
+ Scotchman, with an English commission, came to Director William Kieft. He
+ laid claim to the island, but his pretension was not much regarded; for
+ which reason he departed without accomplishing anything, having influenced
+ only a few simple people. Director Kieft also afterwards sent and broke up
+ the English who wished to begin a settlement at Oyster Bay, and thus it
+ remained for a long time.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) James Farrett, as agent for Lord Stirling, made grants
+ at Oyster Bay to a company of men from Lynn, who began a
+ settlement there. Stirling had received a grant of Long
+ Island from the Council of New England in April, 1635.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1647, a Scotchman came here, who called himself Captain
+ Forester,(1) and claimed this island for the Dowager of Sterling, whose
+ governor he gave himself out to be. He had a commission dated in the
+ eighteenth year of King James's reign, but it was not signed by His
+ Majesty or any body else. Appended to it was an old seal which we could
+ not decipher. His commission embraced the whole of Long Island, together
+ with five leagues round about it, the main land as well as the islands. He
+ had also full authority from Mary, dowager of Sterling, but this was all.
+ Nevertheless the man was very consequential, and said on his first arrival
+ that he came here to see Governor Stuyvesant's commission, and if that was
+ better than his, he was willing to give way; if not, Governor Stuyvesant
+ must yield to him. To make the matter short, the Director took copies of
+ the papers and sent the man across(2) in the Falconer; but as this vessel
+ put into England, the man did not reach Holland, having escaped there, and
+ never troubling the captain afterwards. The English have since boasted of
+ this very loudly, and have also given out that he had again arrived at
+ Bastock,(3) but we have not heard of him. It is to be apprehended that if
+ he came now, some new act would be committed, for which reason it would be
+ well to hasten the redress of New Netherland.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Andrew Forester, of Dundee.
+
+ (2) Across the ocean.
+
+ (3) Boston.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of The Fresh River.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After Fort Good Hope, begun in the year 1623,(1) on the Fresh River, was
+ finished, some time had elapsed when an English bark arrived there. Jacob
+ van Curler, factor of the Company, by order of Director Wouter van
+ Twiller, protested against it, but notwithstanding his protest they did, a
+ year or two afterwards, come there with some families. A protest was also
+ made against them; but it was very manifest that these people had little
+ respect for it, for notwithstanding frequent protests, they have finally
+ seized and possessed the whole of the Fresh River, and have proceeded so
+ far in their shameless course as, in the year 1640, to seize the Company's
+ farms at the fort, paying no regard to the protests which we made. They
+ have gone even still further, and have belabored the Company's people with
+ sticks and heavy clubs; and have forcibly thrown into the river their
+ ploughs and other instruments, while they were on the land for the purpose
+ of working, and have put their horses to the pound. The same things
+ happened very frequently afterwards. They also took hogs and cows
+ belonging to the fort, and several times sold some of them for the
+ purpose, as they said, of repairing the damage. Against all these acts,
+ and each one in particular, protests were repeatedly made, but they were
+ met with ridicule. Several sharp letters about this were written in Latin
+ to their governors; of which letters and protests, minutes or copies
+ remain with the Company's officers, from which a much fuller account of
+ these transactions could be made. But all opposition was in vain, for
+ having had a smack of the goodness and convenience of this river, and
+ discovered the difference between the land there and that more easterly,
+ they would not go back; nor will they put themselves under the protection
+ of Their High Mightinesses, unless they be sharply summoned thereto, as it
+ is desirable they should be at the first opportunity.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) A misprint for 1633. The narrative below relates to the
+ English settlers at Hartford, founded in 1635. See De
+ Vries, pp. 203, 204, supra.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of the Right of the Netherlanders to the Fresh River.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ To speak from the beginning, our people had carefully explored and
+ discovered the most northerly parts of New Netherland and some distance on
+ the other side of Cape Cod, as we find it described, before the English
+ were known here, and had set up our arms upon Cape Cod as an act of
+ possession. In the year 1614 our traders(1) had not only traded at the
+ Fresh River, but had also ascended it before any English had ever dreamed
+ of going there, which they did first in the year 1636, after our fort, the
+ Good Hope, had been a long time in esse and almost all the lands on both
+ sides the river had been purchased by our people from the Indians, which
+ purchase took place principally in the year 1632. Kievets-hoeck(2) was
+ also purchased at the same time by one Hans den Sluys,(3) an officer of
+ the company. On this cape the States' arms had been affixed to a tree in
+ token of possession; but the English who now possess the Fresh River have
+ torn them down and carved a ridiculous face in their place. Whether this
+ was done by authority or not, cannot be positively asserted; it is however
+ supposed that it was. It has been so charged upon them in several letters,
+ and no denial has been made. Besides they have, contra jus gentium, per
+ fas et nefas,(4) invaded the whole river, for the reason, as they say,
+ that the land was lying idle and waste, which was no business of theirs
+ and not true; for there was already built upon the river a fort which
+ continued to be possessed by a garrison. There was also a large farm(5)
+ near the fort, belonging to the Dutch or the Company. Most of the land was
+ bought and appropriated and the arms of their High Mightinesses were set
+ up at Kievets Hoeck, which is situated at the mouth of the river, so that
+ everything was done that could be done except that the country was not all
+ actually occupied. This the English demanded in addition, just as if it
+ were their right, since they were in greater numbers, to establish laws
+ for our nation in its own purchased lands and limits, and direct how and
+ in what manner it should introduce people into the country, and if it did
+ not turn our exactly according to their desire and pleasure, that they
+ have the right to invade and appropriate these waters, lands and
+ jurisdiction to themselves.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Adriaen Block.
+
+ (2) Saybrook Point. Kievit, or kiewit, is the bird pewit.
+
+ (3) Hans Eencluys in the manuscript, according to <i>N.Y. Col.
+ Doc.</i>, I. 287.
+
+ (4) "Contrary to the law of nations, regardless of right or
+ wrong."
+
+ (5) Brouwerye, brewery, in the printed pamphlet, but bouwery
+ in the manuscript.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of the Roden-Berch,(1) by the English called New Haven, and other Places
+ of less Importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The number of villages established by the English, from New Holland or
+ Cape Cod to Stamford, within the limits of the Netherlanders, is about
+ thirty, and they may contain five thousand men capable of bearing arms.
+ Their cattle, cows and horses are estimated at thirty thousand; their
+ goats and hogs cannot be stated; neither of them can be fully known
+ because there are several places which cannot well pass for villages, but
+ which nevertheless are beginnings of villages. Among all these,
+ Roden-Berch, or New Haven, is the first. It has a governor, contains about
+ three hundred and forty families, and is counted as a province or one of
+ the members of New England, of which there are four in all.(2)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Red Hill.
+
+ (2) I.e., of the United Colonies of New England, the
+ confederation formed in 1643.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This place was begun eleven years ago, in the year 1638, and since then
+ the people have broken off and formed Milford, Stratford, Stamford and the
+ trading house before spoken of, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Director Kieft has caused several protests to be drawn up, in Latin and in
+ other languages, commanding them by virtue of his commissions from the
+ Lords States General, His Highness the Prince of Orange and the Most Noble
+ Directors of the Chartered West India Company, to desist from their
+ proceedings and usurpations, and warning them, in case they did not, that
+ we would, as soon as a fit opportunity should present, exact of them
+ satisfaction therefor. But it was knocking at a deaf man's door, as they
+ did not regard these protests or even take any notice of them; on the
+ contrary they have sought many subterfuges, circumstances, false pretences
+ and sophistical arguments to give color to their doings, to throw a cloud
+ upon our lawful title and valid rights, and to cheat us out of them.
+ General Stuyvesant also has had many questions with them, growing out of
+ this matter, but it remains as it was. The utmost that they have ever been
+ willing to come to, is to declare that the dispute could not be settled in
+ this country, and that they desired and were satisfied that Their High
+ Mightinesses should arrange it with their sovereign. It is highly
+ necessary that this should be done, inasmuch as the English have already
+ seized, and are in possession of, almost half of New Netherland, a matter
+ which may have weighty consequences in the future. It is therefore
+ heartily to be desired that Their High Mightinesses will be pleased to
+ take this subject into serious consideration before it shall go further,
+ and the breach become irreparable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We must now pass to the South River, called by the English Delaware Bay,
+ first speaking of the boundaries; but in passing we cannot omit to say
+ that there has been here, both in the time of Director Kieft and in that
+ of General Stuyvesant, a certain Englishman, who called himself Sir Edward
+ Ploeyden, with the title of Earl Palatine of New Albion, who claimed that
+ the land on the west side of the North River to Virginia was his, by gift
+ of King James of England,(1) but he said he did not wish to have any
+ strife with the Dutch, though he was very much piqued at the Swedish
+ governor, John Prins, at the South River, on account of some affront given
+ him, too long to relate. He said also that when an opportunity should
+ offer he would go there and take possession of the river. In short,
+ according to the claims of the English, it belongs to them, and there is
+ nothing left for the subjects of Their High Mightinesses&mdash;one must
+ have this far, and another that far, but they all agree never to fall
+ short.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Plowden claimed under a patent from the viceroy of
+ Ireland under Charles I., June, 1634. The history of his
+ shadowy principality of New Albion is best accounted by
+ Professor Gregory B. Keen in Winsor's <i>Narrative and
+ Critical History of America</i>, III. 457-468. The best
+ account of the Swedish colony in the South River is by the
+ same writer, ibid., IV. 443-500.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of the South River and the Boundaries there.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As we have now come to speak of the South River and the most southerly
+ portion of New Netherland, we will, although this is well performed by
+ others, relate everything from the beginning, and yet as briefly as is
+ practicable. The boundaries, as we find them, extend as far as Cape
+ Henlopen, many miles south of Cape Cornelius, to the latitude of
+ thirty-eight degrees. The coast stretches, one course with another,
+ west-southwest and west, and although this Cape Henlopen is not much
+ esteemed, it is nevertheless proper that it should be brought to our
+ attention, as very important, not only in regard to the position of the
+ country, but also as relates to the trade with the Indians at the South
+ River, which the English and Swedes are striving after very hard, as we
+ will show. If the boundaries of this country were settled, these people
+ would conveniently and without further question be ousted, and both the
+ enjoyment of the productions of the land and the trade be retained for the
+ subjects of Their High Mightinesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of the South Bay and South River.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The South Bay and South River, by many called the second great river of
+ New Netherland, is situated at the latitude of 38 degrees 53 minutes. It
+ has two headlands or capes&mdash;the more northerly bearing the name of
+ Cape May, the more southerly that of Cape Cornelius. The bay was called
+ New Port-May, but at the present time is known as Godyn's Bay. These names
+ were given to the places about the time of their first discovery, before
+ any others were given them. The discovery, moreover, took place at the
+ same time with that of the North River, and by the same ship and persons,
+ who entered the South Bay before they came to the North Bay, as all can
+ read at length in the <i>Nieuwe Werelt</i> of Johannes de Laet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the same time that the forts were laid out on the North and Fresh
+ rivers, since the year 1623, Fort Nassau was erected upon this river,
+ which, in common parlance, is called the South River. It was the first of
+ the four, and was built with the same object and design as all the others,
+ as hereinbefore related. It lies on the east bank,(1) but it would have
+ done as well on the west bank, fifteen leagues up the river. The bay runs
+ for the most part north and south; is called New Port-May or Godyn's Bay;
+ and is nine leagues long before you come to the river, and six leagues
+ wide, so that from one shore you cannot see the other. On account of
+ certain bars it is somewhat dangerous for inexperienced navigators, but
+ not so for those who are acquainted with the channels. This bay and river
+ are compared by its admirers with the river Amazon, that is, by such of
+ them as have seen both; it is by everyone considered one of the most
+ beautiful, and the best and pleasantest rivers in the world of itself and
+ as regards its surroundings. Fourteen streams empty into this river, the
+ least of them navigable for two or three leagues; and on both sides there
+ are tolerably level lands of great extent. Two leagues from Cape
+ Cornelius, where you enter on the west side, lies a certain creek, which
+ might be taken for an ordinary river or stream, being navigable far up,
+ and affording a beautiful roadstead for ships of all burdens. There is no
+ other like it in the whole bay for safety and convenience. The main
+ channel for navigation runs close by it; this place we call the Hoere-kil.
+ From whence this name is derived we do not know;(2) it is certain that
+ this place was taken and colonized by Netherlanders, years before any
+ English or Swedes came there. The States' arms were also set up at this
+ place in copper, but as they were thrown down by some mischievous savages,
+ the commissary there very firmly insisted upon, and demanded, the head of
+ the offender. The Indians not knowing otherwise brought a head, saying it
+ was his; and the affair was supposed to be all settled, but some time
+ afterwards, when our people were working unsuspectingly in their fields,
+ the Indians came in the guise of friendship, and distributing themselves
+ among the Dutch in proportionate numbers, surprised and murdered them. By
+ this means the colony was again reduced to nothing; but it was
+ nevertheless sealed with blood and dearly enough bought.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Fort Nassau stood at the mouth of Timber Creek, opposite
+ the present site of Philadelphia.
+
+ (2) Harlot's creek, from the behavior of the Indian women.
+ The story below is that of the short-lived colony of
+ Swanendael, 1631-1632.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There is another kill on the east side called the Varckens Kil,(1) three
+ leagues up from the mouth of the river. Here some English had settled, but
+ Director Kieft protested against their proceedings, and drove them away,
+ assisted somewhat by the Swedes, who agreed with him to keep out the
+ English. The Swedish governor, considering an opportunity then offered to
+ him, caused a fort to be built at this place, called Elsenborch,(2) and
+ manifests there great boldness towards every one, even as respects the
+ Company's boats or all which go up the South River. They must strike the
+ flag before this fort, none excepted; and two men are sent on board to
+ ascertain from whence the yachts or ships come. It is not much better than
+ exercising the right of search. It will, to all appearance, come to this
+ in the end. What authority these people can have to do this, we know not;
+ nor can we comprehend how officers of other potentates, (at least as they
+ say they are, yet what commission they have we do not yet know,) can make
+ themselves master of, and assume authority over, lands and goods belonging
+ to and possessed by other people, and sealed with their blood, even
+ without considering the Charter. The Minquas-kil(3) is the first upon the
+ river, and there the Swedes have built Fort Christina. This place is well
+ situated, as large ships can lie close against the shore to load and
+ unload. There is, among others, a place on the river, (called Schuylkil, a
+ convenient and navigable stream,) heretofore possessed by the
+ Netherlanders, but how is it now? The Swedes have it almost entirely under
+ their dominion. Then there are in the river several beautiful large
+ islands, and other places which were formerly possessed by the
+ Netherlanders, and which still bear the names given by them. Various other
+ facts also constitute sufficient and abundant proof that the river belongs
+ to the Netherlanders, and not to the Swedes. Their very beginnings are
+ convincing, for eleven years ago, in the year 1638, one Minne-wits,(4) who
+ before that time had had the direction at the Manathans, on behalf of the
+ West India Company, arrived in the river with the ship Kalmer-Sleutel [Key
+ of Calmar], and the yacht Vogel-Gryp [Griffin], giving out to the
+ Netherlanders who lived up the river, under the Company and Heer vander
+ Nederhorst, that he was on a voyage to the West Indies, and that passing
+ by there, he wished to arrange some matters and to furnish the ship with
+ water and wood, and would then leave. Some time afterwards, some of our
+ people going again, found the Swedes still there but then they had already
+ made a small garden for raising salads, pot-herbs and the like. They
+ wondered at this, and inquired of the Swedes what is meant, and whether
+ they intended to stay there. They excused themselves by various reasons
+ and subterfuges, but some notwithstanding supposed that such was their
+ design. The third time it became apparent, from their building a fort,
+ what their intentions were. Director Kieft, when he obtained information
+ of the matter, protested against it, but in vain. It was plainly and
+ clearly to be seen, in the progress of the affair, that they did not
+ intend to leave. It is matter of evidence that above Maghchachansie,(5)
+ near the Sankikans, the arms of Their High Mightinesses were erected by
+ order of Director Kieft, as a symbol that the river, with all the country
+ and the lands around there, were held and owned under Their High
+ Mightinesses. But what fruits has it produced as yet, other than continued
+ derision and derogation of dignity? For the Swedes, with intolerable
+ insolence, have thrown down the arms, and since they are suffered to
+ remain so, this is looked upon by them, and particularly by their
+ governor, as a Roman achievement. True, we have made several protests, as
+ well against this as other transactions, but they have had as much effect
+ as the flying of a crow overhead; and it is believed that if this governor
+ had a supply of men, there would be more madness in him than there has
+ been in the English, or any of their governors. This much only in regard
+ to the Swedes, since the Company's officers will be able to make a more
+ pertinent explanation, as all the documents and papers remain with them;
+ to which, and to their journals we ourselves refer.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Hog Creek, now called Salem Creek, where New Haven men
+ settled in 1641 at or near the present site of Salem, New
+ Jersey.
+
+ (2) Fort Nya Elfsborg, 1643-1654, a little further down the
+ Delaware River.
+
+ (3) Christina Creek; the fort was in what is now Wilmington,
+ Delaware.
+
+ (4) Peter Minuit.
+
+ (5) Apparently within the present bounds of Philadelphia,
+ where Andries Hudde, acting under orders from Kieft,
+ purchased land and set up the arms of the States General in
+ September, 1646. The Sankikans occupied northern New
+ Jersey, with an important village at or near Trenton.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The English have sought at different times and places to incorporate this
+ river which they say is annexed to their territory, but this has as yet
+ been prevented by different protests. We have also expelled them by force,
+ well knowing that if they once settled there, we should lose the river or
+ hold it with much difficulty, as they would swarm there in great numbers.
+ There are rumors daily, and it is reported to us that the English will
+ soon repair there with many families. It is certain that if they do come
+ and nestle down there, they will soon possess it so completely, that
+ neither Hollanders nor Swedes, in a short time, will have much to say; at
+ least, we run a chance of losing the whole, or the greatest part of the
+ river, if very shortly remarkable precaution be not used. And this would
+ be the result of populating the country; but the Directors of the Company
+ to this day have had no regard to this worth the while, though the subject
+ has been sufficiently brought before them in several documents. They have
+ rather opposed and hindered this; for it has been with this matter as with
+ the rest, that avarice has blinded wisdom. The report now is that the
+ English intend to build a village and trading house there; and indeed if
+ they begin, there is nobody in this country who, on the Company's behalf,
+ can or apparently will, make much effort to prevent them. Not longer ago
+ than last year, several free persons,(1) some of whom were of our own
+ number and who had or could have good masters in Fatherland, wished to
+ establish a trading house and some farms and plantations, upon condition
+ that certain privileges and exemptions should be extended to them; but
+ this was refused by the General, saying, that he could not do it, not
+ having any order or authority from the noble Lords Directors; but if they
+ were willing to begin there without privileges, it could in some way be
+ done. And when we represented to His Honor that such were offered by our
+ neighbors all around us, if we would only declare ourselves willing to be
+ called members of their government, and that this place ran a thousand
+ dangers from the Swedes and English, His Honor answered that it was well
+ known to be as we said, (as he himself did, in fact, well know,) and that
+ reason was also in our favor, but that the orders which he had from the
+ Directors were such that he could not answer for it to them. Now we are
+ ignorant in these matters, but one thing or the other must be true, either
+ it is the fault of the Director or of the Managers,(2) or of both of them.
+ However it may be, one shifts the blame upon the other, and between them
+ both every thing goes to ruin. Foreigners enjoy the country and fare very
+ well; they laugh at us too if we say anything; they enjoy privileges and
+ exemptions, which, if our Netherlanders had enjoyed as they do, would
+ without doubt, next to the help of God, without which we are powerless,
+ have enabled our people to flourish as well or better than they do; ergo,
+ the Company or their officers have hitherto been and are still the cause
+ of its not faring better with the country. On account of their cupidity
+ and bad management there is not hope, so long as the land is under their
+ government, that it will go on any better; but it will grow worse.
+ However, the right time to treat this subject has not yet come.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Persons who came to New Netherland, not as colonists
+ under the patroons, or as employees of the West India
+ Company, but on their own account.
+
+ (2) I.e., of the governor (director-general) of New
+ Netherland or of the directors of the company.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of the Situation and Goodness of the Waters.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Having given an account of the situation of the country and its
+ boundaries, and having consequently spoken of the location of the rivers,
+ it will not be foreign to our purpose to add a word as to the goodness and
+ convenience of the waters; which are salt, brackish, or fresh, according
+ to their locality. There are in New Netherland four principal rivers; the
+ most southerly is usually called the South River, and the bay at its
+ entrance, Godyn's Bay. It is so called not because it runs to the south,
+ but because it is the most southerly river in New Netherland. Another
+ which this lies south of or nearest to, and which is the most noted and
+ the best, as regards trade and population, is called Rio Montanjes, from
+ certain mountains, and Mauritius River, but generally, the North River,
+ because it reaches farthest north. The third is the East River, so called
+ because it runs east from the Manathans. This is regarded by many not as a
+ river but as a Bay, because it is extremely wide in some places and
+ connects at both ends with the sea. We however consider it a river and
+ such it is commonly reckoned. The fourth is called the Fresh River,
+ because the water is for the most part fresh, more so than the others.
+ Besides these rivers, there are many bays, havens and inlets, very
+ convenient and useful, some of which might well be classed among rivers.
+ There are numerous bodies of water inland, some large, others small,
+ besides navigable kills like rivers, and many creeks very advantageous for
+ the purpose of navigating through the country, as the map of New
+ Netherland will prove. There are also various waterfalls and rapid
+ streams, fit to erect mills of all kinds upon for the use of man, and
+ innumerable small rivulets over the whole country, like veins in the body;
+ but they are all fresh water, except some on the sea shore, (which are
+ salt and fresh or brackish), very good both for wild and domestic animals
+ to drink. The surplus waters are lost in the rivers or in the sea. Besides
+ all these there are fountains without number, and springs all through the
+ country, even at places where water would not be expected; as on cliffs
+ and rocks whence they issue like spring veins. Some of them are worthy of
+ being well guarded, not only Because they are all (except in the thickets)
+ very clear and pure, but because many have these properties, that in the
+ winter they smoke from heat, and in summer are so cool that the hands can
+ hardly be endured in them on account of the cold, not even in the hottest
+ of the summer; which circumstance makes them pleasant for the use of man
+ and beast, who can partake of them without danger; for if any one drink
+ thereof, it does him no harm although it be very warm weather. Thus much
+ of the proprietorship, location, goodness and fruitfulness of these
+ provinces, in which particulars, as far as our little experience extends,
+ it need yield to no province in Europe. As to what concerns trade, in
+ which Europe and especially Netherland is pre-eminent, it not only lies
+ very convenient and proper for it, but if there were inhabitants, it would
+ be found to have more commodities of and in itself to export to other
+ countries than it would have to import from them. These things considered,
+ it will be little labor for intelligent men to estimate and compute
+ exactly of what importance this naturally noble province is to the
+ Netherland nation, what service it could render it in future, and what a
+ retreat it would be for all the needy in the Netherlands, as well of high
+ and middle, as of low degree; for it is much easier for all men of
+ enterprise to obtain a livelihood here than in the Netherlands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot sufficiently thank the Fountain of all Goodness for His having
+ led us into such a fruitful and healthful land, which we, with our
+ numerous sins, still heaped up here daily, beyond measure, have not
+ deserved. We are also in the highest degree beholden to the Indians, who
+ not only have given up to us this good and fruitful country, and for a
+ trifle yielded us the ownership, but also enrich us with their good and
+ reciprocal trade, so that there is no one in New Netherland or who trades
+ to New Netherland without obligation to them. Great is our disgrace now,
+ and happy should we have been, had we acknowledged these benefits as we
+ ought, and had we striven to impart the Eternal Good to the Indians, as
+ much as was in our power, in return for what they divided with us. It is
+ to be feared that at the Last Day they will stand up against us for this
+ injury. Lord of Hosts! Forgive us for not having conducted therein more
+ according to our reason; give us also the means and so direct our hearts
+ that we in future may acquit ourselves a we ought for the salvation of our
+ own souls and of theirs, and for the magnifying of thy Holy Name, for the
+ sake of Christ. Amen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To speak with deference, it is proper to look beyond the trouble which
+ will be incurred in adjusting the boundaries and the first cost of
+ increasing the population of this country, and to consider that beginnings
+ are difficult and that sowing would be irksome if the sower were not
+ cheered with the hope of reaping. We trust and so assure ourselves that
+ the very great experience of Their High Mightinesses will dictate better
+ remedies than we are able to suggest. But it may be that Their High
+ Mightinesses and some other friends, before whom this may come, may think
+ strange that we speak as highly of this place as we do, and as we know to
+ be true, and yet complain of want and poverty, seek relief, assistance,
+ redress, lessening of charges, population and the like, and show that the
+ country is in a poor and ruinous condition; yea, so much so, as that
+ without special aid and assistance it will utterly fall off and pass under
+ foreign rule. It will therefore be necessary to point out the true reasons
+ and causes why New Netherland is in so bad a state, which we will do as
+ simply and truly as possible, according to the facts, as we have seen,
+ experienced, and heard them; and as this statement will encounter much
+ opposition and reproach from many persons who may take offence at it, we
+ humbly pray Their High Mightinesses and all well wishers, who may chance
+ to read this, that they do not let the truth yield to any falsehoods,
+ invented and embellished for the purpose, and that they receive no other
+ testimony against this relation than that of such impartial persons as
+ have not had, either directly or indirectly, any hand therein, profited by
+ the loss of New Netherland, or otherwise incurred any obligation to it.
+ With this remark we proceed to the reasons and sole cause of the evil
+ which we indeed have but too briefly and indistinctly stated in the
+ beginning of our petition to Their High Mightinesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ Of the Reasons and Causes why and how New Netherland is so Decayed.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As we shall speak of the reasons and causes which have brought New
+ Netherland into the ruinous condition in which it is now found to be, we
+ deem it necessary to state first the difficulties. We represent it as we
+ see and find it, in our daily experience. To describe it in one word, (and
+ none better presents itself,) it is <i>bad government,</i> with its
+ attendants and consequences, that is, to the best of our knowledge, the
+ true and only foundation stone of the decay and ruin of New Netherland.
+ This government from which so much abuse proceeds, is twofold, that is; in
+ the Fatherland by the Managers, and in this country. We shall first
+ briefly point out some orders and mistakes issuing from the Fatherland,
+ and afterwards proceed to show how abuses have grown up and obtained
+ strength here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Managers of the Company adopted a wrong course at first, and as we
+ think had more regard for their own interest than for the welfare of the
+ country, trusting rather to flattering than true counsels. This is proven
+ by the unnecessary expenses incurred from time to time, the heavy accounts
+ of New Netherland,(1) the registering of colonies&mdash;in which business
+ most of the Managers themselves engaged, and in reference to which they
+ have regulated the trade&mdash;and finally the not peopling the country.
+ It seems as if from the first, the Company have sought to stock this land
+ with their own employees, which was a great mistake, for when their time
+ was out they returned home, taking nothing with them, except a little in
+ their purses and a bad name for the country, in regard to its lack of
+ sustenance and in other respects. In the meantime there was no profit, but
+ on the contrary heavy monthly salaries, as the accounts of New Netherland
+ will show.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) In 1644 the Bureau of Accounts of the West India Company
+ reported that since 1626 the company had expended for New
+ Netherland 515,000 guilders, say $250,000. At the time of
+ the report the company was practically bankrupt.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Had the Honorable West India Company, in the beginning, sought population
+ instead of running to great expense for unnecessary things, which under
+ more favorable circumstances might have been suitable and very proper, the
+ account of New Netherland would not have been so large as it now is,
+ caused by building the ship New Netherland at an excessive outlay,(1) by
+ erecting three expensive mills, by brick-making, by tar-burning, by
+ ash-burning, by salt-making and the like operations, which through bad
+ management and calculation have all gone to nought, or come to little; but
+ which nevertheless have cost much. Had the same money been used in
+ bringing people and importing cattle, the country would now have been of
+ great value.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) A ship of eight hundred tons, built in the province in
+ 1631.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The land itself is much better and it is more conveniently situated than
+ that which the English possess, and if there were not constant seeking of
+ individual gain and private trade, there would be no danger that
+ misfortunes would press us as far as they do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the first Exemptions been truly observed, according to their
+ intention, and had they not been carried out with particular views,
+ certainly more friends of New Netherland would have exerted themselves to
+ take people there and make settlements. The other conditions which were
+ introduced have always discouraged individuals and kept them down, so that
+ those who were acquainted with the business, being informed, dared not
+ attempt it. It is very true that the Company have brought over some
+ persons, but they have not continued to do so, and it therefore has done
+ little good. It was not begun properly; for it was done as if it was not
+ intended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is impossible for us to rehearse and to state in detail wherein and how
+ often the Company have acted injuriously to this country. They have not
+ approved of our own country-men settling the land, as is shown in the case
+ of Jacob Walingen and his people at the Fresh River, and quite Recently in
+ the cases at the South River; while foreigners Were permitted to take land
+ there without other opposition than orders and protests. It could hardly
+ be otherwise, for the garrisons are not kept complete conformably to the
+ Exemptions, and thus the cause of New Netherland's bad condition lurks as
+ well in the Netherlands as here. Yea, the seeds of war, according to the
+ declaration of Director Kieft, were first sown by the Fatherland; for he
+ said he had Express orders to exact the contribution from the Indians;
+ Which would have been very well if the land had been peopled, But as it
+ was, it was premature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trade, without which, when it is legitimate, no country is prosperous, is
+ by their acts so decayed, that it amounts to nothing. It is more suited
+ for slaves than freemen, in consequence of the restrictions upon it and
+ the annoyances which accompany the exercise of the right of inspection. We
+ approve of inspection, however, so far as relates to contraband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This contraband trade has ruined the country, and contraband goods are now
+ sent to every part of it by orders given by the Managers to their
+ officers. These orders should be executed without partiality, which is not
+ always the case. The Recognition(1) runs high, and of inspection and
+ confiscation there is no lack; hence legitimate trade is entirely
+ diverted, except a little, which exists pro forma, as a cloak for carrying
+ on illicit trading. In the mean time the Christians are treated almost
+ like Indians, in the purchase of the necessaries with which they cannot
+ dispense. This causes great complaint, distress and poverty: as, for
+ example, the merchants sell those goods which are liable to little
+ depreciation at a hundred per cent. and more profit, when there is
+ particular demand or scarcity of them. And the traders who come with small
+ cargoes, and others engaged in the business, buy them up from the
+ merchants and sell them again to the common man, who cannot do without
+ them, oftentimes at a hundred per cent. advance, or higher and lower
+ according to the demand. Upon liquors, which are liable to much leakage,
+ they take more, and those who buy from them retail them in the same
+ manner, as we have described in regard to dry wares, and generally even
+ more cunningly, so that the goods are sold through first, second and
+ sometimes third hands, at one and two hundred per cent. advance. We are
+ not able to think of all the practices which are contrived for advancing
+ individual and private gain. Little attention is given to populating the
+ land. The people, moreover, have been driven away by harsh and
+ unreasonable proceedings, for which their Honors gave the orders; for the
+ Managers wrote to Director Kieft to prosecute when there was no offence,
+ and to consider a partial offence an entire one, and so forth. It has also
+ been seen how the letters of the Eight Men were treated, and what followed
+ thereupon;(2) besides there were many ruinous orders and instructions
+ which are not known to us. But leaving this at present, with now and then
+ a word, at a convenient point, let us proceed to examine how their
+ officers and Directors have conducted themselves from time to time, having
+ played with the managers as well as with the people, as a cat does with a
+ mouse. It would be possible to relate their management from the beginning,
+ but as most of us were not here then and therefore not eye-witnesses, and
+ as a long time has passed whereby it has partly escaped recollection, and
+ as in our view it was not so bad then as afterwards when the land was made
+ free and freemen began to increase, we will pass by the beginning and let
+ Mr. Lubbert van Dincklaghen, Vice Director of New Netherland, describe the
+ government of Director Wouter van Twiller of which he is known to have
+ information, and will only speak of the last two sad and dire confusions
+ (we would say governments if we could) under Director Kieft, who is now no
+ more, but the evil of it lives after him; and of that under Director
+ Stuyvesant which still stands, if indeed that may be called standing which
+ lies completely under foot.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Export duty.
+
+ (2) Nevertheless, the remonstrance of the Eight Men, October
+ 28, 1644, <i>N.Y. Coll. Doc.</i>, I. 209, did cause the reform of
+ the system of provincial government and the recall of Kieft.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Directors here, though far from their masters, were close by their
+ profit. They have always known how to manage their own matters very
+ properly and with little loss, yet under pretext of the public business.
+ They have also conducted themselves just as if they were the sovereigns of
+ the country. As they desired to have it, so it always had to be; and as
+ they willed so was it done. "The Managers," they say, "are masters in
+ Fatherland, but we are masters in this land." As they understand it it
+ will go, there is no appeal. And it has not been difficult for them
+ hitherto to maintain this doctrine in practice; for the people were few
+ and for the most part very simple and uninformed, and besides, they needed
+ the Directors every day. And if perchance there were some intelligent men
+ among them, who could go upon their own feet, them it was sought to
+ oblige. They could not understand at first the arts of the Directors which
+ were always subtle and dark, so that these were frequently successful and
+ occasionally remained effective for a long time. Director Kieft said
+ himself, and let it be said also by others, that he was sovereign in this
+ country, or the same as the Prince in the Netherlands. This was repeated
+ to him several times here and he never made any particular objection to
+ it. The refusing to allow appeals, and other similar acts, prove clearly
+ that in our opinion no other proof is needed. The present Director does
+ the same, and in the denial of appeal, he is also at home. He likes to
+ assert the maxim "the Prince is above the law," and applies it so boldly
+ to his own person that it confutes itself. These directors, having then
+ the power in their hands, could do and have done what they chose according
+ to their good will and pleasure; and whatever was, was right, because it
+ was agreeable to them. It is well known that those who assume power, and
+ use it to command what they will, frequently command and will more than
+ they ought, and, whether it appear right or not, there are always some
+ persons who applaud such conduct, some out of a desire to help on and to
+ see mischief, others from fear; and so men still complain with Jan Vergas
+ de clementia ducis, of the clemency of the duke.(1) But in order that we
+ give nobody cause to suspect that we blow somewhat too hard, it will be
+ profitable to illustrate by examples the government of Mr. Director Kieft
+ at its close, and the administration of Mr. Director Stuyvesant just prior
+ to the time of our departure. We frankly admit, however, that we shall not
+ be able to speak fully of all the tricks, because they were conducted so
+ secretly and with such duplicity and craft. We will nevertheless expose
+ some of their proceedings according to our ability, and thus let the lion
+ be judged of from his paw.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Juan de Vargas, the chief member of the Duke of Alva's
+ "Council of Blood," who complained that the duke's methods
+ were too lenient.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Casting our eyes upon the government of Director Kieft, the church first
+ meets us, and we will therefore speak of the public property
+ ecclesiastical and civil. But as this man is now dead, and some of his
+ management and doings are freely represented by one Jochem Pietersz Cuyter
+ and Cornelis Melyn,(1) we will dispose of this point as briefly as we
+ possibly can.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Stuyvesant, soon after his arrival, at the instance of
+ Kieft, condemned Kieft's chief opponents, Kuyter and Melyn,
+ for lese-majesty, and banished them, forbidding them to
+ appeal. On reaching Holland, however, after their dramatic
+ escape from the shipwreck of the Princess, they appealed,
+ and secured a reversal of their condemnation.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Before the time that Director Kieft brought the unnecessary war upon the
+ country, his principal aim and endeavors were to provide well for himself
+ and to leave a great name after him, but without any expense to himself or
+ the Company, for this never did anything remarkable for the country by
+ which it was improved. Thus he considered the erection of a church a very
+ necessary public work, the more so as it was in contemplation to build one
+ at that time at Renselaers-Wyck. With this view he communicated with the
+ churchwardens&mdash;of which body he himself was one&mdash;and they
+ willingly agreed to and seconded the project. The place where it should
+ stand was then debated. The Director contended that it should be placed in
+ the fort, and there it was erected in spite of the others, and, indeed, as
+ suitably as a fifth wheel of a wagon; for besides that the fort is small
+ and lies upon a point of land which must be very valuable in case of an
+ increase of population, the church ought to be owned by the congregation
+ at whose cost it was built. It also intercepts and turns off the southeast
+ wind from the grist-mill which stands close by, for which reason there is
+ frequently in summer a want of bread from its inability to grind, though
+ not from this cause alone. The mill is neglected and, in consequence of
+ having had a leaky roof most of the time, has become considerably rotten,
+ so that it cannot now go with more than two arms, and it has been so for
+ nearly five years. But to return to the church&mdash;from which the
+ grist-mill has somewhat diverted us&mdash;the Director then resolved to
+ build a church, and at the place where it suited him; but he was in want
+ of money and was at a loss how to obtain it. It happened about this time
+ that the minister, Everardus Bogardus, gave his step-daughter in marriage;
+ and the occasion of the wedding the Director considered a good opportunity
+ for his purpose. So after the fourth or fifth round of drinking, he set
+ about the business, and he himself showing a liberal example let the
+ wedding-guests subscribe what they were willing to give towards the
+ church. All then with light heads subscribed largely, competing with one
+ another; and although some well repented it when they recovered their
+ senses, they were nevertheless compelled to pay&mdash;nothing could avail
+ to prevent it. The church was then, contrary to every one's wish, placed
+ in the fort. The honor and ownership of that work must be judged of from
+ the inscription, which is in our opinion ambiguous, thus reading: "1642.
+ Willem Kieft, Director General, has caused the congregation to build this
+ church."(1) But whatever be intended by the inscription, the people
+ nevertheless paid for the church.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The inscription was in existence till 1835. This third
+ church stood near what is now called the Bowling Green. The
+ inscription, though susceptible of misconstruction, is not
+ really ambiguous. Its proper interpretation is: "1642,
+ Willem Kieft being Director General, the congregation caused
+ this church to be built."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We must now speak of the property belonging to the church, and, to do the
+ truth no violence, we do not know that there has ever been any, or that
+ the church has any income except what is given to it. There has never been
+ any exertion made either by the Company or by the Director to obtain or
+ establish any.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bowl has been going round a long time for the purpose of erecting a
+ common school and it has been built with words, but as yet the first stone
+ is not laid. Some materials only are provided. The money nevertheless,
+ given for the purpose, has already found its way out and is mostly spent;
+ or may even fall short, and for this purpose also no fund invested in real
+ estate has ever been built up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor fund, though the largest, contains nothing except the alms
+ collected among the people, and some fines and donations of the
+ inhabitants. A considerable portion of this money is in the possession of
+ the Company, who have borrowed it from time to time, and kept it. They
+ have promised, for years, to pay interest. But in spite of all endeavor
+ neither principal nor interest can be obtained from them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Flying reports about asylums for orphans, for the sick and aged,(1) and
+ the like have occasionally been heard, but as yet we can not see that any
+ attempt, order or direction has been made in relation to them. From all
+ these facts, then, it sufficiently appears that scarcely any proper care
+ or diligence has been used by the Company or its officers for any
+ ecclesiastical property whatever&mdash;at least, nothing as far as is
+ known&mdash;from the beginning to this time; but on the contrary great
+ industry and exertion have been used to bind closely to them their
+ minions, or to gain new ones as we shall hereafter at the proper time
+ relate. And now let us proceed to the consideration of what public
+ measures of a civil character had been adopted up to the time of our
+ departure, in order to make manifest the diligence and care of the
+ Directors in this particular.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Seventeenth-century Dutch towns abounded in institutions
+ of this sort.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was not at first, under the government of Director Kieft, so much
+ opportunity as there has since been, because the recognition of the
+ peltries was then paid in the Fatherland, and the freemen gave nothing for
+ excise; but after that public calamity, the rash war, was brought upon us,
+ the recognition of the peltries began to be collected in this country, and
+ a beer-excise was sought to be established, about which a conference was
+ had with the Eight Men, who were then chosen from the people. They did not
+ approve of it as such, but desired to know under what regulations and upon
+ what footing it would take place, and how long it would continue. Director
+ Kieft promised that it should not continue longer than until a ship of the
+ Company should arrive with a new Director, or until the war should be at
+ an end. Although it was very much distrusted by all, and therefore was not
+ consented to, yet he introduced it by force. The brewers who would not
+ agree to it had their beer given over to the soldiers. So it was enforced,
+ but it caused great strife and discontent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From this time forward the Director began to divide the people and to
+ create factions. Those who were on his side could do nothing amiss,
+ however bad it might be; those who were opposed to him were always wrong
+ even if they did perfectly right, and the order to reckon half an offence
+ a whole one was then strictly enforced. The jealousy of the Director was
+ so great that he could no bear without suspicion that impartial persons
+ should visit his partisans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the war was, as the Director himself said, finished&mdash;though in
+ our opinion it will never be finished until the country is populated&mdash;every
+ one hoped that this impost would be removed, but Director Kieft put off
+ the removal until the arrival of a new Director, which was longed for very
+ much. When finally he did appear,(1) it was like the crowning of Rehoboam,
+ for, instead of abolishing the beer-excise, his first business was to
+ impose a wine-excise and other intolerable burdens, so that some of the
+ commonalty, as they had no spokesman, were themselves constrained to
+ remonstrate against it. Instead however of obtaining the relief which they
+ expected, they received abuse from the Director. Subsequently a written
+ answer was given them, which the Director had, as usual, drawn up at such
+ length and with such fulness that plain and simple people, such as are
+ here, must be confused, and unable to make anything out of it. Further
+ attempts have accordingly been made from time to time to introduce new
+ taxes and burdens. In fine it was so managed in Director Kieft's time,
+ that a large yearly sum was received from the recognition and other
+ sources, calculated to amount annually to 16,000 guilders,(2) besides the
+ recognition which was paid in the Fatherland and which had to be
+ contributed by the poor commonalty; for the goods were sold accordingly,
+ and the prices are now unbearably high. In Director Stuyvesant's
+ administration the revenue has reached a much higher sum, and it is
+ estimated that about 30,000 guilders(3) are now derived yearly from the
+ people by recognitions, confiscations, excise and other taxes, and yet it
+ is not enough; the more one has the more one wants. It would be tolerable
+ to give as much as possible, if it was used for the public weal. And
+ whereas in all the proclamations it is promised and declared that the
+ money shall be employed for laudable and necessary public works, let us
+ now look for a moment and see what laudable public works there are in this
+ country, and what fruits all the donations and contributions have hitherto
+ borne. But not to confuse matters, one must understand us not to refer to
+ goods and effects that belong to the Honorable Company as its own, for
+ what belongs to it particularly was never public. The Company's effects in
+ this country may, perhaps, with forts, cannon, ammunition, warehouses,
+ dwelling-houses, workshops, horses, cattle, boats, and whatever else there
+ may be, safely be said to amount to from 60,000 to 70,000 guilders,(4) and
+ it is very probable that the debts against it are considerably more. But
+ passing these by, let us turn our attention to the public property, and
+ see where the money from time to time has been used. According to the
+ proclamations during the administration of Director Kieft, if we rightly
+ consider, estimate and examine them all, we cannot learn or discover that
+ anything&mdash;we say anything large or small&mdash;worth relating, was
+ done, built or made, which concerned or belonged to the commonalty, the
+ church excepted, whereof we have heretofore spoken. Yea, he went on so
+ badly and negligently that nothing has ever been designed, understood or
+ done that gave appearance of design to content the people, even
+ externally, but on the contrary what came from the commonalty has even
+ been mixed up with the effects of the Company, and even the Company's
+ property and means have been everywhere neglected, in order to make
+ friends, to secure witnesses and to avoid accusers about the management of
+ the war. The negroes, also, who came from Tamandare(5) were sold for pork
+ and peas, from the proceeds of which something wonderful was to be
+ performed, but they just dripped through the fingers. There are also
+ various other negroes in this country, some of whom have been made free
+ for their long service, but their children have remained slaves, though it
+ is contrary to the laws of every people that any one born of a free
+ Christian mother should be a slave and be compelled to remain in
+ servitude. It is impossible to relate everything that has happened.
+ Whoever did not give his assent and approval was watched and, when
+ occasion served, was punished for it. We submit to all intelligent persons
+ to consider what fruit this has borne, and what a way this was to obtain
+ good testimony. Men are by nature covetous, especially those who are
+ needy, and of this we will hereafter adduce some few proofs, when we come
+ to speak of Director Kieft's government particularly. But we shall now
+ proceed to the administration of Director Stuyvesant, and to see how
+ affairs have been conducted up to the time of our departure.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Stuyvesant arrived from Holland by way of the West
+ Indies in May, 1647.
+
+ (2) Equivalent to $6,400.
+
+ (3) $12,000. (4) From $24,000 to $28,000.
+
+ (5) A bay on the coast of Brazil, where the Dutch admiral
+ Lichthart defeated the Portugese in a naval engagement, in
+ September, 1645.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Stuyvesant has almost all the time from his first arrival up to our
+ leaving been busy building, laying masonry, making, breaking, repairing
+ and the like, but generally in matters of the Company and with little
+ profit to it; for upon some things more was spent than they were worth;
+ and though at the first he put in order the church which came into his
+ hands very much out of repair, and shortly afterwards made a wooden wharf,
+ both acts very serviceable and opportune, yet after this time we do not
+ know that anything has been done or made that is entitled to the name of a
+ public work, though there has been income enough, as is to be seen in the
+ statement of the yearly revenue. They have all the time been trying for
+ more, like dropsical people. Thus in a short time very great discontent
+ has sprung up on all sides, not only among the burghers, who had little to
+ say, but also among the Company's officers themselves, so that various
+ protests were made by them on account of the expense and waste consequent
+ upon unnecessary councillors, officers, servants and the like who are not
+ known by the Managers, and also on account of the monies and means which
+ were given in common, being privately appropriated and used. But it was
+ all in vain, there was very little or no amendment; and the greater the
+ endeavors to help, restore and raise up everything, the worse has it been;
+ for pride has ruled when justice dictated otherwise, just as if it were
+ disgraceful to follow advice, and as if everything should come from one
+ head. The fruits of this conduct can speak and bear testimony of
+ themselves. It has been so now so long, that every day serves the more to
+ condemn it. Previously to the 23rd of July 1649, nothing had been done
+ concerning weights and measures or the like; but at that time they
+ notified the people that in August then next ensuing the matter would be
+ regulated. The fiscaal would then attend to it, which was as much as to
+ say, would give the pigeons to drink. There is frequently much discontent
+ and discord among the people on account of weights and measures, and as
+ they are never inspected, they cannot be right. It is also believed that
+ some of easy consciences have two sets of them, but we cannot affirm the
+ fact. As to the corn measure, the Company itself has always been
+ suspected, but who dare lisp it? The payment in zeewant, which is the
+ currency here, has never been placed upon a good footing, although the
+ commonalty requested it, and showed how it should be regulated, assigning
+ numerous reasons therefor. But there is always misunderstanding and
+ discontent, and if anything is said before the Director of these matters
+ more than pleases him, very wicked and spiteful words are returned. Those
+ moreover whose office requires them to speak to him of such things are, if
+ he is in no good fit, very freely berated as clowns, bear-skinners, and
+ the like.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fort under which we are to shelter ourselves, and from which as it
+ seems all authority proceeds, lies like a molehill or a tottering wall, on
+ which there is not one gun-carriage or one piece of cannon in a suitable
+ frame or on a good platform. From the first it has been declared that it
+ should be repaired, laid in five angles, and put in royal condition. The
+ commonalty's men have been addressed for money for the purpose, but they
+ excused themselves on the ground that the people were poor. Every one,
+ too, was discontented and feared that if the Director once had his fort to
+ rely upon, he would be more cruel and severe. Between the two, nothing is
+ done. He will doubtless know how to lay the blame with much circumstance
+ upon the commonalty who are innocent, although the Director wished to have
+ the money from them, and for that purpose pretended to have an order from
+ Their High Mightinesses. Had the Director laid out for that purpose the
+ fourth part of the money which was collected from the commonalty during
+ his time, it certainly would not have fallen short, as the wine-excise was
+ expressly laid for that object. But it was sought in a thousand ways to
+ shear the sheep though the wool was not yet grown. In regard, then, to
+ public works, there is little difference between Director Kieft and
+ Director Stuyvesant, for after the church was built the former was
+ negligent, and took personal action against those who looked him in the
+ eye. The latter has had much more opportunity to keep public works in
+ repair than his predecessor had, for he has had no war on his hands. He
+ has also been far more diligent and bitter in looking up causes of
+ prosecution against his innocent opponents than his predecessor ever was.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Administration of Director Kieft in Particular.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Sufficient has been said of what Director Kieft did in regard to the
+ church and its affairs, and in regard to the state, such as buildings and
+ taxes or revenue. It remains for us to proceed to the council-house and
+ produce thence some examples, as we promised. We will, in doing so,
+ endeavor to be brief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Council then consisted of Director Kieft and Monsieur la Montagne. The
+ Director had two votes, and Monsieur la Montagne one; and it was a high
+ crime to appeal from their judgments. Cornelis vander Hoykens sat with
+ them as fiscaal,(1) and Cornelis van Tienhoven as secretary,(2) and
+ whenever any thing extraordinary occurred, the Director allowed some, whom
+ it pleased him&mdash;officers of the company for the most part&mdash;to be
+ summoned in addition, but that seldom happened. Nevertheless it gave
+ discontent. The Twelve Men, and afterwards the Eight,(3) had in court
+ matters neither vote nor advice; but were chosen in view of the war and
+ some other occurrences, to serve as cloaks and cats-paws. Otherwise they
+ received no consideration and were little respected if they opposed at all
+ the views of the Director, who himself imagined, or certainly wished to
+ make others believe, that he was sovereign, and that it was absolutely in
+ his power to do or refuse to do anything. He little regarded the safety of
+ the people as the supreme law, as clearly appeared in the war, although
+ when the spit was turned in the ashes, it was sought by cunning and
+ numerous certificates and petitions to shift the blame upon others. But
+ that happened so because the war was carried too far, and because every
+ one laid the damage and the blood which was shed to his account. La
+ Montagne said that he had protested against it, but that it was begun
+ against his will and to his great regret, and that afterwards, when it was
+ entered upon, he had helped to excuse it to the best of his ability. The
+ secretary, Cornelius van Tienhoven, also said that he had no hand in the
+ matter, and nothing had been done by him in regard to it except by the
+ express orders of the Director. But this was not believed, for there are
+ those who have heard La Montagne say that if the secretary had not brought
+ false reports the affair would never have happened.(4) There are others
+ also who know this, and every one believes it to be so; and indeed it has
+ plausability. Fiscal van der Hoytgens was not trusted on account of his
+ drinking, wherein all his science consists. He had also no experience
+ here, and in the beginning frequently denounced the war as being against
+ his will. So that the blame rests, and must rest only upon the Director
+ and Secretary Tienhoven. The Director was entrusted with the highest
+ authority, and if any body advised him to the land's ruin, he was not
+ bound to follow the advice and afterwards endeavor to shift the burden
+ from his own neck upon the people, who however excuse themselves although
+ in our judgment they are not all entirely innocent. The cause of this war
+ we conceive to have been the exacting of the contribution, (for which the
+ Director said he had the order of the Managers,)(5) and his own
+ ungovernable passions, which showed themselves principally in private. But
+ there are friends whom this business intimately concerns, and as they have
+ already undertaken it, we will leave the matter with them and proceed to
+ cite one or two instances disclosing the aspiration after sovereignty.
+ Passing by many cases for the sake of brevity, we have that of one Francis
+ Doughty, an English minister, and of Arnoldus van Herdenberch, a free
+ merchant. But as both these cases appear likely to come before Their High
+ Mightinesses at full length, we will merely give a summary of them. This
+ minister, Francis Doughty, during the first troubles in England, in order
+ to escape them, came to New England.(6) But he found that he might, in
+ conformity with the Dutch reformation, have freedom of conscience, which,
+ contrary to his expectation, he missed in New England, he betook himself
+ to the protection of the Dutch. An absolute ground-brief(7) with the
+ privileges allowed to a colony was granted to him by the Director. He had
+ strengthened his settlement in the course of one year by the addition of
+ several families, but the war coming on, they were driven from their lands
+ with the loss of some men and many cattle, besides almost all their houses
+ and what other property they had. They afterwards returned and remained a
+ while, but consuming more than they were able to raise, they came to the
+ Manathans where all the fugitives sojourned at that time, and there Master
+ Doughty officiated as a minister. After the flame of war was out and the
+ peace was concluded&mdash;but in such a manner that no one much relied
+ upon it&mdash;some of the people again returned to their lands. The
+ Director would have been glad, in order that all things should be
+ completely restored, if it had pleased this man likewise to go back upon
+ his land; but inasmuch as the peace was doubtful, and he had not wherewith
+ to begin, Master Doughty was in no haste. He went however, some time
+ afterwards, and dwelt there half a year, but again left it. As peace was
+ made, and in hope that some others would make a village there, a suit was
+ brought against the minister, and carried on so far that his land was
+ confiscated. Master Doughty, feeling himself aggrieved, appealed from the
+ sentence. The Director answered, his sentence could not be appealed from,
+ but must prevail absolutely; and caused the minister for that remark to be
+ imprisoned twenty-four hours and then to pay 25 guilders. We have always
+ considered this an act of tyranny and regarded It as a token of
+ sovereignty. The matter of Arnoldus van Herdenberch was very like it in
+ its termination. After Zeger Theunisz was murdered by the Indians in the
+ Beregat,(8) and the yacht had returned to the Manathans, Arnoldus van
+ Hardenbergh was with two others appointed by the Director and Council
+ curators over the estate, and the yacht was searched. Some goods were
+ found in it which were not entered, whereupon the fiscaal went to law with
+ the curators, and claimed that the goods were confiscable to the Company.
+ The curators resisted and gave Herdenberch charge of the matter. After
+ some proceedings the goods were condemned. As he found himself now
+ aggrieved in behalf of the common owners, he appealed to such judges as
+ they should choose for the purpose. The same game was then played over
+ again. It was a high crime. The fiscaal made great pretensions and a
+ sentence was passed, whereof the contents read thus: "Having seen the
+ written complaint of the Fiscaal vander Hoytgens against Arnoldus van
+ Hardenberch in relation to appealing from our sentence dated the 28th
+ April last past, as appears by the signature of the before-named Sr. A.
+ van Hardenberch, from which sentence no appeal can be had, as is proven to
+ him by the States General and His Highness of Orange: Therefore the
+ Director General and Council of New Netherland, regarding the dangerous
+ consequences tending to injure the supreme authority of this land's
+ magistracy, condemn the before-named Arnold van Herdenberch to pay
+ forthwith a fine of 25 guilders, or to be imprisoned until the penalty be
+ paid; as an example to others." Now, if one know the lion from his paw, he
+ can see that these people do not spare the name of Their High
+ Mightinesses, His Highness of Orange, the honor of the magistrates, nor
+ the words, "dangerous consequences," "an example to others," and other
+ such words, to play their own parts therewith. We have therefore placed
+ this act by the side of that which was committed against the minister
+ Doughty. Many more similar cases would be found in the record, if other
+ things were always rightly inserted in it, which is very doubtful, the
+ contrary sometimes being observed. It appears then sufficiently that
+ everything has gone on rather strangely. And with this we will leave the
+ subject and pass on to the government of Director Stuyvesant, with a
+ single word, however, touching the sinister proviso incorporated in the
+ ground-briefs, as the consequences may thence be very well understood.
+ Absolute grants were made to the people by the ground-briefs, and when
+ they thought that everything was right, and that they were masters of
+ their own possessions, the ground-briefs were demanded from them again
+ upon pretence that there was something forgotten in them; but that was not
+ it. They thought they had incommoded themselves in giving them, and
+ therefore a proviso was added at the end of the ground-brief, and it was
+ signed anew; which proviso directly conflicts with the ground-brief, so
+ that in one and the same ground-brief is a contradiction without chance of
+ agreement, for it reads thus in the old briefs: "and take in possession
+ the land and the valleys appertaining of old thereto," and the proviso
+ says, "no valley to be used before the Company," all which could well
+ enough be used, and the Company have a competency. In the ground-briefs is
+ contained also another provision, which is usually inserted and sticks in
+ the bosom of every one: to wit, that they must submit themselves to all
+ taxes which the council has made or shall make.(9) These impositions can
+ be continued in infinitum, and have already been enforced against several
+ inhabitants. Others also are discouraged from undertaking anything on such
+ terms.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Cornelis van der Huygens was schout-fiscaal (sheriff and
+ public prosecutor) of New Netherland from 1639 to 1645. He
+ was drowned in the wreck of the Princess in 1647, along with
+ Kieft.
+
+ (2) Cornelis van Tienhoven was a figure of much importance
+ in New Netherland history. An Utrecht man, he came out as
+ book-Keeper in 1633, and served in that capacity under Van
+ Twiller. In 1638, at the beginning of Kieft's
+ administration, he was made provincial secretary, and
+ continued in that office under Stuyvesant, supporting with
+ much shrewdness and industry the measures of the
+ administration. His endeavors to counteract this
+ <i>Representation</i> of the commonalty of New Netherland are
+ described in the introduction, and are exhibited in the
+ piece which follows.
+
+ (3) The Twelve Men were representatives chosen at the
+ request of Kieft, to advise respecting war against the
+ Weckquasgeeks, by an assembly of heads of families convened
+ in August, 1641. They counselled delay, but finally, in
+ January, 1642, consented to war. When they proceeded to
+ demand reforms, especially popular representation in the
+ Council, Kieft dissolved them. After the Indian outbreak of
+ August, 1643, the Eight Men were elected, also at the
+ instance of Kieft, and did their part in the management of
+ the ensuing warfare; but they also, in the autumns of 1643
+ and 1644, protested to the West India Company and the States
+ General against Kieft's misgovernment, and demanded his
+ recall.
+
+ (4) This is intended to connect Kieft's massacre of the
+ refugee Tappaans at Pavonia, February 25-26, 1643, with a
+ previous reconnaissance of their position by Van Tienhoven.
+
+ (5) Demand of tribute which Kieft made of the river Indians
+ in 1639 and 1640.
+
+ (6) Reverend Francis Doughty, Adriaen van der Donck's
+ father-in-law, came to Massachusetts in 1637, but was forced
+ to depart on account of heresies respecting baptism. He is
+ reputed one of the first, if not the first, Presbyterian
+ ministers in America. Further details regarding him, from
+ an unfriendly pen, may be seen in Van Tienhoven's reply,
+ post. The conditions on which he and his associates settled
+ at Mespath (Newtown) may be seen in <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, XIII.
+ 8; the Patent, in O'Callaghan's <i>History of New Netherland</i>,
+ I. 425.
+
+ (7) Conveyance.
+
+ (8) Shrewsbury Inlet.
+
+ (9) Mr. Murphy cites the clause, from a ground-brief or
+ patent issued in 1639. After describing the land conveyed,
+ it is declared to be "upon the express condition and
+ stipulation that the said A.B. and his assigns shall
+ acknowledge the Nobel Lords Managers aforesaid as their
+ masters and patroons under the sovereignty of the High and
+ Mighty Lord States General, and shall be obedient to the
+ Director and Council here, as all good citizens are bound to
+ be, submitting themselves to all such taxes and imposts as
+ have been or may be, hereafter, imposed by the Noble Lords."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ The Administration of Director Stuyvesant in Particular
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We wish much we were already through with this administration, for it has
+ grieved us, and we know ourselves powerless; nevertheless we will begin,
+ and as we have already spoken of the public property, ecclesiastical and
+ civil, we will consider how it is in regard to the administration of
+ justice, and giving decisions between man and man. And first, to point as
+ with a finger at the manners of the Director and Council. As regards the
+ Director, from his first arrival to this time, his manner in court has
+ been to treat with violence, dispute with or harass one of the two
+ parties, not as becomes a judge, but as a zealous advocate, which has
+ given great discontent to every one, and with some it has gone so far and
+ has effected so much, that many of them dare bring no matter before the
+ court, if they do not stand well or tolerably so with the Director. For
+ whoever has him opposed, has as much as the sun and moon against him.
+ Though he has himself appointed many of the councillors, and placed hem
+ under obligation to him, and some pretend that he can overpower the rest
+ by plurality of votes, he frequently puts his opinion in writing, and that
+ so fully that it covers several pages, and then he adds verbally,
+ "Monsieur, this is my advice, if any one has aught to say against it, let
+ him speak." If then any one rises to make objection, which is not easily
+ done, though it be well grounded, His Honor bursts out immediately in fury
+ and makes such gestures, that it is frightful; yea, he rails out
+ frequently at the Councillors for this thing and the other, with ugly
+ words which would better suit the fish-market than the council chamber;
+ and if this be all endured, His Honor will not rest yet unless he has his
+ will. To demonstrate this by examples and proof, though easily done, would
+ nevertheless detain us too long; but we all say and affirm that this has
+ been his common practice from the first and still daily continues. And
+ this is the condition and nature of things in the council on the part of
+ the Director, who is its head and president. Let us now briefly speak of
+ the councillors individually. The Vice Director, Lubbert van
+ Dincklagen,(1) has for a long time on various occasions shown great
+ dissatisfaction about many different matters, and has protested against
+ the Director and his appointed councillors, but only lately, and after
+ some others made resistance. He was, before this, so influenced by fear,
+ that he durst venture to take no chances against the Director, but had to
+ let many things pass by and to submit to them. He declared afterwards that
+ he had great objections to them, because they were not just, but he saw no
+ other way to have peace, as the Director said even in the council, that he
+ would treat him worse than Wouter van Twiller had ever done, if he were
+ not willing to conform to his wishes. This man then is overruled. Let us
+ proceed farther. Monsieur la Montagne had been in the council in Kieft's
+ time, and was then very much suspected by many. He had no commission from
+ the Fatherland, was driven by the war from his farm, is also very much
+ indebted to the Company, and therefore is compelled to dissemble. But it
+ is sufficiently known from himself that he is not pleased, and is opposed
+ to the administration. Brian Newton,(2) lieutenant of the soldiers, is the
+ next. This man is afraid of the Director, and regards him as his
+ benefactor. Besides being very simple and inexperienced in law, he does
+ not understand our Dutch language, so that he is scarcely capable of
+ refuting the long written opinions, but must and will say yes. Sometimes
+ the commissary, Adrian Keyser, is admitted into the council, who came here
+ as secretary. This man has not forgotten much law, but says that he lets
+ God's water run over God's field. He cannot and dares not say anything,
+ for so much can be said against him that it is best that he should be
+ silent. The captains of the ships, when they are ashore, have a vote in
+ the Council; as Ielmer Thomassen, and Paulus Lenaertson,(3) who was made
+ equipment-master upon his first arrival, and who has always had a seat in
+ the council, but is still a free man. What knowledge these people, who all
+ their lives sail on the sea, and are brought up to ship-work, have of law
+ matters and of farmers' disputes any intelligent man can imagine. Besides,
+ the Director himself considers them so guilty that they dare not accuse
+ others, as will appear from this passage at Curacao, before the Director
+ ever saw New Netherland. As they were discoursing about the price of
+ carracks, the Director said to the minister and others, "Domine
+ Johannes,(4) I thought that I had brought honest ship-masters with me, but
+ I find that I have brought a set of thieves"; and this was repeated to
+ these councillors, especially to the equipment-master, for Captain Ielmer
+ was most of the time at sea. They have let it pass unnoticed&mdash;a proof
+ that they were guilty. But they have not fared badly; for though Paulus
+ Lenaertssen has small wages, he has built a better dwelling-house here
+ than anybody else. How this has happened is mysterious to us; for though
+ the Director has knowledge of these matters, he nevertheless keeps quiet
+ when Paulus Lenaertssen begins to make objections, which he does not
+ easily do for any one else, which causes suspicion in the minds of many.
+ There remains to complete this court-bench, the secretary and the fiscaal,
+ Hendrick van Dyck,(5) who had previously been an ensign-bearer. Director
+ Stuyvesant has kept him twenty-nine months out of the meetings of the
+ council, for the reason among others which His Honor assigned, that he
+ cannot keep secret but will make public, what is there resolved. He also
+ frequently declared that he was a villain, a scoundrel, a thief and the
+ like. All this is well known to the fiscaal, who dares not against him
+ take the right course, and in our judgment it is not advisable for him to
+ do so; for the Director is utterly insufferable in word and deed. What
+ shall we say of a man whose head is troubled, and has a screw loose,
+ especially when, as often happens, he has been drinking. To conclude,
+ there is the secretary, Cornelius van Tienhoven. Of this man very much
+ could be said, and more than we are able, but we shall select here and
+ there a little for the sake of brevity. He is cautious, subtle,
+ intelligent and sharp-witted&mdash;good gifts when they are well used. He
+ is one of those who have been longest in the country, and every
+ circumstance is well known to him, in regard both to the Christians and
+ the Indians. With the Indians, moreover, he has run about the same as an
+ Indian, with a little covering and a small patch in front, from lust after
+ the prostitutes to whom he has always been mightily inclined, and with
+ whom he has had so much to do that no punishment or threats of the
+ Director can drive him from them. He is extremely expert in dissimulation.
+ He pretends himself that he bites when asleep, and that he shows
+ externally the most friendship towards those whom he most hates. He gives
+ every one who has any business with him&mdash;which scarcely any one can
+ avoid&mdash;good answers and promises of assistance, yet rarely helps
+ anybody but his friends; but twists continually and shuffles from one side
+ to the other. In his words and conduct he is shrewd, false, deceitful and
+ given to lying, promising every one, and when it comes to perform, at home
+ to no one. The origin of the war was ascribed principally to him, together
+ with some of his friends. In consequence of his false reports and lies the
+ Director was led into it, as is believed and declared both by the honest
+ Indians and Christians. Now, if the voice of the people, according to the
+ maxim, be the voice of God, one can with truth say scarcely anything good
+ of this man or omit anything bad. The whole country, save the Director and
+ his party, cries out against him bitterly, as a villain, murderer and
+ traitor, and that he must leave the country or there will be no peace with
+ the Indians. Director Stuyvesant was, at first and afterwards, well
+ admonished of this; but he has nevertheless kept him in office, and
+ allowed him to do so much, that all things go according to his wishes,
+ more than if he were President. Yea, he also says that he is well
+ contented to have him in his service, but that stone does not yet rest. We
+ firmly believe that he misleads him in many things, so that he does many
+ bad things which he otherwise would not do; in a word, that he is an
+ indirect cause of his ruin and dislike in the country. But it seems that
+ the Director can or will not see it; for when it was represented to him by
+ some persons he gave it no consideration. It has been contrived to
+ disguise and manage matters so, that in the Fatherland, where the truth
+ can be freely spoken, nobody would be able to molest him in order to
+ discover the truth. We do not attempt it. Having established the powers of
+ the Council, it is easy to understand that the right people clung by each
+ other, in order to maintain the imaginary sovereignty and to give a gloss
+ to the whole business. Nine men were chosen to represent the whole
+ commonalty, and commissions and instructions were given that whatever
+ these men should do, should be the act of the whole commonalty.(6) And so
+ in fact it was, as long as it corresponded with the wishes and views of
+ the Director. In such cases they represented the whole commonalty; but
+ when it did not so correspond, they were then clowns, usurers, rebels and
+ the like. But to understand this properly it will be best briefly to state
+ all things chronologically, as they have happened during his
+ administration, and in what manner those who have sought the good of the
+ country have been treated with injustice.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Lubbertus van Dincklagen, doctor of laws, was sent out
+ as schout-fiscaal of New Netherland in 1634, quarrelled with
+ Van Twiller, and was sent back by him in 1636. In 1644 he
+ was Provisionally appointed as Kieft's successor, but
+ Stuyvesant was finally made Director, and Van Dincklagen
+ went out with him as vice-director and second member of the
+ Council. He opposed some of Stuyvesant's arbitrary acts,
+ supplied the three bearers of this <i>Representation</i> with
+ letters of credence to the States General, was expelled from
+ the Council by Stuyvesant in 1651, and died in 1657 or 1658.
+
+ (2) An Englishman who had served under the company several
+ years at Curacao.
+
+ (3) Ielmer (said to =Ethelmar) Tomassen was skipper of the
+ Great Gerrit in 1647, when Stuyvesant made him company's
+ storekeeper and second in military command; in 1649 and
+ 1650, of the Falcon. Paulus Leendertsen van der Grift was
+ captain in the West India Company's service from at least
+ 1644. In 1647 Stuyvesant made him superintendent of naval
+ equipment. In the first municipal government of New
+ Amsterdam, 1653, he was made a schepen (magistrate and
+ councillor), later a burgomaster.
+
+ (4) Reverend Johannes Backerus, minister for the Company at
+ Curacao from 1642 to 1647, was transferred to Amsterdam when
+ Stuyvesant came out, in order to fill the vacancy left by
+ Reverend Everardus Bogardus, minister at Manhattan from 1633
+ to 1647, who, after long quarrelling with Kieft, had gone
+ home in the same ship with him, the ill-fated Princess.
+
+ (5) Ensign Hendrick van Dyck came out in 1640 as commander
+ of the militia; again with Stuyvesant in 1647 as schout-
+ fiscaal. In 1652 Stuyvesant removed him from that office.
+ His defence of his official career, a valuable document, may
+ be seen in <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, I. 491-513.
+
+ (6) See the introduction.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ His first arrival&mdash;for what passed on the voyage is not for us to
+ speak of&mdash;was like a peacock, with great state and pomp. The
+ declaration of His Honor, that he wished to stay here only three years,
+ with other haughty expressions, caused some to think that he would not be
+ a father. The appellation of Lord General,(1) and similar titles, were
+ never before known here. Almost every day he caused proclamations of
+ various import to be published, which were for the most part never
+ observed, and have long since been a dead letter, except the wine excise,
+ as that yielded a profit. The proceedings of the Eight Men, especially
+ against Jochem Pietersz Cuyffer and Cornelis Molyn, happened in the
+ beginning of his administration. The Director showed himself so one-sided
+ in them, that he gave reason to many to judge of his character, yet little
+ to his advantage. Every one clearly saw that Director Kieft had more
+ favor, aid and counsel in his suit than his adversary, and that the one
+ Director was the advocate of the other as the language of Director
+ Stuyvesant imported and signified when he said, "These churls may
+ hereafter endeavor to knock me down also, but I will manage it so now,
+ that they will have their bellies full for the future." How it was
+ managed, the result of the lawsuit can bear witness. They were compelled
+ to pay fines, and were cruelly banished. In order that nothing should be
+ wanting, Cornelis Molyn, when he asked for mercy, till it should be seen
+ how his matters would turn out in the Fatherland, was threatened in
+ language like this, as Molyn, who is still living, himself declares, "If I
+ knew, Molyn, that you would divulge our sentence, or bring it before Their
+ High Mightinesses, I would cause you to be hung immediately on the highest
+ tree in New-Netherland." Now this took place in private, and may be denied&mdash;and
+ ought not to be true, but what does it matter, it is so confirmed by
+ similar cases that it cannot be doubted. For, some time after their
+ departure, in the house of the minister, where the consistory(2) had been
+ sitting and had risen, it happened that one Arnoldus van Herdenbergh
+ related the proceedings relative to the estate of Zeger Teunisz, and how
+ he himself as curator had appealed from the sentence; whereupon the
+ Director, who had been sitting there with them as an elder, interrupted
+ him and replied, "It may during my administration be contemplated to
+ appeal, but if any one should do it, I will make him a foot shorter, and
+ send the pieces to Holland, and let him appeal in that way." Oh cruel
+ words! what more could even a sovereign do? And yet this is all firmly
+ established; for after Jochem Pieterz Cuyffer and Cornelis Molyn went to
+ the Fatherland to prosecute their appeal, and letters came back here from
+ them, and the report was that their appeal was granted, or would be
+ granted, the Director declared openly at various times and on many
+ occasions, as well before inhabitants as strangers, when speaking of
+ Jochem Pietersz Cuyter and Cornelis Molyn, "Even if they should come back
+ cleared and bring an order of the States, no matter what its contents,
+ unless their High Mightinesses summon me, I should immediately send them
+ back." His Honor has also always denied that any appeal was or could be
+ taken in this country, and declared that he was able to show this
+ conclusively. And as some were not willing to believe it, especially in
+ matters against the Company or their chief officers, a great deal which
+ had been sought out in every direction was cited, and really not much to
+ the purpose. At the first, while Director Kieft was still here, the
+ English minister,(3) as he had long continued to service without proper
+ support and as land was now confiscated, prayed that he might be permitted
+ to proceed to the Islands,(4) or to the Netherlands; but an unfavorable
+ answer was always given him, and he was threatened with this and that;
+ finally it resulted in permission to leave, provided he gave a promise
+ under his hand, that he would not in any place in which he should come,
+ speak or complain of what had befallen him here in New Netherland under
+ Director Kieft or Stuyvesant. This the man himself declares. Mr.
+ Dincklagen and Captain Loper,(5) who then had seats in the council, also
+ say that this is true. One wonders, if the Directors act rightly according
+ to their own consciences, what they wished to do with such certificates,
+ and others like them, which were secretly obtained. The Honorable Director
+ began also at the first to argue very stoutly against the contraband
+ trade, as was indeed very laudable, provided the object was to regulate
+ the matter and to keep the law enforced; yet this trade, forbidden to
+ others, he himself wished to carry on; but to this the people were not
+ willing to consent. His Honor said, and openly asserted, that he was
+ allowed, on behalf of the Company, to sell powder, lead and guns to the
+ Indians, but no one else could do so, and that he wished to carry their
+ resolution into execution. What the resolution of the Company amounts to,
+ is unknown to us,(6) but what relates to the act is notorious to every
+ inhabitant; as the Director has by his servants openly carried on the
+ trade with the Indians, and has taken guns from free men who had brought
+ with them one or two for their own use and amusement, paying for them
+ according to his own pleasure, and selling them to the Indians. But this
+ way of proceeding could amount to nothing, and made little progress.
+ Another plan was necessary, and therefore a merchant, Gerrit Vastrick,
+ received orders to bring with him one case of guns which is known of, for
+ the purpose, as it was said, of supplying the Indians sparingly. They set
+ about with this case of guns so openly, that there was not a man on the
+ Manathans but knew it; and it was work enough to quiet the people.
+ Everybody made his own comment; and, as it was observed that the ship was
+ not inspected as others had been before, it was presumed that there were
+ many more guns, besides powder and lead, in it for the Governor; but as
+ the first did not succeed, silence was therefore observed in regard to the
+ rest; and it might have passed unnoticed, had not every one perceived what
+ a great door for abuse and opportunity the Director so opened to all
+ others, and to the captain and merchant, who were celebrated for this of
+ old, and who were now said to have brought with them a great number of
+ guns, which was the more believed, because they went to the right place,
+ and on their return were dumb as to what they did. This begat so much
+ discontent among the common people, and even among other officers, that it
+ is not to be expressed; and had the people not been persuaded and held
+ back, something extraordinary would have happened. It was further declared
+ that the Director is everything, and does the business of the whole
+ country, having several shops himself; that he is a brewer and has
+ breweries, is a part owner of ships, a merchant and a trader, as well in
+ lawful as contraband articles. But he does not mind; he exhibits the
+ orders of the Managers that he might do so, and says moreover that he
+ should receive a supply of powder and lead by the Falconer for the
+ purpose. In a word, the same person who interdicts the trade to others
+ upon pain of death, carries it on both secretly and openly, and desires,
+ contrary to good rules, that his example be not followed, and if others do
+ follow it&mdash;which indeed too often happens secretly&mdash;that they be
+ taken to the gallows. This we have seen in the case of Jacob Reyntgen and
+ Jacob van Schermerhoren, against whom the penalty of death was asked,
+ which the Director was with great difficulty persuaded to withdraw, and
+ who were then banished as felons and their goods confiscated.(7) The
+ banishment was, by the intervention of many good men, afterwards revoked,
+ but their goods, which amounted to much (as they were Scotch
+ merchants(8)), remained confiscated. We cannot pass by relating here what
+ happened to one Joost Theunisz Backer, as he has complained to us of being
+ greatly maltreated, as he in fact was. For the man being a reputable
+ burgher, of good life and moderate means, was put in prison upon the
+ declaration of an officer of the Company, who, according to the General
+ and Council, had himself thrice well deserved the gallows, and for whom a
+ new one even had been made, from which, out of mercy, he escaped. Charges
+ were sought out on every side, and finally, when nothing could be
+ established against him having the semblance of crime, he was released
+ again, after thirteen days confinement, upon satisfactory bail for his
+ appearance in case the fiscaal should find anything against him. Nothing
+ has as yet been done about it. After the year and a day had passed by, we
+ have, as representatives of the commonalty, and upon his request, legally
+ solicited, as his sureties were troubling him, that the suit should be
+ tried, so that he might be punished according to his deserts if he were
+ guilty, and if not, that he might be discharged. But there was nothing
+ gained by our interposition, as we were answered with reproachful
+ language, and the fiscaal was permitted to rattle out anything that came
+ in his mouth, and the man was rendered odious beyond all precedent, and
+ abused before all as a foul monster. Asked he anything, even if it were
+ all right, he received angry and abusive language, his request was not
+ complied with, and justice was denied him. These things produce great
+ dissatisfaction, and lead some to meditate leaving the country. It
+ happened better with one Pieter vander Linden, as he was not imprisoned.
+ There are many others, for the most of them are disturbed and would speak
+ if they durst. Now the Company itself carries on the forbidden trade, the
+ people think that they too can do so without guilt, if they can do so
+ without damage; and this causes smuggling and frauds to an incredible
+ extent, though not so great this year as heretofore. The publishing of a
+ placard that those who were guilty, whether civilly or criminally, in New
+ England, might have passport and protection here, has very much embittered
+ the minds of the English, and has been considered by every one fraught
+ with bad consequences. Great distrust has also been created among the
+ inhabitants on account of Heer Stuyvesant being so ready to confiscate.
+ There scarcely comes a ship in or near here, which, if it do not belong to
+ friends, is not regarded as a prize by him. Though little comes of it,
+ great claims are made to come from these matters, about which we will not
+ dispute; but confiscating has come to such repute in New Netherland, that
+ nobody anywise conspicuous considers his property to be really safe. It
+ were well if the report of this thing were confined to this country; but
+ it has spread among the neighboring English&mdash;north and south&mdash;and
+ in the West Indies and Caribbee Islands. Everywhere there, the report is
+ so bad, that not a ship dare come hither from those places; and good
+ credible people who come from thence, by the way of Boston, and others
+ here trading at Boston, assure us that more than twenty-five ships would
+ come here from those islands every year if the owners were not fearful of
+ confiscation. It is true of these places only and the report of it flies
+ everywhere, and produces like fear, so that this vulture is destroying the
+ prosperity of New Netherland, diverting its trade, and making the people
+ discouraged, for other places not so well situated as this, have more
+ shipping. All the permanent inhabitants, the merchant, the burgher and
+ peasant, the planter, the laboring man, and also the man in service,
+ suffer great injury in consequence; for if the shipping were abundant,
+ everything would be sold cheaper, and necessaries be more easily obtained
+ than they are now, whether they be such as the people themselves, by God's
+ blessing, get out of the earth, or those they otherwise procure, and be
+ sold better and with more profit; and people and freedom would bring
+ trade. New England is a clear example that this policy succeeds well, and
+ so especially is Virginia. All the debts and claims which were left
+ uncollected by Director Kieft&mdash;due for the most part from poor and
+ indigent people who had nothing, and whose property was destroyed by the
+ war, by which they were compelled to abandon their houses, lands, cattle
+ and other means&mdash;were now demanded; and when the people declared that
+ they were not able to pay&mdash;that they had lost their property by the
+ war, and asked My Lord to please have patience, they were repulsed. A
+ resolution was adopted and actually put into execution, requiring those
+ who did not satisfy the Company's debts, to pay interest; but the debts in
+ question were made in and by the war, and the people are not able to pay
+ either principal or interest. Again, the just debts which Director Kieft
+ left behind, due from the Company, whether they consisted of monthly
+ wages, or were for grain delivered, or were otherwise lawfully contracted,
+ these the Director will not pay. If we oppose this as an unusual course,
+ we are rebuked and it has to be so. We have by petition and proper
+ remonstrance effected, however, so much, that the collection of the debts
+ is put off for a time.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Myn Heer Generael is hardly what would be meant in
+ English by "Lord General"; it is most like Fr. Monsieur le
+ General.
+
+ (2) The church session, in the Reformed Church, consisting
+ of minister, elders and deacons.
+
+ (3) Francis Doughty.
+
+ (4) The West Indies.
+
+ (5) Jacob Loper, a Swedish naval captain in the Dutch
+ service, who had married the eldest daughter of Cornelis
+ Molyn.
+
+ (6) Mr. Murphy quotes an apposite passage from a letter
+ which the company had written to Stuyvesant on April 7,
+ 1648: "As they [the Indians] urge it with such earnestness,
+ that they would rather renew the war with us than be without
+ these articles, and as a war with them, in our present
+ situation, would be very unwelcome, we think the best policy
+ is to furnish them with powder and ball but with a sparing
+ hand."
+
+ (7) These sentences were imposed in July, 1648.
+
+ (8) Peddlers.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides this, the country of the Company is so taxed, and is burdened and
+ kept down in such a manner, that the inhabitants are not able to appear
+ beside their neighbors of Virginia or New England, or to undertake any
+ enterprise. It seems&mdash;and so far as is known by us all the
+ inhabitants of New Netherland declare&mdash;that the Managers have scarce
+ any care or regard for New Netherland, except when there is something to
+ receive, for which reason, however, they receive less. The great extremity
+ of war in which we have been, clearly demonstrates that the Managers have
+ not cared whether New Netherland sank or swam; for when in that emergency
+ aid and assistance were sought from them&mdash;which they indeed were
+ bound by honor and by promises to grant, unsolicited, pursuant to the
+ Exemptions&mdash;they have never established any good order or regulation
+ concerning it, although (after all) such a thing had been decreed and
+ commanded by Their High Mightinesses. Neither have they ever allowed the
+ true causes and reasons of the war to be investigated, nor have they
+ attempted to punish those who had rashly begun it. Hence no little
+ suspicion that it was undertaken by their orders; at least it is certain
+ that their officers were chosen more from favor and friendship than merit,
+ which did not make their matters go on better. But this is the loss and
+ damage for the most part of the stockholders. Many of the others doubtless
+ knew well their objects. In a word, they come far short in affording that
+ protection which they owe the country, for there is nothing of the kind.
+ They understand how to impose taxes, for while they promised in the
+ Exemptions not to go above five per cent., they now take sixteen. It is a
+ common saying that a half difference is a great difference, but that is
+ nothing in comparison with this. The evasions and objections which are
+ used by them, as regards merchants' goods, smuggling and many other
+ things, and which the times have taught them, in order to give color to
+ their acts, are of no force or consideration. They however are not now to
+ be refuted, as it would take too long; though we stand ready to do so if
+ there be any necessity for it. These and innumerable other difficulties,
+ which we have not time to express, exist, tending to the damage, injury
+ and ruin of the country. If the inhabitants or we ourselves go to the
+ Director or other officers of the Company, and speak of the flourishing
+ condition of our neighbors, and complain of our own desolate and ruinous
+ state, we get no other answer from them than that they see and observe it,
+ but cannot remedy it, as they follow the Company's orders, which they are
+ compelled to do, and that if we have any thing to say, we must petition
+ their masters, the Managers, or Their High Mightinesses, which in truth we
+ have judged to be necessary. It is now more than a year since the
+ commons-men deemed it expedient, and proposed, to send a deputation to
+ Their High Mightinesses. The Director commended the project and not only
+ assented to it but urged it strongly. It was put well in the mill, so that
+ we had already spoken of a person to go, but it fell through for these
+ reasons: When it was proposed, the Director desired that we should consult
+ and act according to his wishes; which some who perceived the object would
+ not consent to, and the matter therefore fell asleep. Besides, the
+ English, who had been depended upon and who were associated in the affair,
+ withdrew till the necessity of action became greater, and the Nine Men
+ were changed the next year,(1) when Herr Stuyvesant again urged the matter
+ strongly, and declared that he had already written to the Company that
+ such persons would come. After the election of the Nine Men, and before
+ the new incumbents were sworn in, it was determined and resolved verbally,
+ that they would proceed with the deputation, whatever should be the
+ consequences; but it remained some time before the oath was renewed, on
+ account of some amplification of the commission being necessary, which was
+ finally given and recorded and signed; but we have never been able to
+ obtain an authentic copy of it, although the Director has frequently
+ promised and we have frequently applied for it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) December, 1648.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As the Company had now been waited upon a long while in vain, promising
+ amendment from time to time but going on worse, a determined resolution
+ was taken by the commons-men to send some person. They made their
+ intention known to the Director, and requested that they might confer with
+ the commonalty; but their proposition was not well received, and they
+ obtained in reply to their written petition a very long apostil, to the
+ effect, that consultation must be had with the Director, and his
+ instructions followed, with many other things which did not agree with out
+ object, and were impracticable, as we think. For various reasons which we
+ set down in writing, we thought it was not advisable to consult with him,
+ but we represented to his Honor that he should proceed; we would not send
+ anything to the Fatherland without his having a copy of it. If he could
+ then justify himself, we should be glad he should; but to be expected to
+ follow his directions in this matter was not, we thought, founded in
+ reason, but directly antagonistic to the welfare of the country. We had
+ also never promised or agreed to do so; and were bound by an oath to seek
+ the prosperity of the country, as, according to our best knowledge, we are
+ always inclined to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the above mentioned apostil it says, if we read rightly, that we should
+ inquire what approbation the commonalty were willing to give to this
+ business, and how the expense should be defrayed; but the Director
+ explained it differently from what we understood it. Now as his Honor was
+ not willing to convene the people however urgent our request, or that we
+ should do it, we went round from house to house and spoke to the
+ commonalty. The General has, from that time, burned with rage, and, if we
+ can judge, has never been effectually appeased since, although we did not
+ know but that we had followed his order herein. Nevertheless it was
+ perceived that the Nine Men would not communicate with him or follow his
+ directions in anything pertaining to the matter. This excited in him a
+ bitter and unconquerable hatred against them all, but principally against
+ those whom he supposed to be the chief authors of it; and although these
+ persons had been good and dear friends with him always, and he, shortly
+ before, had regarded them as the most honorable, able, intelligent and
+ pious men of the country, yet as soon as they did not follow the General's
+ wishes they were this and that, some of them rascals, liars, rebels,
+ usurers and spendthrifts, in a word, hanging was almost too good for them.
+ It had been previously strongly urged that the deputation should be
+ expedited, but then [he said] there was still six months time, and that
+ all that was proper and necessary could be put upon a sheet of paper. Many
+ reports also were spread among the people, and it was sought principally
+ by means of the English to prevent the college of the Nine Men from doing
+ anything; but as these intrigues were discovered, and it was therefore
+ manifest that this could not be effected, so in order to make a diversion,
+ many suits were brought against those who were considered the ringleaders.
+ They were accused and then prosecuted by the fiscaal and other suborned
+ officers, who made them out to be the greatest villains in the country,
+ where shortly before they had been known as the best people and dearest
+ children. At this time an opportunity presented itself, which the Director
+ was as glad to have, at least as he himself said, as his own life. At the
+ beginning of the year 1649, clearly perceiving that we would not only have
+ much to do about the deputation but would hardly be able to accomplish it,
+ we deemed it necessary to make regular memoranda for the purpose of
+ furnishing a journal from them at the proper time. This duty was committed
+ to one Adriaen vander Donck, who by a resolution adopted at the same time
+ was lodged in a chamber at the house of one Michael Jansz. The General on
+ a certain occasion when Vander Donck was out of the chamber, seized this
+ rough draft with his own hands, put Vander Donck the day after in jail,
+ called together the great Council, accused him of having committed crimen
+ laesae majestatis, and took up the matter so warmly, that there was no
+ help for it but either the remonstrance must be drawn up in concert with
+ him (and it was yet to be written,) or else the journal&mdash;as Mine Heer
+ styled the rough draft from which the journal was to be prepared&mdash;was
+ of itself sufficient excuse for action; for Mine Heer said there were
+ great calumnies in it against Their High Mightinesses, and when we wished
+ to explain it and asked for it, to correct the errors, (as the writer did
+ not wish to insist upon it and said he knew well that there were mistakes
+ in it, arising from haste and other similar causes, in consequence of his
+ having had much to do and not having read over again the most of it,) our
+ request was called a libel which was worthy of no answer, and the writer
+ of which it was intended to punish as an example to others. In fine we
+ could not make it right in any way. He forbade Vander Donck the council
+ and also our meetings, and gave us formal notice to that effect, and yet
+ would not release him from his oath. Then to avoid the proper mode of
+ proof, he issued a proclamation declaring that no testimony or other act
+ should be valid unless it were written by the secretary, who is of service
+ to nobody, but on the contrary causes every one to complain that nothing
+ can be done. Director Kieft had done the same thing when he was
+ apprehensive that an attestation would be executed against him. And so it
+ is their practice generally to do everything they can think of in order to
+ uphold their conduct. Those whose offices required them to concern
+ themselves with the affairs of the country, and did so, did well, if they
+ went according to the General's will and pleasure; if they did not, they
+ were prosecuted and thrown into prison, guarded by soldiers so that they
+ could not speak with any body, angrily abused as vile monsters, threatened
+ to be taught this and that, and everything done against them that he could
+ contrive or invent. We cannot enter into details, but refer to the record
+ kept of these things, and the documents which the Director himself is to
+ furnish. From the foregoing relation Their High Mightinesses, and others
+ interested who may see it, can well imagine what labor and burdens we have
+ had upon our shoulders from which we would very willingly have escaped,
+ but for love of the country and of truth, which, as far as we know, has
+ long lain buried. The trouble and difficulty which do or will affect us,
+ although wanting no addition, do not grieve us so much as the sorrowful
+ condition of New Netherland, now lying at its last gasp; but we hope and
+ trust that our afflictions and the sufferings of the inhabitants and
+ people of the country will awaken in Their High Mightinesses a compassion
+ which will be a cause of rejoicing to New Netherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ In what Manner New Netherland should be Redressed.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although we are well assured and know, in regard to the mode of redress of
+ the country, we are only children, and Their High Mightinesses are
+ entirely competent, we nevertheless pray that they overlook our
+ presumption and pardon us if we make some suggestions according to our
+ slight understanding thereof, in addition to what we have considered
+ necessary in our petition to Their High Mightinesses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our opinion this country will never flourish under the government of
+ the Honorable Company, but will pass away and come to an end of itself
+ without benefiting thereby the Honorable Company, so that it would be
+ better and more profitable for them, and better for the country, that they
+ should divest themselves of it and transfer their interests.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To speak specifically. Provision ought to be made for public buildings, as
+ well ecclesiastical as civil, which, in beginnings, can be ill dispensed
+ with. It is doubtful whether divine worship will not have to cease
+ altogether in consequence of the departure of the minister, and the
+ inability of the Company. There should be a public school, provided with
+ at least two good masters, so that first of all in so wild a country,
+ where there are many loose people, the youth be well taught and brought
+ up, not only in reading and writing, but also in the knowledge and fear of
+ the Lord. As it is now, the school is kept very irregularly, one and
+ another keeping it according to his pleasure and as long as he thinks
+ proper. There ought also to be an almshouse and an orphan asylum, and
+ other similar institutions. The minister who now goes home,(1) should be
+ able to give a much fuller explanation thereof. The country must also be
+ provided with godly, honorable and intelligent rulers who are not too
+ indigent, or indeed are not too covetous. A covetous chief makes poor
+ subjects. The manner the country is now governed falls severely upon it,
+ and is intolerable, for nobody is unmolested or secure in his property
+ longer than the Director pleases, who is generally strongly inclined to
+ confiscating; and although one does well, and gives the Heer what is due
+ to him, one must still study always to please him if he would have quiet.
+ A large population would be the consequence of a good government, as we
+ have shown according to our knowledge in our petition; and although to
+ give free passage and equip ships, if it be necessary, would be expensive
+ at first, yet if the result be considered, it would be an exceedingly wise
+ measure, if by that means farmers and laborers together with other needy
+ people were brought into the country, with the little property which they
+ have; as also the Fatherland has enough of such people to spare. We hope
+ it would then prosper, especially as good privileges and exemptions, which
+ we regard as the mother of population, would encourage the inhabitants to
+ carry on commerce and lawful trade. Every one would be allured hither by
+ the pleasantness, situation, salubrity and fruitfulness of the country, if
+ protection were secured within the already established boundaries. It
+ would all, with God's assistance, then, according to human judgment, go
+ well, and New Netherland would in a few years be a worthy place and be
+ able to do service to the Netherland nation, to repay richly the cost, and
+ to thank its benefactors.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Johannes Backerus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ High Mighty Lords! We have had the boldness to write this remonstrance,
+ and to represent matters as we have done from love of the truth, and
+ because we felt ourselves obliged to do so by our oath and conscience. It
+ is true that we have not all of us at one time or together seen, heard and
+ met with every detail of its entire contents. Nevertheless there is
+ nothing in it but what is well known by some of us to be true and certain;&mdash;the
+ most is known by all of us to be true. We hope Their High Mightinesses
+ will pardon our presumption and be charitable with our plainness of style,
+ composition and method. In conclusion we commit Their High Mightinesses,
+ their persons, deliberations and measures and their people, at home and
+ abroad, together with all the friends of New Netherland, to the merciful
+ guidance and protection of the Most High, whom we supplicate for Their
+ High Mightinesses' present and eternal welfare. Amen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Done this 28th of July in New Netherland, subscribed, "ADRIAEN VANDER
+ DONCK, AUGUSTIJN HERMANSZ, ARNOLDUS VAN HARDENBERGH, JACOB VAN
+ COUWENHOVEN, OLOFF STEVENSZ" (by whose name was written "Under protest&mdash;obliged
+ to sign about the government of the Heer Kieft"), "MICHIEL JANSZ, THOMAS
+ HAL, ELBERT ELBERTSZ, GOVERT LOKERMANS, HENDRICK HENDRICKSZ KIP and JAN
+ EVERTSBOUT." Below was written, "After collation with the original
+ remonstrance, dated and subscribed as above, with which these are found to
+ correspond, at the Hague, the 13th October, 1649, by me;" and was
+ subscribed,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "D. v. SCHELLUYNEN, Notary Public."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ ANSWER TO THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW NETHERLAND, 1650
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and sources.
+
+ Cornelius Van Tienhoven, Answer to The Representation of New
+ Netherland, 1650. In J. Franklin Jameson, ed., Narratives
+ of New Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original Narratives of Early
+ American History). NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR____">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The origin and value of the following document have been sufficiently
+ described in the introduction to that which precedes. Cornelis van
+ Tienhoven, secretary of the province under Kieft and Stuyvesant, had been
+ sent by the latter to Holland to counteract the efforts of the three
+ emissaries whom the commonalty had sent thither to denounce the existing
+ system of government. Working in close co-operation with the Amsterdam
+ Chamber of the West India Company, he played a skilful game, and succeeded
+ in delaying and in part averting hostile action on the part of the States
+ General. The piece which follows is his chief defensive recital of the
+ acts of the administration, and as such has much value.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Van Tienhoven had the reputation of a libertine, and conducted himself as
+ such while in Holland, finally escaping to New Netherland in 1651 with a
+ girl whom he had deceived, though he had a wife in the province. Yet
+ Stuyvesant retained him in his favor, promoted him in 1652 to be
+ schout-fiscaal of New Netherland, and used him as his chief assistant.
+ After a disastrous outbreak, however, understood to have been caused by
+ his advice, the Company ordered Stuyvesant to exclude him from office; and
+ presently Van Tienhoven and his brother, a fraudulent receiver-general,
+ absconded from the province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The manuscript of Van Tienhoven's <i>Answer</i> was found by Brodhead in
+ the archives of the Netherlands, and is still there. Two translations of
+ it, differing but slightly, have been printed, the first in 1849 by Henry
+ C. Murphy, in the <i>Collections of the New York Historical Society</i>,
+ second series, II. 329-338, the other in the <i>Documents relating to the
+ Colonial History of New York</i>, I. 422-432. The former, revised by
+ comparison with the original manuscript at the Hague by Professor William
+ I. Hull, of Swarthmore College, appears in the following pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ANSWER TO THE REPRESENTATION OF NEW NETHERLAND, BY CORNELIS VAN TIENHOVEN,
+ 1650
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A Brief Statement or Answer to some Points embraced in the Written
+ Deduction of Adrian van der Donk and his Associates, presented to the High
+ and Mighty Lords States General. Prepared by Cornelis van Tienhoven,
+ Secretary of the Director and Council of New Netherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ IN order to present the aforesaid answer succinctly, he, Van Tienhoven,
+ will allege not only that it ill becomes the aforesaid Van her Donk and
+ other private persons to assail and abuse the administration of the
+ Managers in this country, and that of their Governors there,(1) in such
+ harsh and general terms, but that they would much better discharge their
+ duty if they were first to bring to the notice of their lords and patrons
+ what they had to complain of. But passing by this point, and leaving the
+ consideration thereof to the discretion of your High Mightinesses, he
+ observes preliminary and generally, that it could as easily and with more
+ truth be denied, than by them it is odiously affirmed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) In New Netherland. Van Tienhoven prepared this answer
+ in Holland.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Coming then to the matter, I will only touch upon those points as to which
+ either the Managers or the Directors are arraigned. In regard to point No.
+ 1, I deny, and it never will appear, that the Company have refused to
+ permit our people to make settlements in the country, and allow foreigners
+ to take up the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The policy of the Company to act on the defensive, since they had not the
+ power to resist their pretended friends, and could only protect their
+ rights by protest, was better and more prudent than to come to
+ hostilities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trade has long been free to every one, and as profitable as ever. Nobody's
+ goods were confiscated, except those who had violated their contract, or
+ the order by which they were bound; and if anybody thinks that injustice
+ has been done him by confiscation, he can speak for himself. At all events
+ it does not concern these people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for their complaining that the Christians are treated like the Indians
+ in the sale of goods, this is admitted; but this was not done by the
+ Company, nor by the Directors, because (God help them) they have not had
+ anything there to sell for many years. Most of the remonstrants, being
+ merchants or factors, are themselves the cause of this, since they are the
+ persons who, for those articles which cost here one hundred guilders,
+ charge there, over and above the first cost, including insurance, duties,
+ laborer's wages, freight, etc., one and two hundred per cent. or more
+ profit. Here can be seen at once how these people lay to the charge of the
+ Managers and their officers the very fault which they themselves commit.
+ They can never show, even at the time the Company had their shop and
+ magazines there well supplied, that the goods were sold at more than fifty
+ per cent. profit, in conformity with the Exemptions. The forestalling of
+ the goods by one and another, and their trying to get this profit, cannot
+ be prevented by the Director, the more so as the trade was thrown open to
+ both those of small and those of large means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is a pure calumny, that the Company had ordered half a fault to be
+ reckoned for a whole one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, as it does not concern the inhabitants what instructions or orders
+ the patroon gives to his chief agent, the charge is made for the purpose
+ of making trouble. For these people would like to live without being
+ subject to any one's censure or discipline, which, however, they stand
+ doubly in need of.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again it is said in general terms, but wherein, should be specified and
+ proven, that the Director exercises and has usurped sovereign power.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the inhabitants have had need of the Directors appears by the books
+ of accounts, in which it can be seen that the Company has assisted all the
+ freemen (some few excepted) with clothing, provisions and other things,
+ and in the erection of houses, and this at the rate of fifty per cent.
+ advance above the actual cost in the Fatherland, which is not yet paid.
+ And they would gladly, by means of complaints, drive the Company from the
+ land, and pay nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is ridiculous to suppose Director Kieft should have said that he was
+ sovereign, like the Prince in the Fatherland; but as relates to the denial
+ of appeal to the Fatherland, it arose from this, that, in the Exemptions,
+ the Island of the Manhatans was reserved as the capital of New Netherland,
+ and all the adjacent colonies were to have their appeal to it as the
+ Supreme Court of that region.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Art. XX.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Besides, it is to be remarked, that the patroon of the colony of
+ Renselaerswyck notified all the inhabitants not to appeal to the
+ Manhatans, which was contrary to the Exemptions, by which the colonies are
+ bound to make a yearly report of the state of the colony, and of the
+ administration of justice, to the Director and Council on the
+ Manhatans.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Art. XXVIII.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Directors have never had any management of, or meddled with, church
+ property. And it is not known, nor can it be proven, that any one of the
+ inhabitants of New Netherland has contributed or given, either voluntarily
+ or upon solicitation, anything for the erection of an orphan asylum or an
+ almshouse. It is true that the church standing in the fort was built in
+ the time of William Kieft, and 1,800 guilders were subscribed for the
+ purpose, for which most of the subscribers have been charged in their
+ accounts, which have not yet been paid. The Company in the meantime has
+ disbursed the money, so that the Commonalty (with a few exceptions) has
+ not, but the Company Has, paid the workmen. If the commonalty desire such
+ works As the aforesaid, they must contribute towards them as is Done in
+ this country, and, if there were an orphan asylum and Almshouse, there
+ should be rents not only to keep up the house, But also to maintain the
+ orphans and old people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If any one could show that by will, or by donation of a living person, any
+ money, or moveable or immoveable property, has been bestowed for such or
+ any other public work, the remonstrants would have done it; but there is
+ in New Netherland no instance of the kind, and the charge is spoken or
+ written in anger. When the church which is in the fort was to be built,
+ the Churchwardens were content it should be put there. These persons
+ complain because they considered the Company's fort not worthy of a
+ church. Before the church was built, the grist-mill could not grind with a
+ southeast wind, because the wind was shut off by the walls of the fort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the new school, towards which the commonalty has contributed
+ something, is not yet built, the Director has no management of the money,
+ but the churchwardens have, and the Director is busy in providing
+ materials. In the mean time a place has been selected for a school, where
+ the school is kept by Jan Cornelissen. The other schoolmasters keep school
+ in hired houses, so that the youth, considering the circumstances of the
+ country, are not in want of schools. It is true there is no Latin school
+ or academy, but if the commonalty desire it, they can furnish the means
+ and attempt it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to what concerns the deacons' or poor fund, the deacons are
+ accountable, and are the persons to be inquired of, as to where the money
+ is invested, which they have from time to time put out at interest; and as
+ the Director has never had the management of it, (as against common
+ usage), the deacons are responsible for it, and not the director. It is
+ true Director Kieft being distressed for money, had a box hung in his
+ house, of which the deacons had one key, and in which all the small fines
+ and penalties which were incurred on court day were dropped. With the
+ consent of the deacons he opened it, and took on interest the money, which
+ amounted to a pretty sum.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is admitted, that the beer excise was imposed by William Kieft, and the
+ wine excise by Peter Stuyvesant, and that they continued to be collected
+ up to the time of my leaving there; but it is to be observed here, that
+ the memorialists have no reason to complain about it, for the merchant,
+ burgher, farmer and all others (tapsters only excepted), can lay in as
+ much beer and wine as they please without paying any excise, being only
+ bound to give an account of it in order that the quantity may be
+ ascertained. The tapsters pay three guilders for each tun of beer and one
+ stiver for each can of wine,(1) which they get back again from their daily
+ visitors and the travellers from New England, Virginia and elsewhere.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The stiver was the twentieth part of a gulden or
+ guilder, and equivalent to two cents, the guilder being
+ equivalent to forty cents.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The commonalty up to that time were burdened with no other local taxes
+ than the before mentioned excise, unless the voluntary gift which was
+ employed two years since for the continuation of the building of the
+ church, be considered a tax, of which Jacob Couwenhoven,(1) who is one of
+ the churchwardens, will be able to give an account.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Couwenhoven, it will be remembered, was one of the
+ delegates from the commonalty then in Holland.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In New England there are no taxes or duties imposed upon goods exported or
+ imported; but every person's wealth is there appraised by the government,
+ and he must pay for the following, according to his wealth and the
+ assessment by the magistrates: for the building and repairing of churches,
+ and the support of the ministers; for the building of schoolhouses, and
+ the support of schoolmasters; for all city and village improvements, and
+ the making and keeping in repair all public roads and paths, which are
+ there made many miles into the country, so that they can be used by horses
+ and carriages, and journeys made from one place to another; for
+ constructing and keeping up all bridges over the rivers at the crossings;
+ for the building of inns for travellers, and for the maintenance of
+ governors, magistrates, marshals and officers of justice, and of majors,
+ captains and other officers of the militia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In every province of New England there is quarterly a general assembly of
+ all the magistrates of such province;(1) and there is yearly a general
+ convention of all the provinces, each of which sends one deputy with his
+ suite, which convention lasts a long time. All their travelling expenses,
+ board and compensation are there raised from the people. The poor-rates
+ are an additional charge.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) A loose statement, only so far correct, that each New
+ England colony had several sessions of its magistrates each
+ year, sometimes monthly sessions, while their legislative
+ assemblies ("general courts") were commonly held more than
+ once a year. Van Tienhoven's general contention is correct,
+ that government in New England was far more elaborate and
+ expensive than in New Netherland; but New England had in
+ 1650 a population of about 30,000, New Netherland hardly
+ more than 3,000. The annual meeting mentioned in the next
+ sentence is that of the Commissioners of the United
+ Colonies, in which, however, each colony was represented by
+ two deputies, not one.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The accounts will show what was the amount of recognitions collected
+ annually in Kieft's time; but it will not appear that it was as large by
+ far as they say the people were compelled to pay. This is not the
+ Company's fault, nor the Directors', but of those who charge one, two and
+ three hundred per cent. profit, which the people are compelled to pay
+ because there are few tradesmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will not appear, either now or in the future, that 30,000 guilders were
+ collected from the commonalty in Stuyvesant's time; for nothing is
+ received besides the beer and wine excise, which amounts to about 4,000
+ guilders a year on the Manhatans. From the other villages situated around
+ it there is little or nothing collected, because there are no tapsters,
+ except one at the Ferry,(1) and one at Flushing.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The hamlet on the East River opposite Manhattan; the
+ village of Bruekelen stood a mile east of the river.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ If anything has been confiscated, it did not belong to the commonalty, but
+ was contraband goods imported from abroad; and nobody's goods are
+ confiscated without good cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question is whether the Honorable Company or the Directors are bound
+ to construct any works for the commonalty out of the recognition which the
+ trader pays in New Netherland for goods exported, especially as those
+ duties were allowed to the Company by Their High Mightinesses for the
+ establishment of garrisons, and the expenses which they must thereby
+ incur, and not for the construction of poor-houses, orphan asylums, or
+ even churches and school-houses, for the commonalty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charge that the property of the Company is neglected in order to
+ procure assistance from friends, cannot be sustained by proof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The provisions obtained for the negroes from Tamandare were sent to
+ Curacao, except a portion consumed on the Manhatans, as the accounts will
+ show; but all these are mattes which do not concern these persons,
+ especially as they are not accountable for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to the freemen's contracts which the Director graciously granted the
+ negroes who were the Company's slaves, in consequence of their long
+ service: freedom was given to them on condition that their children should
+ remain slaves, who are not treated otherwise than as Christians. At
+ present there are only three of these children who do any service. One of
+ them is at the House of Hope,(1) one at the Company's Bouwery, and one
+ with Martin Crigier, who has brought the girl up well, as everybody knows.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Near Hartford, Connecticut. The company's bouwery, or
+ farm, next mentioned, was the tract extending between the
+ lines of Fulton and Chambers Streets, Broadway and the North
+ River. Martin Cregier was captain of the militia company.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ That the Heer Stuyvesant should build up, alter and repair the Company's
+ property was his duty. For the consequent loss or profit he will answer to
+ the Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The burghers upon the island of Manhatans and thereabouts must know that
+ nobody comes or is admitted to New Netherland (being a conquest) except
+ upon this condition, that he shall have nothing to say, and shall
+ acknowledge himself under the sovereignty of Their High Mightinesses the
+ States General and the Lords Managers, as his lords and patrons, and shall
+ be obedient to the Director and Council for the time being, as good
+ subjects are bound to be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who are they who have complained about the haughtiness of Stuyvesant? I
+ think they are such as seek to live without law or rule.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their complaint that no regulation was made in relation to sewan is
+ untrue. During the time of Director Kieft good sewan passed at four for a
+ stiver, and the loose bits were fixed at six pieces for a stiver.(1) The
+ reason why the loose sewan was not prohibited, was because there is no
+ coin in circulation, and the laborers, farmers, and other common people
+ having no other money, would be great losers; and had it been done, the
+ remonstrants would, without doubt, have included it among their
+ grievances.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Kieft's regulation was adopted April 16, 1641. In
+ Connecticut and Massachusetts, in 1640 ad 1641, the legal
+ valuations varied from four beads to the penny (or stiver)
+ to six beads.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nobody can prove that Director Stuyvesant has used foul language to, or
+ railed at as clowns, any persons or respectability who have treated him
+ decently. It may be that some profligate has given the Director, if he
+ used any bad words to him, cause to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That the fort is not properly repaired does not concern the inhabitants.
+ It is not their domain, but the Company's. They are willing to be
+ protected by good forts and garrisons belonging to the Company without
+ furnishing any aid or assistance by labor or money for the purpose; but it
+ appears they are not willing to see a fort well fortified and properly
+ garrisoned, from the apprehension that malevolent and seditious persons
+ will be better punished, which they call cruelty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the Director not been compelled to provide the garrisons of New
+ Netherland and Curacao with provisions, clothing and pay, the fort would,
+ doubtless, have been completed already.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Against whom has Director Stuyvesant personally made a question without
+ reason or cause?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A present of maize or Indian corn they call a contribution, because a
+ present is never received from the Indians without its being doubly paid
+ for, as these people, being very covetous, throw out a herring for a
+ codfish, as everybody who knows the Indians can bear witness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Francis Doughty, father-in-law of Adrian van der Donk, and an English
+ minister, was allowed a colony at Mestpacht, not for himself alone as
+ patroon, but for him and his associates, dwelling in Rhode Island, at
+ Cohanock and other places, from whom he had a power of attorney, and of
+ whom a Mr. Smith(1) was one of the principal; for the said minister had
+ scarcely any means of himself to build even a hovel, let alone to people a
+ colony at his own expense; but was to be employed as minister by his
+ associates, who were to establish him on a farm in the said colony, for
+ which he would discharge ministerial duties among them, and live upon the
+ profits of the farm.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Richard Smith, a Gloucestshire man, settled early in
+ Plymouth Colony (Taunton). Removing thence on account of
+ religious differences, he settled in what is now Rhode
+ Island, where he became a close friend of Roger Williams.
+ Between 1640 and 1643 he made the first permanent settlement
+ in the Narragansett country, at Cawcamsqussick (Wickford),
+ where he had for many years his chief residence and where
+ his house still stands. His extensive trading interests
+ brought him to Manhattan, where for some years he had a
+ house.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Coming to the Manhatans to live during the war, he was permitted to act as
+ minister for the English dwelling about there; and they were bound to
+ maintain him without either the Director or the Company being liable to
+ any charge therefor. The English not giving him wherewith to live on, two
+ collections were made among the Dutch and English by means of which he
+ lived at the Manhatans.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The said colony of Mespacht was never confiscated, as is shown by the
+ owners, still living there, who were interested in the colony with
+ Doughty; but as Doughty wished to hinder population, and to permit no one
+ to build in the colony unless he were willing to pay him a certain amount
+ of money down for every morgen of land, and a certain yearly sum in
+ addition in the nature of ground-rent, and in this way sought to establish
+ a domain therein, the others interested in the colony (Mr. Smith
+ especially) having complained, the Director and Council finally determined
+ that the associates might enter upon their property&mdash;the farm and
+ lands which Doughty possessed being reserved to him; so that he has
+ suffered no loss or damage thereby. This I could prove also, were it not
+ that the documents are in New Netherland and not here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are no clauses inserted in the ground-briefs, contrary to the
+ Exemptions, but the words nog te beramen (hereafter to be imposed) can be
+ left out of the ground-briefs, if they be deemed offensive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stuyvesant has never contested anything in court, but as president has put
+ proper interrogatories to the parties and with the court's advice has
+ rendered decisions about which the malevolent complain; but it must be
+ proven that anyone has been wronged by Stuyvesant in court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to what relates to the second [Vice Director] Dinclagen, let him settle
+ his own matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It can be shown that Brian Newton not only understands the Dutch tongue,
+ but also speaks it, so that their charge, that Newton does not understand
+ the Dutch language, is untrue. All the other slanders and calumnies
+ uttered against the remaining officers should be required to be proven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that in New Netherland it was commonly stated in conversation
+ that there was no appeal from a judgment in New Netherland pronounced on
+ the island of Manhatans, founded on the Exemptions by which on the island
+ of Manhatans was established the supreme court for all the surrounding
+ colonies, and also that there had never been a case in which an appeal
+ from New Netherland had been entertained by Their High Mightinesses,
+ although it had been petitioned for when Hendrick Jansen Snyder, Laurens
+ Cornelissen and others, many years ago, were banished from New
+ Netherland.(1) It would be a very strange thing indeed if the officers of
+ the Company could banish nobody from the country, while the officers of
+ the colony of Renselaerswyck, who are merely subordinates of the Company,
+ can banish absolutely from the colony whomever they may deem advisable for
+ the good of the colony, and permit no one to dwell there unless with their
+ approbation and upon certain conditions, some of which are as follows: in
+ the first place, no one down to the present time can possess a foot of
+ land of his own in the colony, but is obliged to take upon rent all the
+ land which he cultivates. When a house is erected an annual ground-rent in
+ beavers must be paid; and all the farmers must do the same, which they
+ call obtaining the right to trade. Where is there an inhabitant under the
+ jurisdiction of the Company of whom anything was asked or exacted for
+ trade or land? All the farms are conveyed in fee, subject to the clause
+ beraemt ofte nog te beramen, (taxes imposed or to be imposed.)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Hendrick Jansen the tailor was throughout Kieft's
+ administration one of his bitterest and most abusive
+ opponents, and was several times prosecuted for slander. In
+ 1647 he sailed on the Princess with Kieft and was lost.
+ Lourens Cornelissen van der Wel was a sea-captain, and also
+ prosecuted by Kieft.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The English minister Francis Doughty has never been in the service of the
+ company, wherefore it was not indebted to him; but his English
+ congregation are bound to pay him, as may be proven in New Netherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Company has advanced the said minister, from time to time, goods and
+ necessaries of life amounting to about 1100 guilders, as the Colony-Book
+ can show, which he has not yet paid, and he is making complaints now, so
+ that he may avoid paying it. Whether or not the Director has desired a
+ compromise with Doughty, I do not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Director Stuyvesant, when he came to New Netherland, endeavored according
+ to his orders to stop in a proper manner the contraband trade in guns,
+ powder and lead. The people of the colony of Renselaerwyck understanding
+ this, sent a letter and petition to the Director, requesting moderation,
+ especially as they said if that trade were entirely abolished all the
+ Christians in the colony would run great danger of being murdered, as may
+ more at large be seen by the contents of their petition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Director and Council taking the request into consideration, and
+ looking further into the consequences, resolved that guns and powder, to a
+ limited extent, be sparingly furnished by the factor at Fort Orange, on
+ account of the Company, taking good care that no supply should be carried
+ by the boats navigating the river, until in pursuance of a further order.
+ It is here to be observed that the Director, fearing one of two [evils]
+ and in order to keep the colony out of danger, has permitted some arms to
+ be furnished at the fort. Nobody can prove that the Director has sold or
+ permitted to be sold anything contraband, for his own private benefit.
+ That the Director has permitted some guns to be seized has happened
+ because they brought with them no license pursuant to the order of the
+ Company, and they would under such pretences be able to bring many guns.
+ The Director has paid for every one that was seized, sixteen guilders,
+ although they do not cost in this country more than eight or nine
+ guilders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is true that a case of guns was brought over by Vastrick, by order of
+ Director Stuyvesant, in which there were thirty guns, which the Director,
+ with the knowledge of the Vice Director and fiscaal, permitted to be
+ landed in the full light of day, which guns were delivered to Commissary
+ Keyser with orders to sell them to the Netherlanders who had no arms, in
+ order that in time they might defend themselves, which Keyser has done;
+ and it will appear by his accounts where these guns are. If there were any
+ more guns in the ship it was unknown to the Director. The fiscaal, whose
+ business it was, should have seen to it and inspected the ship; and these
+ accusers should have shown that the fiscaal had neglected to make the
+ search as it ought to have been done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jacob Reinsen and Jacob Schermerhorn are Scotch merchants (pedlers) born
+ in Waterland, one of whom, Jacob Schermerhorn, was at Fort Orange, the
+ other, Jacob Reintjes, was at Fort Amsterdam, who there bought powder,
+ lead and guns, and sent them up to Schermerhorn, who traded them to the
+ Indians. It so happened that the Company's corporal, Gerit Barent, having
+ in charge such of the arms of the Company as required to be repaired or
+ cleaned, sold to the before named Jacob Reintjes, guns, locks,
+ gun-barrels, etc., as can be proven by Jacob Reintjes' own confession, by
+ letters written to his partner long before this came to light, and by the
+ accusations of the corporal. The corporal, seduced by the solicitation of
+ Jacob Reintjes, sold him the arms as often as desired, though the Latter
+ knew that the guns and gun-barrels belonged to the Company, and not to the
+ corporal. There was confiscated also a parcel of peltries (as may be seen
+ in the accounts) coming chiefly from the contraband goods (as appears from
+ the letters). And as the said Jacob Reintjes has been in this country
+ since the confiscation, he would have made complaint if he had not been
+ guilty, especially as he was sufficiently urged to do so by the enemies of
+ the Company and of the Director, but his own letters were witnesses
+ against him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Joost de Backer being accused also by the above named corporal of having
+ bought gun-locks and gun-barrels from him, and the first information
+ having proved correct, his house was searched according to law, in which
+ was found a gun of the Company which he had procured from the corporal; he
+ was therefore taken into custody until he gave security [to answer] for
+ the claim of the fiscaal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the English of New England protected among them all fugitives who came
+ to them from the Manhatans without the passport required by the usage of
+ the country, whether persons in the service of the Company or freemen, and
+ took them into their service, it was therefore sought by commissioners to
+ induce the English to restore the fugitives according to an agreement
+ previously made with Governors Eaton and Hopkins, but as Governor Eaton
+ failed to send back the runaways, although earnestly solicited to do so,
+ the Director and Council, according to a previous resolution, issued a
+ proclamation that all persons who should come from the province of New
+ Haven (all the others excepted) to New Netherland should be protected;
+ which was a retaliatory measure. As the Governor permitted some of the
+ fugitives to come back to us, the Director and Council annulled the order,
+ and since then matters have gone on peaceably, the dispute about the
+ boundaries remaining the same as before.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Theophilus Eaton, governor of New Haven 1639-1658, and
+ Edward Hopkins, governor of Connecticut seven times in the
+ period 1640-1654. The recriminations and retaliations
+ alluded to took place in the winter of 1647-1648. Two
+ months before the date of this Answer, Stuyvesant had
+ arranged with the Commissioners of the United Colonies at
+ Hartford a provisional Agreement as to boundaries between
+ English and Dutch on Long Island and on the mainland; but
+ the treaty was not ratified by the English and Dutch
+ governments.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Nobody's goods have been confiscated in New Netherland without great
+ reason; and if any one feels aggrieved about it, the Director will be
+ prepared to furnish an answer. That ships or shipmasters are afraid of
+ confiscation and therefore do not come to New Netherland is probable, for
+ nobody can come to New Netherland without a license. Whoever has this, and
+ does not violate his agreement, and has properly entered his goods, need
+ not be afraid of confiscation; but all smugglers and persons who sail with
+ two commissions may well be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All those who were indebted to the Company were warned by the Director and
+ Council to pay the debts left uncollected by the late William Kieft, and
+ as some could, and others could not well pay, no one was compelled to pay;
+ but these debts, amounting to 30,000 guilders, make many who do not wish
+ to pay, angry and insolent, (especially as the Company now has nothing in
+ that country to sell them on credit,) and it seems that some seek to pay
+ after the Brazil fashion.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The recent conquest of the company's province of Brazil
+ by the Portuguese had enabled many debtors there to avoid
+ paying their debts.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The memorialists have requested that the people should not be harassed,
+ which however has never been the case, but they would be right glad to see
+ that the Company dunned nobody, not demanded their own, yet paid their
+ creditors. It will appear by the account-books of the Company that the
+ debts were not contracted during the war, but before it. The Company has
+ assisted the inhabitants, who were poor and burdened with wives and
+ children, with clothing, houses, cattle, land, etc., and from time to time
+ charged them in account, in hopes of their being able at some time to pay
+ for them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If the taxes of New England, before spoken of, be compared with those of
+ New Netherland, it will be found that those of New England are a greater
+ burden upon that country than the taxes of New Netherland are upon our
+ people.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wine excise of one stiver per can, was first imposed in the year 1647.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beer excise of three guilders per tun, was imposed by Kieft in 1644,
+ and is paid by the tapster alone, and not the burgher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The recognition of eight in a hundred upon exported beaver skins does not
+ come out of the inhabitants, but out of the trader, who is bound to pay it
+ according to contract.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Director has always shown that he was desirous and pleased to see a
+ deputation from the commonalty, who should seek in the Fatherland from the
+ Company as patrons and the Lords States as sovereigns, the following:
+ population, settlement of boundaries, reduction of charges upon New
+ Netherland tobacco and other productions, means of transporting people,
+ permanent and solid privileges, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For which purpose he has always offered to lend a helping hand; but the
+ remonstrants have pursued devious paths and excited some of the
+ commonalty, and by that means obtained a clandestine and secret
+ subscription, as is to be seen by their remonstrance, designed for no
+ other object than to render the Company&mdash;their patrons&mdash;and the
+ officers in New Netherland odious before Their High Mightinesses, so that
+ the Company might be deprived of the jus patronatus and be still further
+ injured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remonstrants say that we had relied upon the English, and by means of
+ them sought to divert the college, (as they call it,) which is untrue, as
+ appears by the propositions made to them. But it is here to be observed
+ that the English, living under the protection of the Netherlanders, having
+ taken the oath of allegiance and being domiciliated and settled in New
+ Netherland, are to be considered citizens of the country. These persons
+ have always been opposed to them, since the English, as well as they, had
+ a right to say something in relation to the deputation, and would not
+ consent to all their calumnies and slanders, but looked to the good of the
+ commonalty and of the inhabitants.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not written on their petition, in the margin, that they might
+ secretly go and speak to the commonalty. The intention of the Director was
+ to cause them to be called together as opportunity should offer, at which
+ time they might speak to the commonalty publicly about the deputation. The
+ Director was not obliged, as they say, to call the commonalty immediately
+ together. It was to be considered by him at what time each one could
+ conveniently come from home without considerable loss, especially as some
+ lived at a distance in the country, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That they have not been willing to communicate, was because all whom they
+ now paint in such black colors would have been able to provide themselves
+ with weapons, and make the contrary appear, and in that case could have
+ produced something [in accusation of] some of them. And since the Director
+ and those connected with the administration in New Netherland are very
+ much wronged and defamed, I desire time in order to wait for opposing
+ documents from New Netherland, if it be necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to Vander Donk and his associates' report that the Director instituted
+ suits against some persons: The Director going to the house of Michael
+ Jansen, (one of the signers of the remonstrance,) was warned by the said
+ Michael and Thomas Hall, saying, there was within it a scandalous journal
+ of Adrian van der Donck; which journal the Director took with him, and on
+ account of the slanders which were contained in it against Their High
+ Mightinesses and private individuals, Van der Donck was arrested at his
+ lodgings and proof of what he had written demanded, but he was released on
+ the application and solicitation of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the administration both of Kieft and of Stuyvesant, it was by a
+ placard published and posted, that no attestations or other public
+ writings should be valid before a court in New Netherland, unless they
+ were written by the secretary. This was not done in order that there
+ should be no testimony [against the Director] but upon this consideration,
+ that most of the people living in Netherland are country and seafaring
+ men, and summon each other frequently for small matters before the court,
+ while many of them can neither read nor write, and neither testify
+ intelligibly nor produce written evidence, and if some do produce it,
+ sometimes it is written by some sailor or farmer, and often wholly
+ indistinct and contrary to the meaning of those who had it written or who
+ made the statement; consequently the Director and Council could not know
+ the truth of matters as was proper and as justice demanded, etc. Nobody
+ has been arrested except Van der Donk for writing the journal, and
+ Augustyn Heermans, the agent of Gabri, because he refused to exhibit the
+ writings drawn up by the Nine Men, which were promised to the Director,
+ who had been for them many times like a boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the first point of redress, as they call it, the remonstrants advise,
+ that the Company should abandon and transfer the country. What frivolous
+ talk this is! The Company have at their own expense conveyed cattle and
+ many persons thither, built forts, protected many people who were poor and
+ needy emigrating from Holland, and provided them with provisions and
+ clothing; and now when some of them have a little more than they can eat
+ up in a day, they wish to be released from the authority of their
+ benefactors, and without paying if they could; a sign of gross
+ ingratitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hitherto the country has been nothing but expense to the Company, and now
+ when it can provide for itself and yield for the future some profit to the
+ Company, these people are not willing to pay the tenth which they are in
+ duty bound to pay after the expiration of the ten years, pursuant to the
+ Exemptions to which they are making an appeal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Upon the second point they say that provision should be made for
+ ecclesiastical and municipal property, church services, an orphan asylum
+ and an almshouse. If they are such philanthropists as they appear, let
+ them lead the way in generous contributions for such laudable objects, and
+ not complain when the Directors have endeavored to make collections for
+ the building of the church and school. What complaints would have been
+ made if the Director had undertaken to make collections for an almshouse
+ and an orphan asylum! The service of the church will not be suspended,
+ although Domine Johannes Backerus has departed, who was there only
+ twenty-Seven months. His place is supplied by a learned and godly Minister
+ who has no interpreter when he defends the Reformed Religion against any
+ minister of our neighbors, the English Brownists.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Referring to Reverend Johannes Megapolensis, who had
+ been persuaded to remain in New Netherland and assume
+ pastoral care of Manhattan.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The foregoing are the points which really require any answer. We will only
+ add some description of the persons who have signed the remonstrance and
+ who are the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Adrian van der Donk has been about eight years in New Netherland. He went
+ there in the service of the proprietors of the colony of Renselaerswyck as
+ an officer, but did not long continue such, though he lived in that colony
+ till 1646.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arnoldus van Hardenburgh accompanied Hay Jansen to New Netherland, in the
+ year 1644, with a cargo for his brother. He has never to our knowledge
+ suffered any loss or damage in New Netherland, but has known how to charge
+ the commonalty well for his goods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Augustyn Heermans came on board the Maecht van Enkhuysen,(1) being then as
+ he still is, the agent of Gabrie(2) in trading business.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) "Maid of Enkhuizen."
+
+ (2) Peter Gabry and Sons, a noted firm of Amsterdam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Jacob van Couwenhoven came to the country with his father in boyhood, was
+ taken by Wouter van Twiller into the service of the Company as an
+ assistant, and afterwards became a tobacco planter. The Company has aided
+ him with necessaries as it is to be seen by the books, but they have been
+ paid for.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Olof Stevensen, brother-in-law of Govert Loockmans, went out in the year
+ 1637 in the ship Herring as a soldier in the service of the Company. He
+ was promoted by Director Kieft and finally made commissary of the shop. He
+ has profited in the service of the Company, and endeavors to give his
+ benefactor the world's pay, that is, to recompense good with evil. He
+ signed under protest, saying that he was obliged to sign, which can be
+ understood two ways, one that he was obliged to subscribe to the truth,
+ the other that he had been constrained by force to do it. If he means the
+ latter, it must be proven.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Michael Jansen came to New Netherland as a farmer's man in the employ of
+ the proprietors of Renselaerswyck. He made his fortune in the colony in a
+ few years, but not being able to agree with the officers, finally came in
+ the year 1646 to live upon the island Manhatans. He would have come here
+ himself, but the accounts between him and the colony not being settled, in
+ which the proprietors did not consider themselves indebted as he claimed,
+ Jan Evertsen came over in his stead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thomas Hall came to the South River in 1635, in the employ of an
+ Englishman, named Mr. Homs, being the same who intended to take Fort
+ Nassau at that time and rob us of the South River. This Thomas Hall ran
+ away from his master, came to the Manhatans and hired himself as a
+ farmer's man to Jacob van Curlur. Becoming a freeman he has made a tobacco
+ plantation upon the land of Wouter van Twyler, and he has been also a
+ farm-superintendent; and this W. van Twyler knows the fellow. Thomas Hall
+ dwells at present upon a small bowery belonging to the Honorable Company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elbert Elbertsen came to the country as a farmer's boy at about ten or
+ eleven years of age, in the service of Wouter van Twyler, and has never
+ had any property in the country. About three years ago he married the
+ widow of Gerret Wolphertsen, (brother of the before mentioned Jacob van
+ Couwenhoven,) and from that time to this has been indebted to the Company,
+ and would be very glad to get rid of paying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Govert Loockmans, brother in law of Jacob van Couwenhoven, came to New
+ Netherland in the yacht St. Martin in the year 1633 as a cook's mate, and
+ was taken by Wouter van Twyler into the service of the Company, in which
+ service he profited somewhat. He became a freeman, and finally took charge
+ of the trading business for Gilles Verbruggen and his company in New
+ Netherland. This Loockmans ought to show gratitude to the Company, next to
+ God, for his elevation, and not advise its removal from the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hendrick Kip is a tailor, and has never suffered any injury in New
+ Netherland to our knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jan Evertsen-Bout, formerly an officer of the Company, came the last time
+ in the year 1634, with the ship Eendracht [Union], in the service of the
+ Honorable Michiel Paauw, and lived in Pavonia until the year 1643, and
+ prospered tolerably. As the Honorable Company purchased the property of
+ the Heer Paauw, the said Jan Evertsen succeeded well in the service of the
+ Company, but as his house and barn at Pavonia were burnt down in the war,
+ he appears to take that as a cause for complaint. It is here to be
+ remarked, that the Honorable Company, having paid 26,000 guilders for the
+ colony of the Heer Paauw, gave to the aforesaid Jan Evertsen, gratis, long
+ after his house was burnt, the possession of the land upon which his house
+ and farmstead are located, and which yielded good grain. The land and a
+ poor unfinished house, with a few cattle, Michiel Jansen has bought for
+ eight thousand guilders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In brief, these people, to give their doings a gloss, say that they are
+ bound by oath and compelled by conscience; but if that were the case they
+ would not assail their benefactors, the Company and others, and endeavor
+ to deprive them of this noble country, by advising their removal, now that
+ it begins to be like something, and now that there is a prospect of the
+ Company getting its own again. And now that many of the inhabitants are
+ themselves in a better condition than ever, this is evidently the cause of
+ the ambition of many, etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the Hague, 29th November, 1650.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTER OF JOHANNES BOGAERT TO HANS BONTEMANTEL, 1655
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Letter of Johannes Bogaert to Hans Bontemantel, 1655. In J. Franklin
+ Jameson, ed., Narratives of New Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original Narratives
+ of Early American History). NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR_____">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE chief military exploit of Director Stuyvesant was the conquest in 1655
+ of the Swedish settlements on the Delaware River. New Sweden had been
+ founded in 1638 by a party of settlers under Peter Minuit, sent out by the
+ Swedish South Company, with private help from Dutch merchants. The history
+ of this little colony belongs to another volume of this series, but some
+ account of its absorption in New Netherland should find a place in this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first the Dutch and Swedes on the Delaware, the former with their Fort
+ Nassau on the east side, the latter with their three forts, Nya Elfsborg
+ on the east side, Christina and Nya Goteborg (New Gottenburg) on the west,
+ dwelt together in amity. But competition for the Indian trade was keen,
+ conflicting purchases of land from the Indians gave rise to disputes, and
+ from the beginning of Stuyvesant's administration there was friction. This
+ he greatly increased by proceeding to the South River with armed forces,
+ in 1651, and building Fort Casimir on the west side of the river, near the
+ present site of Newcastle, and uncomfortably near to Fort Christina. In
+ 1654 a large reinforcement to the Swedish colony came out under Johan
+ Rising, who seized Fort Casimir. But the serious efforts to strengthen the
+ colony, made by Sweden in the last year of Queen Christina and the first
+ year of King Charles X., were made too late. The Dutch West India Company
+ ordered Director Stuyvesant not only to retake Fort Casimir but to expel
+ the Swedish power from the whole river. He proceeded to organize in
+ August, 1655, the largest military force which had yet been seen in the
+ Atlantic colonies. The best Dutch account of what it achieved is presented
+ in translation in the following pages; the Swedish side is told by
+ Governor Rising in a report printed in the <i>Collections of the New York
+ Historical Society</i>, second series, I. 443-448, and in <i>Pennsylvania
+ Archives</i>, second series, V. 222-229.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Rising's dates are given according to Old Style, Swedish
+ fashion, Bogaert's according to New Style, as customary in
+ the province of Holland.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Of Johannes Bogaert, author of the following letter, we know only that he
+ was a "writer," or clerk. Hans Bontemantel, to whom the letter was
+ addressed, was a director in the Amsterdam Chamber of the West India
+ Company, and a schepen (magistrate) of Amsterdam from 1655 to 1672, in
+ which last year he took a prominent part in bringing William III. The
+ letter was first printed in 1858 in <i>De Navorscher</i> (the Dutch <i>Notes
+ and Queries</i>), VIII. 185-186. A translation by Henry C. Murphy was
+ published the same year in <i>The Historical Magazine</i>, II. 258-259,
+ and this, carefully revised by the present editor, appears below. For a
+ history of New Sweden, see Professor Gregory B. Keen's chapter in Winsor's
+ <i>Narrative and Critical History of America</i>, IV. 443-488.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LETTER OF JOHANNES BOGAERT TO HANS BONTEMANTEL, 1655
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Noble and Mighty Sir:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Schepen Bontemantel:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THIS is to advise your Honor of what has occurred since the 5th of
+ September, 1655, when we sailed with our seven ships,(1) composed of two
+ yachts called the Holanse Tuijn (Dutch Frontier), the Prinses Royael
+ (Princess Royal,) a galiot called the Hoop (Hope), mounting four guns, the
+ flyboat Liefde (Love), mounting four guns, the yacht Dolphijn (Dolphin),
+ vice-admiral, with four guns, the yacht Abrams Offerhande (Abraham's
+ Offering), as rear-admiral, mounting four guns; and on the 8th arrived
+ before the Swedish fort, named Elsener.(2) This south fort had been
+ abandoned. Our force consisted of 317 soldiers, besides a company of
+ sailors.(3) The general's(4) company, of which Lieutenant Nuijtingh was
+ captain, and Jan Hagel ensign-bearer, was ninety strong. The general's
+ second company, of which Dirck Smit was captain, and Don Pouwel
+ ensign-bearer, was sixty strong. Nicolaes de Silla the marshal's company,
+ of which Lieutenant Pieter Ebel was captain, and William van Reijnevelt
+ ensign-bearer, was fifty-five strong. The major's second company, which
+ was composed of seamen and pilots, with Dirck Jansz Verstraten of Ossanen
+ as their captain, boatswain's-mate Dirck Claesz of Munnikendam as
+ ensign-bearer, and the sail-maker Jan Illisz of Honsum as lieutenant,
+ consisted of fifty men; making altogether 317 men. The 10th, after
+ breakfast, the fleet got under way, and ran close under the guns of Fort
+ Casemier, and anchored about a cannon-shot's distance from it. The troops
+ were landed immediately, and General Stuijvesant dispatched Lieutenant
+ Dirck Smit with a drummer and a white flag to the commandant, named Swen
+ Schoeten,(5) to summon the fort. In the meantime we occupied a guard-house
+ about half a cannon-shot distant from the fort; and at night placed a
+ company of soldiers in it, which had been previously used as a magazine.
+ The 11th, the commander, Swen Schoeten, sent a flag requesting to speak
+ with the General, who consented. They came together, and after a
+ conference the said commander surrendered Fort Casemier to the general,
+ upon the following conditions:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Six are named below. The seventh (or first) was the
+ "admiral" or flag-ship De Waegh ("The Balance"), on which
+ the writer sailed. The Hoop was a French privateer,
+ L'Esperance, which had just arrived at New Amsterdam and was
+ engaged for the expedition.
+
+ (2) Nya Elfsborg.
+
+ (3) Rising states the total number of the force as 600 or
+ 700.
+
+ (4) I.e., Stuyvesant's. In the military organization of
+ that day, one or two companies were usually given a primary
+ position as the "general's own" or "colonel's own." Of the
+ persons mentioned below, Nicasius de Sille was a member of
+ the Council, and De Koningh was the captain of De Waegh.
+
+ (5) Sven Schute.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ First, The commander, whenever he pleases and shall have the opportunity,
+ by the arrival of ships belonging to the crown, or private ships, shall be
+ permitted to remove from Fort Casemier the guns of the crown, large and
+ small: consisting, according to the statement of the commander, of four
+ iron guns and five case-shot guns, of which four are small and one is
+ large. Second, Twelve men shall march out as the body-guard of the
+ commander, fully accoutred, with the flag of the crown; the others with
+ their side-arms only. The guns and muskets which belong to the crown shall
+ be and remain at the disposition of the commandant, to take or cause them
+ to be taken from the fort whenever the commander shall have an opportunity
+ to do so. Third, The commander shall have all his private personal effects
+ uninjured, in order to take them with him or to have them taken away
+ whenever he pleases, and also the effects of all the officers. Fourth, The
+ commander shall this day restore into the hands of the General Fort
+ Casemier and all the guns, ammunition, materials, and other property
+ belonging to the General Chartered West India Company. Done, concluded and
+ signed by the contracting parties the 11th September, 1655, on board the
+ ship De Waegh, lying at Fort Casemier. (Signed) Petrus Stuijvesant, Swen
+ Schuts.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) This agrees with the official text in <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>,
+ XII. 102.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The 13th, was taken prisoner the lieutenant of Fort Crist[ina], with a
+ drummer, it being supposed that he had come as a spy upon the army, in
+ consequence of the drummer's having no drum. The 14th, the small fleet was
+ again under sail with the army for Verdrietige Point,(1) where they were
+ landed. The 15th, we arrived at the west of Fort Christina, where we
+ formed ourselves into three divisions; the major's company and his company
+ of sailors were stationed on the south side of the creek, by the yacht
+ Eendraght (Union), where the major constructed a battery of three guns,
+ one eight-pounder and two six-pounders; the general's company and the
+ field marshal's were divided into two. The marshal threw up a battery of
+ two twelve-pounders, about northwest of the fort. The general placed a
+ battery about north of the fort, opposite the land entrance, one hundred
+ paces, by calculation, from the fort, and mounting one eighteen-pounder,
+ one eight-pounder, one six-pounder, and one three-pounder.(2)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) On Augustin Herrman's excellent map of Maryland and
+ Delaware, "Virdrietige Hoeck" (Tedious Point) appears as a
+ name of a promontory about where Marcus Hook, Pa., now is.
+ Rising, however, reports the Dutch as landing at Tridje
+ Hoeck ("Third Point"), just north of Christina Creek.
+
+ (2) For a plan of the siege, derived from that made by the
+ Swedish engineer Linstrom, see Winsor, <i>Narrative and
+ Critical History of America</i>, IV. 480.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The 17th, the flyboat Liefde returned to the Manhathans with the Swedish
+ prisoners. From the 17th to the 23rd nothing particular happened. Then,
+ when we had everything ready, the governor of the fort received a letter
+ from our general, to which our general was to have an answer the next day.
+ The same day an Indian, whom we had dispatched on the 13th to Menades,
+ arrived, bringing news and letters to the effect that some Dutch people
+ had been killed at Menades by the Indians;(1) which caused a feeling of
+ horror through the army, so that the general sent a letter immediately to
+ the fort, that he would give them no time the next morning. Then Then the
+ general agreed wit the Swedish governor to come together in the morning
+ and make an arrangement. The general had a tent erected between our
+ quarter and their fort, and there an agreement was made, whereby the
+ governor, Johan Risingh, surrendered the fort on the 24th of September,
+ upon the conditions mentioned in the accompanying capitulation.(2) On the
+ 28th of September the general left with the ships and yachts, and we were
+ ordered to remain from eight to fourteen days, and let the men work daily
+ at Fort Casemier, in the construction of ramparts.(3)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) A hundred were killed, a hundred and fifty taken
+ prisoners.
+
+ (2) <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, XII. 104-106.
+
+ (3) Fort Casimir was made the seat of Dutch administration
+ on the South River. In 1657 it was named New Amstel, and
+ the colony there was taken over by the city of Amsterdam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The 11th of October, Governor Rijsingh and Factor Elswijck, with some
+ Swedes, came on board, whom we carried with us to Menades. We ran out to
+ sea for the Menades on the 12th, and on the 17th happily arrived within
+ Sandy Hook. On the 21st we sailed for the North River, from Staten Island,
+ by the watering-place, and saw that all the houses there, and about
+ Molyn's house,(1) were burned up by the Indians; and we learned here that
+ Johannes van Beeck, with his wife and some other people, and the captain
+ of a slave-trader which was lying here at anchor with a vessel, having
+ gone on a pleasure excursion, were attacked by the Indians, who murdered
+ Van Beeck and the captain, and took captive his wife and sister. We found
+ Van Beeck dead in a canoe, and buried him. His wife has got back. The
+ general is doing all that lies in his power to redeem the captives and to
+ make peace. Commending your Honor, with hearty salutations, to the
+ protection of the Most High, that he will bless you and keep you in
+ continued Health, I remain your Honor's
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Obedient servant,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHANNES BOGAERT, Clerk.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Laus Deo, Ship De Waegh (The Balance),
+ The 31st October, 1655.
+ Hon. Mr. Schepen Bontemantel,
+ Director of the Chartered West India Company,
+ at Amsterdam.
+
+ (1) The house of Cornelis Melyn, on Staten Island.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LETTERS OF THE DUTCH MINISTERS TO THE CLASSIS OF AMSTERDAM, 1655-1664
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Reference material and sources.
+
+ Johannes Megapolensis, Samuel Drisius, and Henricus Selyns,
+ Letters of the Dutch Ministers to the Classis of Amsterdam,
+ 1655-1664. In J. Franklin Jameson, ed., Narratives of New
+ Netherland, 1609-1664 (Original Narratives of Early American
+ History). NY: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1909.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR______">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ INTRODUCTION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ THE Dutch clergy of the Reformed Church, as has already been mentioned in
+ a previous introduction, were men whose observations we must value because
+ of their intelligence and their acquirements; and they also had a point of
+ view which was to a large extent independent of the Director General and
+ other civil officials. Hence the series of their reports to the Classis of
+ Amsterdam is worthy of much attention. In the absence of a continuous
+ narrative of high importance for the years from 1655 to 1664 it has been
+ deemed best to make use for those years of certain of these clerical
+ letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of their authors, Domine Megapolensis has been already treated, in the
+ introduction to his tract on the Mohawks. He remained at New Amsterdam
+ through the period of the English conquest, and died there in 1669. The
+ Reverend Samuel Drisius (Dries) was born about 1602, of Dutch parents, but
+ was throughout his earlier life a pastor in England, until the troubles in
+ that country caused him to return to the Netherlands. Since he was able to
+ preach not only in Dutch but also in English and even in French, it was
+ natural that the Classis should send him out to New Netherland in response
+ to the urgent requests made for assistance to Megapolensis, especially in
+ dealing with the non-Dutch population at New Amsterdam. He began his
+ pastoral service there in 1653, and continued throughout the remainder of
+ the period represented by this book. In 1669 he is reported as
+ incapacitated by failing mental powers, and he died in 1673. Domine
+ Henricus Selyns was examined as a candidate for the ministry in 1657,
+ ordained by the Classis in 1660, called to Breukelen and inducted there in
+ that year. He returned to Holland in 1664, before the surrender, but came
+ back to New York in 1682 as minister of the Collegiate Church, and died
+ there in 1701.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John Romeyn Brodhead, at the time of his remarkable mission to the
+ Netherlands (1841), included in his endeavors a search for Dutch
+ ecclesiastical papers bearing on New Netherland. The letters which follow
+ were among those which he found in Amsterdam, in the archives of the
+ Classis. In 1842 they were Lent, in 1846 given, by the Classis to the
+ General Synod of the Reformed Dutch Church in America. To this material
+ large Additions were made by a further search carried out in 1897-1898, by
+ the Reverend Dr. Edward T. Corwin, acting as agent of that church, who is
+ responsible for the translations which follow. An account of all this
+ ecclesiastical material, under the title "The Amsterdam Correspondence,"
+ was printed by him in 1897 in the eight volume of the <i>Papers of the
+ American Society of Church History</i>. He edited the material for
+ publication in the first volume of the series called <i>Ecclesiastical
+ Records, State of New York</i>, published by the state in 1901. The
+ letters which follow are taken, with slight revision, from various pages
+ (from page 334 to page 562) of that volume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ LETTERS OF THE DUTCH MINISTERS TO THE CLASSIS OF AMSTERDAM, 1655-1664
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rev. Johannes Megapolensis to the Classis of Amsterdam (March 18, 1655).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverendissimi Domini, Fratres in Christo, Synergi observandi:(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I FEEL it my duty, to answer the letter of your Reverences, dated the 11th
+ of November, 1654.(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have cause to be grateful to the Messrs. Directors(3) and to your
+ Reverences for the case and trouble taken to procure for the Dutch on Long
+ Island a good clergyman, even though it has not yet resulted in anything.
+ Meanwhile, God has led Domine Joannes Pelhemius(4) from Brazil, by way of
+ the Caribbean Islands, to this place. He has for the present gone to Long
+ Island, to a village called Midwout, which is somewhat the Meditullium(5)
+ of the other villages, to wit, Breuckelen, Amersfoort and Gravesande.
+ There he has preached for the accommodation of the inhabitants on Sundays
+ during the winter, and has administered the sacraments, to the
+ satisfaction of all, as Director Stuyvesant has undoubtedly informed the
+ Messrs. Directors.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Most Reverend Masters, Brethren in Christ, Venerable
+ Fellow-Workers.
+
+ (2) <i>Ecclesiastical Records, State of New York</i>, I. 331.
+
+ (3) Of the West India Company.
+
+ (4) Reverend Johannes Theodorus Polhemus or Polhemius, born
+ about 1598, was in early life a minister in the Palatinate.
+ Driven thence by persecutions in 1635, he was sent to Brazil
+ in 1636 by the Dutch West India Company, and remained there,
+ minister at Itamarca, till the waning of the company's
+ fortunes in that country and the loss of Pernambuco
+ compelled his retirement. In 1654 he went thence to New
+ Netherland, and became provisionally minister of Midwout,
+ the first Dutch church on Long Island. From 1656 to 1660 he
+ was minister of Midwout, Breukelen and Amersfoort, from 1660
+ to 1664 of Midwout and Amersfoort, from 1664 of all three
+ churches again. He died in 1676.
+
+ (5) Middle point. Midwout is now Flatbush; Amersfoort is
+ Flatlands.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As to William Vestiens, who has been schoolmaster and sexton here, I could
+ neither do much, nor say much, in his favor, to the Council, because for
+ some years past they were not satisfied or pleased with his services.(1)
+ Thereupon when he asked for an increase of salary last year, he received
+ the answer, that if the service did not suit him, he might ask for his
+ discharge. Only lately I have been before the Council on his account, and
+ spoken about it, in consequence of your letter, but they told me that he
+ had fulfilled his duties only so-so(2) and that he did little enough for
+ his salary.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Willem Vestiens or Vestens, schoolmaster, of Haarlem, "a
+ good, God-fearing man," was sent out in 1650 as
+ schoolmaster, sexton, and "comforter of the sick." In 1655
+ he asked to be transferred to the East Indies, and was
+ replaced at New Amsterdam by Harmanus van Hoboken.
+
+ (2) Taliter qualiter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Some Jews came from Holland last summer, in order to trade. Later some
+ Jews came upon the same ship as Dr. Polheymius;(1) they were healthy, but
+ poor. It would have been proper, that they should have been supported by
+ their own people, but they have been at our charge, so that we have had to
+ spend several hundred guilders for their support. They came several times
+ to my house, weeping and bemoaning their misery. When I directed them to
+ the Jewish merchant,(2) they said, that he would not lend them a single
+ stiver. Some more have come from Holland this spring. They report that
+ many more of the same lot would follow, and then they would build here a
+ synagogue. This causes among the congregation here a great deal of
+ complaint and murmuring. These people have no other God than the Mammon of
+ unrighteousness, and no other aim than to get possession of Christian
+ property, and to overcome all other merchants by drawing all trade towards
+ themselves. Therefore we request your Reverences to obtain from the
+ Messrs. Directors, that these godless rascals, who are of no benefit to
+ the country, but look at everything for their own profit, may be sent away
+ from here. For as we have here Papists, Mennonites and Lutherans among the
+ Dutch; also many Puritans or Independents, and many atheists and various
+ other servants of Baal among the English under this Government, who
+ conceal themselves under the name of Christians; it would create a still
+ greater confusion, if the obstinate and immovable Jews came to settle
+ here.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Refugees from Brazil, who retired after the capture of
+ Pernambuco by the Portugese, in January, 1654. The number
+ of Jews who settled in New Amsterdam became considerable.
+ The West India Company in 1655 repressed all attempts of
+ Stuyvesant and his Council to expel or oppress them.
+
+ (2) Jacob Barsimson seems to have been the one Jewish
+ merchant then there.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In closing I commend your Reverences with your families to the protection
+ of God, who will bless us and all of you in the service of the divine
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your obedient
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHAN. MEGAPOLENSIS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amsterdam in New Netherland the 18th of March, 1655.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Addressed to the Reverend, Pious and very Learned Deputies ad res
+ Ecclesiasticas Indicas, in the Classis of Amsterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Revs. J. Megapolensis and S. Drisius to the Classis of Amsterdam (August
+ 5, 1657).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverend, Pious and Learned Gentlemen, Fathers and Brethren in Christ
+ Jesus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The letters of your Reverences, of the 13th of June 1656, and of the 15th
+ of October of the same year have been received. We were rejoiced to learn
+ of the fatherly affection and care which you show for the welfare of this
+ growing congregation. We also learned thereby of the trouble you have
+ taken with the Messrs. Directors, to prevent the evils threatened to our
+ congregation by the creeping in of erroneous spirits; and of your
+ Reverences' desire, to be informed of the condition of the churches in
+ this country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We answered you in the autumn of the year 1656, and explained all things
+ in detail. To this we have as yet received no reply, and are therefore in
+ doubt, whether our letters reached you. This present letter must therefore
+ serve the same end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Lutherans here pretended, last year, that they had obtained the
+ consent of the Messrs. Directors, to call a Lutheran pastor from
+ Holland.(1) They therefore requested the Hon. Director and the Council,
+ that they should have permission, meanwhile, to hold their conventicles to
+ prepare the way for their expected and coming pastor. Although they began
+ to urge this rather saucily, we, nevertheless, animated and encourage by
+ your letters, hoped for the best, yet feared the worst, which has indeed
+ come to pass. For although we could not have believed that such permission
+ had been given by the Directors, there nevertheless arrived here, with the
+ ship Meulen(2) in July last, a Lutheran preacher Joannes Ernestus
+ Goetwater,(3) to the great joy of the Lutherans, but to the special
+ displeasure and uneasiness of the congregation in this place; yea, even
+ the whole country, including the English, were displeased.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) There were Lutherans at Manhattan at the time of Father
+ Jogue's visit (1643), and they are called a congregation in
+ 1649. In 1653 they petitioned to have a minister of their
+ own and freedom of public worship. Stuyvesant and the
+ ministers were disposed to maintain the monopoly of the
+ Reformed (Calvinistic) Church. In 1656 he forbade even
+ Lutheran services in private houses; but the Company would
+ not sustain this, though they upheld him in sending
+ Gutwasser back to Holland in 1659.
+
+ (2) "The Mill."
+
+ (3) Johann Ernst Gutwasser.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We addressed ourselves, therefore, to his Honor the Director-General, the
+ Burgomasters and Schepens of this place,(1) and presented the enclosed
+ petition. As a result thereof, the Lutheran pastor was summoned before
+ their Honors and asked with what intentions he had come here, and what
+ commission and credentials he possessed. He answered that he had come to
+ serve here as a Lutheran preacher, but that he had no other commission
+ than a letter from the Lutheran Consistory at Amsterdam to the Lutheran
+ congregation here. He was then informed by the Hon. authorities here, that
+ he must abstain from all church services, and from the holding of any
+ meetings, and not even deliver the letter which he brought from the
+ Lutherans at Amsterdam without further orders; but that he must regulate
+ himself by the edicts of this province against private conventicles. He
+ promised to do this, adding however that with the next ships he expected
+ further orders and his regular commission. In the meantime, however, we
+ had the snake in our bosom. We should have been glad if the authorities
+ here had opened that letter of the Lutheran Consistory, to learn therefrom
+ the secret of his Mission, but as yet they have not been willing to do
+ this.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) New Amsterdam had received a municipal constitution, of
+ about the type usual in the Netherlands, though somewhat
+ less liberal, in 1653.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We then demanded that our authorities here should send back the Lutheran
+ preacher, who had come without the consent of the Messrs. Directors, in
+ the same ship in which he had come, in order to put a stop to this work,
+ which they evidently intended to prosecute with a hard Lutheran head, in
+ spite of and against the will of our magistrates; for we suspect that this
+ one has come over to see whether he can pass, and be allowed to remain
+ here, and thus to lay the foundation for further efforts; but we do not
+ yet know what we can accomplish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Domine Gideon Schaats(1) wrote to you last year about the congregation at
+ Rensselaerswyck or Beverwyck, as he intends to do again. We know nothing
+ otherwise than that the congregation there is in a good condition; that it
+ is growing vigorously, so that it is almost as strong as we are here at
+ the Manhatans. They built last year a handsome parsonage. On the South
+ River, matters relating to religion and the church have hitherto
+ progressed very unsatisfactorily; first because we had there only one
+ little fort, and in it a single commissary, with ten to twenty men, all in
+ the Company's service, merely for trading with the Indians. Secondly: In
+ the year 1651 Fort Nassau was abandoned and razed, and another, called
+ Fort Casemier, was erected, lower down and nearer to the seaboard. This
+ was provided with a stronger garrison, and was reinforced by several
+ freemen, who lived near it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Minister at Rensselaerswyck since 1652.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But the Swedes, increasing there in numbers, troubled and annoyed our
+ people daily. After they had taken Fort Casemier from us, they annoyed our
+ countrymen so exceedingly, that the South River was abandoned by them.
+ However in the year 1655 our people recovered Fort Casemier, and now it is
+ held by a sufficiently strong garrison, including several freemen, who
+ also have dwellings about. One was then appointed, to read to them on
+ Sundays, from the Postilla.(1) This is continued to this day.(2) The
+ Lutheran preacher who was sent there was returned to Sweden.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Book of Homilies.
+
+ (2) Reverend Peter Hjort, pastor at Fort Trinity.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Two miles from Fort Casemier, up the river, is another fort, called
+ Christina. This was also taken by our people, at the same time, and the
+ preacher there(1) was sent away, with the Swedish garrison.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Matthias Nertunius.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But because many Swedes and Finns, at least two hundred, live above Fort
+ Christina, two or three leagues further up the river, the Swedish governor
+ made a condition in his capitulation, that they might retain one Lutheran
+ preacher,(1) to teach these people in their language. This was granted
+ then the more easily, first, because new troubles had broken out at
+ Manhattan with the Indians, and it was desirable to shorten proceedings
+ here and return to the Manhattans to put things in order there; secondly,
+ because there was no Reformed preacher here, nor any who understood their
+ language, to be located there.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Lars Lock or Lokenius, preacher at Tinicum from
+ 1647 to 1688.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ This Lutheran preacher is a man of impious and scandalous habits, a wild,
+ drunken, unmannerly clown, more inclined to look into the wine can than
+ into the Bible. He would prefer drinking brandy two hours to preaching
+ one; and when the sap is in the wood his hands itch and he wants to fight
+ whomsoever he meets. The commandant at Fort Casimir, Jean Paulus Jacqet,
+ brother-in-law of Domine Casparus Carpentier,(1) told us that during last
+ spring this preacher was tippling with a smith, and while yet over their
+ brandy they came to fisticuffs, and beat each other's heads black and
+ blue; yea, that the smith tore all the clothing from the preacher's body,
+ so that this godly minister escaped in primitive nakedness, and although
+ so poorly clothed, yet sought quarrels with others. Sed hoc parergicos.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Carpentier was a Reformed minister whom the Dutch had
+ established at Fort Casimir. Jacquet was vice-director on
+ the South River, 1655-1657.
+
+ (2) But this incidentally.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On Long Island there are seven villages belonging to this province, of
+ which three, Breuckelen, Amersfoort and Midwout,(1) are inhabited by Dutch
+ people, who formerly used to come here(2) to communion and other services
+ to their great inconvenience. Some had to travel for three hours to reach
+ this place. Therefore, when Domine Polheymus arrived here from Brazil,
+ they called him as preacher, which the Director-General and Council
+ confirmed.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Brooklyn, Flatlands and Flatbush.
+
+ (2) To New Amsterdam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The four other villages on Long Island, viz., Gravensand, Middleburgh,
+ Vlissingen, and Heemstede(1) are inhabited by Englishmen. The people of
+ Gravensand are considered Mennonites. The majority of them reject the
+ baptism of infants, the observance of the Sabbath, the office of preacher,
+ and any teachers of God's word. They say that thereby all sorts of
+ contentions have come into the world. Whenever they meet, one or the other
+ reads something to them. At Vlissingen, they formerly had a Presbyterian
+ minister(2) who was in agreement with our own church. But at present, many
+ of them have become imbued with divers opinions and it is with them quot
+ homines tot sententiae.(3) They began to absent themselves from the sermon
+ and would not pay the preacher the salary promised to him. He was
+ therefore obliged to leave the place and go to the English Virginias. They
+ have now been without a preacher for several years. Last year a
+ troublesome fellow, a cobbler from Rhode Island in New England,(4) came
+ there saying, he had a commission from Christ. He began to preach at
+ Vlissingen and then went with the people into the river and baptized them.
+ When this became known here, the fiscaal went there, brought Him to this
+ place, and he was banished from the province.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Gravesend, Newtown, Flushing and Hempstead.
+
+ (2) Reverend Francis Doughty.
+
+ (3) As many opinions as men.
+
+ (4) William Wickenden. The schout of the village was fined
+ fifty pounds for allowing him to preach in his house.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At Middleburgh, alias Newtown, they are mostly Independents and have a man
+ called Johannes Moor,(1) of the same way of thinking, who preaches there,
+ but does not serve the sacraments. He says he was licensed in New England
+ to preach, but not authorized to administer the sacraments. He has thus
+ continued for some years. Some of the inhabitants of this village are
+ Presbyterians, but they cannot be supplied by a Presbyterian preacher.
+ Indeed, we do not know that there are any preachers of this denomination
+ to be found among any of the English of New England.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) John Moore, formerly minister at Hempstead; died this
+ year, 1637.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At Heemstede, about seven leagues from here, there live some Independents.
+ There are also many of our own church, and some Presbyterians. They have a
+ Presbyterian preacher, Richard Denton,(1) a pious, godly and learned man,
+ who is in agreement with our church in everything. The Independents of the
+ place listen attentively to his sermons; but when he began to baptize the
+ children of parents who are no members of the church, they rushed out of
+ the church.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Richard Denton (1586-1662), one of the pioneers
+ of Presbyterianism in America, was a Cambridge man, who came
+ over with Winthrop in 1630, and was settled successively at
+ Watertown, Wethersfield and Stamford. His differences with
+ the Congregational clergy of New England had led to his
+ withdrawal, and since 1644 he had been at Hempstead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ On the west shore of the East River, about one miles beyond Hellgate, as
+ we call it, and opposite Flushing, is another English village, called
+ Oostdorp, which was begun two years ago. The inhabitants of this place are
+ also Puritans or Independents. Neither have they a preacher, but they hold
+ meetings on Sunday, and read a sermon of some English writer, and have a
+ prayer.(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Oost-dorp ("East Village") is the present Westchester.
+ "After dinner [Sunday, December 31, 1656] Cornelis van
+ Ruyven went to the house where they assemble on Sundays, to
+ observe their mode of worship, as they have not as yet any
+ clergyman. There I found a gathering of about fifteen men
+ and ten or twelve women. Mr. Baly made a prayer, which
+ being concluded, one Robert Basset read a sermon from a
+ printed book composed and published by an English minister
+ in England. After the reading Mr. Baly made another prayer
+ and they sang a psalm and separated." (Journal of Brian
+ Newton et als., to Oostdorp, <i>Doc. Hist. N.Y.</i>, octavo, III.
+ 923)
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Such is the condition of the church in our province. To this we must add
+ that, as far as we know, not one of all these places, Dutch or English,
+ has a schoolmaster, except the Manhattans, Beverwyck, and now also Fort
+ Casimir on the South River.(1) And although some parents try to give their
+ children some instruction, the success if far from satisfactory, and we
+ can expect nothing else than young men of foolish and undisciplined minds.
+ We see at present no way of improving this state of affairs; first,
+ because some of the villages are just starting, and have no means, the
+ people having come half naked and poor from Holland, to pay a preacher and
+ schoolmaster; secondly, because there are few qualified persons here who
+ can or will teach.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Harmanus van Hoboken at New Amsterdam, Adriaen Jansz at
+ Beverwyck (Albany), and since April of this year Evert
+ Pietersen at Fort Casimir. Two years later (1659) the
+ company sent over Alexander Carolus Curtius, "late professor
+ in Lithuania," to be master of a Latin school in New
+ Amsterdam.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ We can say but little of the conversion of the heathens or Indians here,
+ and see no way to accomplish it, until they are subdued by the numbers and
+ power of our people, and reduced to some sort of civilization; and also
+ unless our people set them a better example, than they have done
+ theretofore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We have had an Indian here with us for about two years. He can read and
+ write Dutch very well. We have instructed him in the fundamental
+ principles of our religion, and he answers publicly in church, and can
+ repeat the Commandments. We have given him a Bible, hoping he might do
+ some good among the Indians, but it all resulted in nothing. He took to
+ drinking brandy, he pawned the Bible, and turned into a regular beast,
+ doing more harm than good among the Indians.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Closing we commend your Reverences to the gracious protection of the
+ Almighty, whom we pray to bless you in the Sacred Ministry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vestri et officio et effectu,(1)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Yours both officially and actually.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ JOHANNES MEGPOLENSIS. SAMUEL DRISSIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Amsterdam, in New Netherland, the 5th of August, 1657.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Revs. Megapolensis and Drisius to the Classis of Amsterdam (October 25,
+ 1657).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Brethren in Christ:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since our last letter, which we hope you are receiving about this time, we
+ have sent in a petition in relation to the Lutheran minister, Joannes
+ Ernestus Gutwasser. Having marked this on its margin, we have sent it to
+ the Rev. Brethren of the Classis. We hope that the Classis will take care
+ that, if possible, no other be sent over, as it is easier to send out an
+ enemy than afterward to thrust him out. We have the promise that the
+ magistrates here will compel him to leave with the ship De Wage. It is
+ said that there has been collected for him at Fort Orange a hundred beaver
+ skins, which are valued here at eight hundred guilders, and which is the
+ surest pay in this country. What has been collected here, we cannot tell.
+ Our magistrates have forbidden him to preach, as he has received no
+ authority from the Directors at Amsterdam for that purpose. Yet we hear
+ that the Hon. Directors at Amsterdam gave him permission to come over. We
+ have stated in a previous letter the injurious tendency of this with
+ reference to the prosperity of our church.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lately we have been troubled by others. Some time since, a shoemaker,(1)
+ leaving his wife and children, came here and preached in conventicles. He
+ was fined, and not being able to pay, was sent away. Again a little while
+ ago there arrived here a ship with Quakers, as they are called. They went
+ away to New England, or more particularly, to Rhode Island, a place of
+ errorists and enthusiasts. It is called by the English themselves the
+ latrina(2) of New England. They left several behind them here, who labored
+ to create excitement and tumult among the people&mdash;particularly two
+ women, the one about twenty, and the other about twenty-eight.(3) These
+ were quite outrageous. After being examined and placed in prison, they
+ were sent away. Subsequently a young man at Hempstead, an English town
+ under the government, aged about twenty-three or twenty-four years,(4) was
+ arrested, and brought thence, seven leagues. He had pursued a similar
+ course and brought several under his influence. The magistrate, in order
+ to repress the evil in the beginning, after he had kept him in confinement
+ for several days, adjudged that he should either pay one hundred guilders
+ or work at the wheelbarrow two years with the negroes. This he obstinately
+ refused to do, though whipped on his back. After two or three days he was
+ whipped in private on his bare back, with threats that the whipping would
+ be repeated again after two or three days, if he should refuse to labor.
+ Upon this a letter was brought by an unknown messenger from a person
+ unknown to the Director-General. The import of this, (written in English),
+ was, Think, my Lord-Director, whether it be not best to send him to Rhode
+ Island, as his labor is hardly worth the cost.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) William Wickenden, of Rhode Island.
+
+ (2) Sink.
+
+ (3) Dorothy Waugh, afterward whipped at Boston, and Mary
+ Wetherhead.
+
+ (4) Robert Hodgson, who had come on the same ship with the
+ preceding. A contemporary Quaker writer attributes his
+ release to the intercession of Stuyvesant's sister, Mrs.
+ Anna Bayard. Persecution of Quakers and other sectaries in
+ New Netherland was continued by Stuyvesant, and finally
+ culminated in the case of John Bowne, of Flushing, a Quaker,
+ who has left us an interesting account of his suffering,
+ printed in the <i>American Historical Record</i> I. 4-8.
+ Banished from the province and transported to Holland, Bowne
+ laid his case before the directors of the West India
+ Company, who reproved Stuyvesant by a letter in which they
+ said (April 16, 1663): "The consciences of men ought to
+ remain free and unshackled,... This maxim of moderation
+ has always been the guide of the magistrates in this city;
+ and the consequence has been that people have flocked from
+ every land to this asylum. Tread thus in their steps, and
+ we doubt not you will be blessed."
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Since the arrival of De Wage from the South River [the Director?] has
+ again written to Joannes Ernestus Gutwasser to go away. On this he
+ presented a petition, a copy of which herewith transmitted, as also a copy
+ signed by several of the Lutheran denomination. We observe that it is
+ signed by the least respectable of that body, and that the most
+ influential among them were unwilling to trouble themselves with it. Some
+ assert that he has brought with him authority from the West India Company
+ to act as minister. Whether dismission and return will take place without
+ trouble remains to be seen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We are at this time in great want of English ministers. It is more than
+ two years since Mr. Doughty, of Flushing which is a town here, went to
+ Virginia, where he is now a preacher. He left because he was not well
+ supported. On October 13, Mr. Moore, of Middelburg, which is another town
+ here, died of a pestilential disease, which prevailed in several of our
+ English towns and in New England. He left a widow with seven or eight
+ children. A year before, being dissatisfied with the meagre and irregular
+ payments from his hearers, he went to Barbadoes, to seek another place.
+ Mr. Richard Denton, who is sound in faith, of a friendly disposition, and
+ beloved by all, cannot be induced by us to remain, although we have
+ earnestly tried to do this in various ways. He first went to Virginia to
+ seek a situation, complaining of lack of salary, and that he was getting
+ in debt, but he has returned thence. He is now fully resolved to go to old
+ England, because his wife, who is sickly, will not go without him, and
+ there is need of their going there, on account of a legacy of four hundred
+ pounds sterling, lately left by a deceased friend, and which they cannot
+ obtain except by their personal presence. At Gravesend there never has
+ been a minister. Other settlements, yet in their infancy, as Aernem,(1)
+ have no minister. It is therefore to be feared that errorists and fanatics
+ may find opportunity to gain strength. We therefore request you, Rev.
+ Brethren, to solicit the Hon. Directors of the West India Company, to send
+ over one or two English preachers, and that directions may be given to the
+ magistracy that the money paid by the English be paid to the magistrate,
+ and not to the preacher, which gives rise to dissatisfaction, and that at
+ the proper time any existing deficiency may be supplied by the Hon.
+ Directors. Otherwise we do not see how the towns will be able to obtain
+ ministers, or if they obtain them, how they will be able to retain them.
+ Complaints continually reach us about the payment of ministers.
+ Nevertheless in New England there are few places without a preacher,
+ although there are many towns, stretching for more than one hundred
+ leagues along the coast. Hoping that by God's blessing and your care
+ something may be effected in this matter, we remain,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Arnhem was a village begun on Smith's Island in Newton
+ Creek.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Your friends and fellow laborers,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOHANNES MEGAPOLENSIS. SAMUEL DRISIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manhattans, Oct. 22, 1657.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rev. Brethren:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the writing of the above letter, and before sealing it, we have
+ learned from the Hon. Directors and the fiscaal, that Joannes Ernestus
+ Gutwasser is not to be found, that his bedding and books were two days ago
+ removed, and that he has left our jurisdiction. Still it is our opinion
+ that he remains concealed here, in order to write home, and make his
+ appearance as if out of the Fatherland; and to persevere with the
+ Lutherans in his efforts. We therefore hope and pray that you may, if
+ possible, take measures to prevent this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAMUEL DRISIUS. Oct. 25, 1657.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Rev. Learned, etc. the Deputies ad res Indicas of the Classis of
+ Amsterdam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rev. J. Megapolensis to the Classis of Amsterdam (September 28, 1658).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rdi. Patres et Fratres in Christo:(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In a preceding letter of September 24, 1658,(2) mention was made of a
+ Jesuit who came to this place, Manhattans, overland, from Canada. I shall
+ now explain the matter more fully, for your better understanding of it. It
+ happened in the year 1642, when I was minister in the colony of
+ Rensselaerswyck, that our Indians in the neighborhood, who are generally
+ called Maquaas, but who call themselves Kajingehaga, were at war with the
+ Canadian or French Indians, who are called by our Indians Adyranthaka.
+ Among the prisoners whom our Indians had taken from the French, was this
+ Jesuit,(3) whom they according to their custom had handled severely. When
+ he was brought to us, his left thumb and several fingers on both hands had
+ been cut off, either wholly or in part, and the nails of the remaining
+ fingers had been chewed off. As this Jesuit had been held in captivity by
+ them for some time, they consented that he should go among the Dutch, but
+ only when accompanied by some of them. At last the Indians resolved to
+ burn him. Concerning this he came to me with grievous complaint. We
+ advised him that next time the Indians were asleep, he should run away and
+ come to us, and we would protect and secure him, and send him by ship to
+ France. This was done. After concealing him and entertaining him for six
+ weeks, we sent him to the Manhattans and thence to England and France, as
+ he was a Frenchman, born at Paris.(4)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Fathers and Brothers in Christ.
+
+ (2) <i>Ecclesiastical Records, State of New York</i>, I. 432-434.
+
+ (3) Father Jogues; see earlier entries.
+
+ (4) Father Jogues was born in Orleans.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Afterward this same Jesuit came again from France to Canada. As our
+ Indians had made peace with the French, he again left Canada, and took up
+ his residence among the Mohawks. He indulged in the largest expectations
+ of converting them to popery, but the Mohawks with their hatchets put him
+ to a violent death. They then brought and presented to me his missal and
+ breviary together with his underclothing, shirts and coat. When I said to
+ them that I would not have thought that they would have killed this
+ Frenchman, they answered, that the Jesuits did not consider the fact, that
+ their people (the French) were always planning to kill the Dutch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the year 1644 our Indians again took captive a Jesuit,(1) who had been
+ treated in the same manner as to his hands and fingers as the above
+ mentioned. The Jesuit was brought to us naked, with his maimed and bloody
+ fingers. We clothed him, placed him under the care of our surgeon, and he
+ almost daily fed at my table. This Jesuit, a native of Rouen,(2) was
+ ransomed by us from the Indians, and we sent him by ship to France. He
+ also returned again from France to Canada. He wrote me a letter, as the
+ previously mentioned one had done, thanking me for the benefits I had
+ conferred on him. He stated also that he had not argued, when with me, on
+ the subject of religion, yet he had felt deeply interested in me on
+ account of my soul, and admonished me to come again into the Papal Church
+ from which I had separated myself. In each case I returned such a reply
+ that a second letter was never sent me.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Father Giuseppe Bressani (1612-1672).
+
+ (2) Of Rome, in fact.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The French have now for some time been at peace with our Indians. In
+ consequence thereof, it has happened that several Jesuits have again gone
+ among our Indians, who are located about four or five days' journey from
+ Fort Orange. But they did not permanently locate themselves there. All
+ returned to Canada except one, named Simon Le Moyne. He has several times
+ accompanied the Indians out of their own country, and visited Fort Orange.
+ At length he came here to the Manhattans, doubtless at the invitation of
+ Papists living here, especially for the sake of the French privateers, who
+ are Papists, and have arrived here with a good prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He represented that he had heard the other Jesuits speak much of me, who
+ had also highly praised me for the favors and benefits I had shown them;
+ that he therefore could not, while present here, neglect personally to pay
+ his respects to me, and thank me for the kindness extended to their
+ Society. 1. He told me that during his residence among our Indians he had
+ discovered a salt spring, situated fully one hundred leagues from the sea;
+ and the water was so salt that he had himself boiled excellent salt from
+ it.(1) 2. There was also another spring which furnished oil. Oleaginous
+ matter floated on its surface, with which the Indians anointed their
+ heads. 3. There was another spring of hot sulphurous water. If paper and
+ dry materials were thrown into it, they became ignited. Whether all this
+ is true, or a mere Jesuit lie, I will not decide. I mention the whole on
+ the responsibility and authority of the Jesuit.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Father Le Moyne made this discovery while sojourning
+ among the Onondagas in 1654.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ He told me that he had lived about twenty years among the Indians. When he
+ was asked what fruit had resulted from his labors, and whether he had
+ taught the Indians anything more than to make the sign of the cross, and
+ such like superstitions, he answered that he was not inclined to debate
+ with me, but wanted only to chat. He spent eight days here, and examined
+ everything in our midst. He then liberally dispensed his indulgences, for
+ he said to the Papists (in the hearing of one of our people who understood
+ French), that they need not go to Rome; that he had as full power from the
+ Pope to forgive their sins, as if they were to go to Rome. He then
+ returned and resided in the country of the Mohawks the whole winter. In
+ the spring, however, troubles began to arise again between our Indians and
+ the Canadians. He then packed up his baggage, and returned to Canada. On
+ his journey, when at Fort Orange, he did not forget me, but sent me three
+ documents: the first, on the succession of the Popes; the second, on the
+ Councils; and the third was about heresies, all written out by himself. He
+ sent with them also, a letter to me, in which he exhorted me to peruse
+ carefully these documents, and meditate on them, and that Christ hanging
+ on the Cross was still ready to receive me, if penitent. I answered him by
+ the letter herewith forwarded, which was sent by a yacht going from here
+ to the river St. Lawrence in New France.(1) I know not whether I shall
+ receive an answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Valete, Domini Fratres, Vester ex officio,(2)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOANNES MEGAPOLENSIS 1658, Sept. 28.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) One of the fruits of Father Le Moyne's visit to New
+ Netherland was that the Dutch obtained from the governor of
+ Canada permission to carry on trade, except the fur trade,
+ on the St. Lawrence.
+
+ (2) Farewell, brethren; yours officially.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Rev. Henricus Selyns to the Classis of Amsterdam (October 4, 1660)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverend, Wise and Pious Teachers:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We cannot be so forgetful as to omit to inform you concerning our churches
+ and services. While at sea, we did not neglect religious worship, but
+ every morning and evening we besought God's guidance and protection, with
+ prayer and the singing of a psalm. On Sundays and feast-days the Holy
+ Gospel was read, when possible. The sacrament was not administered on
+ shipboard, and we had no sick people during the voyage. God's favor
+ brought us all here in safety and health. Arrived in New Netherland, we
+ were first heard at the Manhattans; but the peace-negotiations at the
+ Esopus,(1) where we also went, and the general business of the government
+ necessarily delayed our installation until now. We have preached here at
+ the Esopus, also at Fort Orange; during This time of waiting we were well
+ provided with food and lodging. Esopus needs more people, but Breuckelen
+ more money; wherefore I serve on Sundays, in the evenings only, at the
+ General's bouwery,(2) at his expense. The installation at Brooklyn was
+ made by the Honorable Nicasius de Sille, fiscaal,(3) and Martin Kriegers,
+ burgomaster,(4) with an open commission from his Honor the
+ Director-General.(5) I was cordially received by the magistrates and
+ consistory, and greeted by Domine Polhemius. We do not preach in a church,
+ but in a barn; next winter we shall by God's favor and the general
+ assistance of the people erect a church.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The Indians of Esopus had broken out in hostilities in
+ the autumn of 1659. The next summer Stuyvesant went there,
+ after some defeats of the tribe, and made peace formally,
+ July 15, 1660. A congregation had lately been formed there,
+ which called Domine Harmanus Blom to be its pastor.
+
+ (2) Stuyvesant's Bowery, or farm, acquired by him in 1651,
+ lay in the present region of Third Avenue and Tenth Street.
+ Near the present site of St. Mark's Church he built a chapel
+ for his family, his negro slaves, some forty in number, and
+ the other inhabitants of the neighborhood.
+
+ (3) Of New Netherland.
+
+ (4) Of New Amsterdam.
+
+ (5) For this letter of induction, see <i>Ecclesiastical
+ Records</i>, I. 480.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The audience is passably large, coming from Middelwout, New Amersfort, and
+ often Gravesande increases it; but most come from the Manhattans. The
+ Ferry, the Walebacht, and Guyanes,(1) all belong to Breuckelen. The Ferry
+ is about two thousand paces across the river, or to the Manhattans, from
+ the Breuckelen Ferry. I found at Breuckelen one elder, two deacons, twenty
+ four members, thirty one householders, and one hundred and thirty-four
+ people. The consistory will remain for the present as it is. In due time
+ we will have more material and we will know the congregation better.
+ Cathechizing will not be held here before the winter; but we will begin it
+ at the preaching service there. It will be most suitable to administer the
+ Lord's Supper on Christmas, Easter, Whitsuntide and in September. On the
+ day following these festivals-days a thanksgiving sermon will be preached.
+ I might have taken up my residence at the Manhattans, because of its
+ convenience; but my people, all of them evincing their love and affection
+ for me, have provided me a dwelling of which I cannot complain. I preach
+ at Breuckelen in the morning; but at the Bouwery at the end of the
+ catechetical sermon. The Bouwery is a place of relaxation and pleasure,
+ whither people go from the Manhattans, for the evening service. There are
+ there forty negroes, from the region of the Negro Coast, besides the
+ household families. There is here as yet no consistory, but the deacons
+ from New Amsterdam provisionally receive the alms; and at least one
+ deacon, if not an elder, ought to be chosen there. Besides myself, there
+ are in New Netherland the Domines Joannes Megapolensis and Samuel Drisius
+ at New Amsterdam; Domine Gideon Schaats at Fort Orange; Domine Joannes
+ Polhemius at Middelwout and New Amersfort; and Domine Hermanus Blom at the
+ Esopus. I have nothing more to add, except to express my sincere gratitude
+ and to make my respectful acknowledgements. I commend your Reverences,
+ wise and pious teachers, to God's protection, and am,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yours humbly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENRICUS SELYNS, Minister of the Holy Gospel at Breuckelen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From Amsterdam on the Manhattans, Oct. 4, 1660.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Wallabout and Gowanus.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Rev. Henricus Selyns to the Classis of Amsterdam (June 9, 1664).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very Reverend, Pious and Learned Brethren in Christ:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With Christian salutations of grace and peace, this is to inform you, that
+ with proper submission, we take the liberty of reporting to the Very Rev.
+ Classis the condition and welfare of the Church of Jesus Christ, to which
+ your Reverences called me, as well as my request and friendly prayer for
+ an honorable dismission.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for me, your Rev. Assembly sent me to the congregation at Breuckelen to
+ preach the Gospel there, and administer the sacraments. This we have done
+ to the best of our ability; and according to the size of the place with a
+ considerable increase of members. There were only a few members there on
+ my arrival; but these have with God's help and grace increased fourfold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Trusting that it would not displease your Reverences, and would also be
+ very profitable to the Church of Christ, we found it easy to do what might
+ seem troublesome; for we have also taken charge of the congregation at the
+ General's Bouwery in the evening, as we have told you before. An exception
+ to this arrangement is made in regard to the administration of the Lord's
+ Supper. As it is not customary with your Reverences to administer it in
+ the evening, we thought, after conference with our Reverend Brethren of
+ the New Amsterdam congregation, and mature deliberation, that it would be
+ more edifying to preach at the Bouwery, on such occasions, in the morning,
+ and then have the Communion, after the Christian custom of our Fatherland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As to baptisms, the negroes occasionally request that we should baptize
+ their children, but we have refused to do so, partly on account of their
+ lack of knowledge and of faith, and partly because of the worldly and
+ perverse aims on the part of said negroes. They wanted nothing else than
+ to deliver their children from bodily slavery, without striving for piety
+ and Christian virtues. Nevertheless when it was seemly to do so, we have,
+ to the best of our ability, taken much trouble in private and public
+ catechizing. This has borne but little fruit among the elder people who
+ have no faculty of comprehension; but there is some hope for the youth who
+ have improved reasonably well. Not to administer baptism among them for
+ the reasons given, is also the custom among our colleagues.(1) But the
+ most important thing is, that the Father of Grace and God of Peace has
+ blessed our two congregations with quietness and harmony, out of the
+ treasury of his graciousness; so that we have had no reason to complain to
+ the Rev. Classis, which takes such things, however, in good part; or to
+ trouble you, as we might have anticipated.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The enslaving of Africans having at first been justified
+ on the ground of their heathenism, the nation that to
+ baptize them would make it unlawful to hold them in bondage
+ was frequent among owners in the seventeenth century, and
+ operated to deter them from permitting the Christianizing of
+ their slaves. "I may not forget a resolution which his Maty
+ [James II.] made, and had a little before enter'd upon it at
+ the Council Board, at Windsor or Whitehall, that the Negroes
+ in the Plantations should all be baptiz'd, exceedingly
+ declaiming against that impiety of their masters prohibiting
+ it, out of a mistaken opinion that they would be ipso facto
+ free; but his Maty persists in his resolution to have them
+ chisten'd, wch piety the Bishop [Ken] blessed him for."
+ Evelyn, <i>Diary</i>, II. 479 (1685).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the stipulated number of years, pledged to the West India
+ Company, is diminishing; although the obligation we owe to them who
+ recommend us(1) naturally continues. Also, on account of their old age, we
+ would love to see again our parents, and therefore we desire to return
+ home. On revolving the matter in my mind, and not to be lacking in filial
+ duty, I felt it to be proper to refer the subject to God and my greatly
+ beloved parents who call for me, whether I should remain or return home at
+ the expiration of my contract.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The classis.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As we understand, they are, next to myself, most anxious for my return,
+ and have received my discharge from the Hon. Directors, and have notified
+ the Deputies ad Causas Indicas thereof, which has pleased us. We trust
+ that we shall receive also from your Reverences a favorable reply, relying
+ upon your usual kindness. Yet it is far from us to seem to pass by your
+ Reverences, and give the least cause for dissatisfaction. I have
+ endeavored to deserve the favor of the Rev. Classis by the most arduous
+ services for the welfare of Christ's church, and am always ready to serve
+ your Reverences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is my purpose when I return home, when my stipulated time is fulfilled,
+ to give a verbal account of my ministry here, and the state of the church,
+ that you may be assured that any omissions in duty have been through
+ ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Domine Samuel Megapolensis(1) has safely arrived, but Domine Warnerus
+ Hadson,(2) whom you had sent as preacher to the South River, died on the
+ passage over. It is very necessary to supply his place, partly on account
+ of the children who have not been baptized since the death of Domine
+ Wely,(3) and partly on account of the abominable sentiments of various
+ persons there, who speak very disrespectfully of the Holy Scriptures.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Reverend Samuel Megapolensis, born in 1634, studied
+ three years at Harvard College and three at the University
+ of Utrecht. In 1662 he was called by the classis of
+ Amsterdam to the ministry in New Netherland, and ordained by
+ them. In 1664, having meanwhile studied medicine at
+ Leyden, he went out to New Netherland, and was minister of
+ Breukelen from that time to 1669, when he returned to
+ Holland. He died in 1700 as pastor emeritus of the Scottish
+ church at Dordrecht.
+
+ (2) Elsewhere called Hassingh.
+
+ (3) Reverend Everardus Welius, minister of New Amstel from
+ 1657 to 1659, died in the latter year, leaving without
+ pastor a church of sixty members.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In addition there is among the Swedes a certain Lutheran preacher, who
+ does not lead a Christian life.(1) There is also another person, who has
+ exchanged the Lutheran pulpit for a schoolmaster's place. This undoubtedly
+ has done great damage among the sheep, who have so long wandered about
+ without a shepherd except the forementioned pastor, who leads such an
+ unchristian life. God grant that no damage be done to Christ's church, and
+ that your Reverences may provide a blessed instrument for good.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) Lokenius's wife ran away from him, and he too hastily
+ married another before obtaining his divorce. The person
+ next alluded to is probably Abelius Selskoorn, a student,
+ who for a time had conducted divine service at Sandhook
+ (Fort Casimir).
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In view of the deplorable condition of New Netherland, for the savages
+ have killed, wounded and captured some of our people, and have burnt
+ several houses at the Esopus, and the English, with flying banners, have
+ declared our village and the whole of Long Island to belong to the
+ King:(1) therefore the first Wednesday of each month since last July has
+ been observed as a day of fasting and prayer, in order to ask God for his
+ fatherly compassion and pity. The good God, praise be to him, has brought
+ about everything for the best, by the arrival of the last ships. The
+ English are quiet, the savages peaceful; our lamentations have been turned
+ into songs of praise, and the monthly day of fasting into a day of
+ thanksgiving. Thus we spent last Wednesday, the last of the days of
+ prayer. Blessed be God who causes wars to cease to the ends of the earth,
+ and breaks the bow and spear asunder. Herewith, Very Reverend, Pious, and
+ Learned Brethren in Christ, be commend to God for the perfecting of the
+ saints and the edification of the body of Christ. Vale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your Reverences' humble servant in Christ Jesus,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HENRICUS SELYNS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Breuckelen, in New Netherland, June 9, 1664.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The boundaries between New England and New Netherland
+ had always been in dispute. The English population on Long
+ Island grew, an encroached upon the Dutch towns at the west
+ end; and the towns in that region which were partly English,
+ partly Dutch in population were of doubtful allegiance. The
+ graceless Major John Scott, coming to the island with some
+ royal authority, formed a combination of Hempstead,
+ Gravesend, Flushing, Newtown, Jamaica and Oyster Bay, with
+ himself as president, and then proceeded (January, 1664), at
+ the head of 170 men, to reduce the neighboring Dutch
+ villages. Some account of the affair, in the shape in which
+ it reached the Dutch public, may be seen in the extract
+ printed at the end of this letter.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ [The following account of the English encroachments upon Long Island has
+ not been previously translated. It may serve as a summary of the events,
+ or at least of the version of them which came before the Dutch public soon
+ after. It is derived from the <i>Hollantze Mercurius</i> of 1664 (Haerlem,
+ 1665), being part 15 of the <i>Mercurius</i>, which was an annual of the
+ type of the modern <i>Annual Register</i> or of Wassenaer's <i>Historisch
+ Verhael</i>, which preceded it. The passage is at page 10.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In New Netherland the English made bold to come out of New England upon
+ various villages and places belonging under the protection of Their High
+ Mightinesses and the Dutch West India Company even upon Long Island,
+ setting up the banner of Britain and proclaiming that they knew of no New
+ Netherland but that that land belonged solely to the English nation.
+ Finally their wisest conceded, since thus many troubles had arisen about
+ the boundary, that representatives of both nations should come together
+ upon that subject. This was carried out in November last. The Dutch
+ commissioners went to Boston, where they were received by four companies
+ of citizens and a hundred cavalrymen. There they were told that the
+ commissioners on the English side could not arrive to treat of the matter
+ for eight days.(1) Meanwhile the English incited three or four villages to
+ revolt against their government. But all those that were of divided
+ population, like those of Heemstede and Gravesande, refused to accept the
+ English king but said that they had thus far been well ruled by Their High
+ Mightinesses and would so remain, though they were English born. Afterward
+ Heemstede was also subdued but Vlissingen held itself faithful, and some
+ places remained neutral, while the commissioners were detained and finally
+ came again to Amsterdam without having accomplished anything. Meanwhile
+ also the savages of Esopus played their part, having made bold at a place
+ on the river to attack two Dutchmen and cut off their heads.(2)]
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) The journalist here confounds Stuyvesant's visit to
+ Boston in September, 1663, to meet the Commissioners of the
+ United Colonies of New England, with that which his envoys,
+ Van Ruyven, Van Cortlandt and Lawrence, made to Hartford in
+ October, to confer with the General Assembly of Connecticut.
+ His date of November is wrong for both. The attempt to
+ revolutionize the English villages on Long Island had taken
+ place in September; their internal revolt occurred in
+ November. Stuyvesant was obliged to acquiesce. The
+ "Combination" of the English towns under the presidency of
+ Major John Scott and his attempt to win the Dutch towns from
+ their allegiance, took place in January and February, 1664.
+ Stuyvesant was again unable to make effectual resistance,
+ but made a truce with Scott for twelve months.
+
+ (2) After three years of peace at Esopus, the Indians again
+ broke out in hostilities in June, 1663, resulting in the
+ slaughter of twenty-one settlers and the captivity of forty-
+ five others. Three successive expeditions, under
+ Burgomaster Martin Kregier, in July, September and October,
+ destroyed the forts of the Indians, broke down their
+ resistance, and released most of the captives. Captain
+ Kregier's journal of these expeditions is printed in
+ O'Callaghan's <i>Documentary History</i>, IV. 45-98.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Rev. Samuel Drisius to the Classis of Amsterdam (August 5, 1664).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Peace of Christ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reverend, Learned and Beloved Brethren in Christ Jesus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I find a letter from the Rev. Classis, which I have not yet answered; and
+ a good opportunity now offering itself by the departure of our colleague,
+ Domine Henricus Selyns, I cannot omit to write a letter to your
+ Reverences. We could have wished, that Domine Selyns had longer continued
+ with us, both on account of his diligence and success in preaching and
+ catechizing, and of his humble and edifying life. By this he has attracted
+ a great many people, and even some of the negroes, so that many are sorry
+ for his departure. But considering the fact that he owes filial obedience
+ to his aged parents, it is God's will that he should leave us. We must be
+ resigned, therefore, while we commit him to God and the word of His grace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Concerning the places in which he has preached, especially the village
+ called Breuckelen, and the Bouwerie, nothing has been decided yet; but I
+ think that the son of Domine Megapolensis, who has recently come over,
+ will take charge of them, as he has not been sent by the Directors to any
+ particular place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The French on Staten Island would also like to have a preacher, but as
+ they number only a few families, are very poor, and cannot contribute much
+ to a preacher's salary, and as our support here is slow and small, there
+ is not much hope, that they will receive the light. In the meantime, that
+ they may not be wholly destitute, Director Stuyvesant has, at their
+ request, allowed me to go over there every two months, to preach and
+ administer the Lord's Supper. This I have now done for about a year. In
+ the winter this is very difficult, for it is a long stretch of water, and
+ it is sometimes windy, with a heavy sea. We have, according to the
+ decision of the Classis, admitted the Mennonist, who is quite unknown to
+ us, to the communion, without rebaptism;(1) but last week he and his wife
+ removed to Curacao in the West Indies, to live there. The preacher, sent
+ to New Amstel on the South River, died on the way, as we are told.
+ Ziperius left for Virginia long ago.(2) He behaved most shamefully here,
+ drinking, cheating and forging other people's writings, so that he was
+ forbidden not only to preach, but even to keep school. Closing herewith I
+ commend the Rev. Brethren to God's protection and blessing in their work.
+ This is the prayer of
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your Reverences' dutiful friend in Christ,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAMUEL DRISIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ New Amsterdam, August 5, Anno 1664.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) In a letter of October 4, 1660, Drisius had consulted
+ the classis on the question whether a well-behaved young man
+ residing in New Amsterdam, formerly one of the Mennonites
+ and baptized by them, might be admitted to the Lord's Supper
+ without rebaptism. The classis, by letter of December 16,
+ 1661, ruled that according to the practice of the Dutch
+ churches, his Mennonite baptism was to be regarded as
+ sufficient.
+
+ (2) Michael Ziperius and his wife came from Curacao in 1659,
+ hoping to receive a call in New Netherland. The classis
+ warned Drisius against him.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Rev. Samuel Drisius to the Classis of Amsterdam (September 15,
+ 1664).(1)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To the Reverend, Learned and Pious Brethren of the Rev. Classis of
+ Amsterdam:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I cannot refrain from informing you of our present situation, namely, that
+ we have been brought under the government of the King of England. On the
+ 26th of August there arrived in the Bay of the North River, near Staten
+ Island, four great men-of-war, or frigates, well manned with sailors and
+ soldiers. They were provided with a patent or commission from the King of
+ Great Britain to demand and take possession of this province, in the name
+ of His Majesty. If this could not be done in an amicable way, they were to
+ attack the place, and everything was to be thrown open for the English
+ soldiers to plunder, rob and pillage. We were not a little troubled by the
+ arrival of these frigates.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) There is another translation of this letter in <i>N.Y.
+ Col. Doc.</i>, XIII. 393-394.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Our Director-General and Council, with the municipal authorities of the
+ city, took the matter much to heart and zealously sought, by messages
+ between them and General Richard Nicolls, to delay the decision. They
+ asked that the whole business should be referred to His Majesty of
+ England, and the Lords States General of the Netherlands; but every effort
+ was fruitless. They landed their soldiers about two leagues from here, at
+ Gravezandt, and marched them over Long Island to the Ferry opposite this
+ place. The frigates came up under full sail on the 4th of September with
+ guns trained to one side. They had orders, and intended, if any resistance
+ was shown to them, to give a full broadside on this open place, then take
+ it by assault, and make it a scene of pillage and bloodshed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Our Hon. Rulers of the Company, and the municipal authorities of the city,
+ were inclined to defend the place, but found that it was impossible, for
+ the city was not in a defensible condition.(1) And even if fortified, it
+ could not have been defended, because every man posted on the circuit of
+ it would have been four rods distant from his neighbor. Besides, the store
+ of powder in the fort, as well as in the city, was small. No relief or
+ assistance could be expected, while daily great numbers on foot and on
+ horseback, from New England, joined the English, hotly bent upon
+ plundering the place. Savages and privateers also offered their services
+ against us. Six hundred Northern Indians with one hundred and fifty French
+ privateers, had even an English commission. Therefore upon the earnest
+ request of our citizens and other inhabitants, our authorities found
+ themselves compelled to come to terms, for the sake of avoiding bloodshed
+ and pillage. The negotiations were concluded on the 6th of September.(2)
+ The English moved in on the 8th, according to agreement.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ (1) See the remonstrance which the inhabitants addressed to
+ Stuyvesant, <i>N.Y. Col. Doc.</i>, II. 248.
+
+ (2) Articles of capitulation, ibid., 250-253, and Brodhead,
+ <i>History of New York</i>, I. 762-763.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ After the surrender of the place several Englishmen, who had lived here a
+ long time and were our friends, came to us, and said that God had signally
+ overruled matters, that the affair had been arranged by negotiations; else
+ nothing but pillage, bloodshed ad general ruin would have followed. This
+ was confirmed by several soldiers who said that they had come here from
+ England hoping for booty; but that now, since the matter turned out so
+ differently, they desired to return to England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Articles of Surrender stipulate that our religious services and
+ doctrines, together with the preachers, shall remain and continue
+ unchanged. Therefore we could not separate ourselves from our congregation
+ and hearers, but consider it our duty to remain with them for some time
+ yet, that they may not scatter and run wild.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hon. Company still owes me a considerable sum, which I hope and wish
+ they would pay. Closing herewith, I recommend your Honors' persons and
+ work to God's blessing and remain,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Your willing colleague,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SAMUEL DRISIUS.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Manhattan, September 15, 1664.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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