A Short History of the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about A Short History of the United States.

A Short History of the United States eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 355 pages of information about A Short History of the United States.

[Sidenote:  The Dutch fur-traders.]

[Sidenote:  Settle on Manhattan Island.]

[Sidenote:  New Netherland.]

59.  The Dutch Fur-Traders.—­Hudson’s failure to find a new way to India made the Dutch India Company lose interest in American exploration.  But many Dutch merchants were greatly interested in Hudson’s account of the “Great River of the Mountain.”  They thought that they could make money from trading for furs with the Indians.  They sent many expeditions to Hudson’s River, and made a great deal of money.  Some of their captains explored the coast northward and southward as far as Boston harbor and Delaware Bay.  Their principal trading-posts were on Manhattan Island, and near the site of Albany.  In 1614 some of the leading traders obtained from the Dutch government the sole right to trade between New France and Virginia.  They called this region New Netherland.

[Sidenote:  The Dutch West India Company, 1621. Higginson, 90-96; Explorers, 303-307; Source-book, 42-44.]

[Sidenote:  The patroons, 1628.]

60.  The Founding of New Netherland.—­In 1621 the Dutch West India Company was founded.  Its first object was trade, but it also was directed “to advance the peopling” of the American lands claimed by the Dutch.  Colonists now came over; they settled at New Amsterdam, on the southern end of Manhattan Island, and also on the western end of Long Island.  By 1628 there were four hundred colonists in New Netherland.  But the colony did not grow rapidly, so the Company tried to interest rich men in the scheme of colonization, by giving them large tracts of land and large powers of government.  These great land owners were called patroons.  Most of them were not very successful.  Indeed, the whole plan was given up before long, and land was given to any one who would come out and settle.

[Illustration:  THE DUTCH COLONY OF NEW AMSTERDAM.]

[Sidenote:  Governor Kieft.]

[Sidenote:  Kieft orders the Indians to be killed.]

[Sidenote:  Results of the massacre.]

61.  Kieft and the Indians, 1643-44.—­The worst of the early Dutch governors was William Kieft (Keeft).  He was a bankrupt and a thief, who was sent to New Netherland in the hope that he would reform.  At first he did well and put a stop to the smuggling and cheating which were common in the colony.  Emigrants came over in large numbers, and everything seemed to be going on well when Kieft’s brutality brought on an Indian war that nearly destroyed the colony.  The Indians living near New Amsterdam sought shelter from the Iroquois on the mainland opposite Manhattan Island.  Kieft thought it would be a grand thing to kill all these Indian neighbors while they were collected together.  He sent a party of soldiers across the river and killed many of them.  The result was a fierce war with all the neighboring tribes.  The Dutch colonists were driven from their farms.  Even New Amsterdam with its stockade was not safe.  For the Indians sometimes came within the stockade and killed the people in the town.  When there were less than two hundred people left in New Amsterdam, Kieft was recalled, and Peter Stuyvesant was sent as governor in his stead.

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A Short History of the United States from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.