New Netherland settlements
New Netherland was the 17th century colonial province of the Republic of the Seven United Netherlands on the northeastern coast of North America. The claimed territory was the land from the Delmarva Peninsula to southern Cape Cod. The settled areas are now part of the Mid-Atlantic states of New York, New Jersey, and Delaware, with small outposts in Connecticut and Pennsylvania. Its capital of New Amsterdam was located at the southern tip of the island of Manhattan on the Upper New York Bay.
The region was initially explored in 1609 by Henry Hudson on an expedition for the Dutch East India Company. It was later surveyed and charted, and was given its name in 1614. The Dutch named the three main rivers of the province the Zuyd Rivier, the Noort Rivier, and the Versche Rivier. They intended to use them to gain access to the interior, the indigenous population, and the lucrative fur trade.
International law required discovery, charting, and settlement to perfect a territorial claim. Large scale settlement was rejected in favor of a formula that was working in Asia of establishing factories. This period is sometimes referred to as the Dutch Golden Age, despite on-going wars on the European continent, and it was difficult to recruit people to leave the economic boom and cultural vibrancy of Europe. Mismanagement and under-funding by the Dutch West India Company hindered early settlement, as well as misunderstandings and armed conflict with Indians. Liberalization of trade, a degree of self-rule, and the loss of Dutch Brazil led to exponential growth in the 1650s. Transfers of power from the Netherlands to England were peaceful in the province, the last one formalized in 1674.
Forts and Factorijen
The first of two Forts Nassau was built in Mahican territory during the first decade, where commerce could be conducted with Indians, and factorijen went up at Schenectady, Schoharie, Esopus, Quinnipiac, Communipaw, Ninigret, Totoket,, Schuykill, and elsewhere. Trapper Jan Rodrigues is believed to have been the first non-Indian to winter on the island of Manhattan in 1611.Nut Island
The States General of the Dutch Republic awarded the newly formed Dutch West India Company a trade monopoly for the region in 1621, and New Netherland became a province of the Dutch Republic in 1624. The South River was initially chosen as the site of the capital because the colonists felt that it had the best climate. However, summer humidity, mosquitos, and winter freezing made the North River more appealing. A number of ships brought settlers to the New World, at first to Noten Island and soon after to the tip of Manhattan, and the colonists began construction of Fort Amsterdam, around which the colony began to grow. Small groups of the early arrivals were dispersed to Fort Orange, to Fort Wilhelmus, or to Kievets Hoek, but those who went to Fort Wilhelmus and Kievets Hoek were later recalled. Among those who made the crossing were many Walloons and 11 Africans as company-owned slaves.Patroonships
In 1629, the Dutch West India Company introduced the Charter of Freedoms and Exemptions, a series of inducements commonly known as the patroon system. Invested members could receive vast land patents and manorial rights, somewhat reminiscent of a feudal lord, if they were willing to fulfill certain conditions, including transporting and settling at least 50 persons. A number of attempts were made, but the only notable success was the Manor of Rensselaerswyck. Pavonia, across the river from New Amsterdam, was returned to the company and became a company-managed holding. In 1640, company policy was changed to allow land purchases by individuals in good standing.South River
Another patroon patent was Zwaanendael Colony later named by the British, Lewes, Delaware, the first Dutch colonial settlement on the Zuyd Rivier, but it was plundered soon after its founding in 1631. After 1638, settlement was mostly in New Sweden, and these were brought under New Netherland control in 1655 when Fort Casimir was built. In 1663, Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy attempted to create a utopian settlement in the region, but it expired under English rule.Fresh River (Connecticut)
The Dutch established a short-lived factorij trading post at Kievits Hoek in present-day Old Saybrook, Connecticut shortly after constructing their first settlement on the island of Manhattan. They abandoned it soon after, however, in order to focus on the trading post at Fort Goede Hoop on the Connecticut River, which was completed in 1633. The Dutch also had a trading post and possible fort at the mouth of the Branford River in Branford, Connecticut, which still contains a wharf called "Dutch Wharf." Soon after, settlers from the Massachusetts Bay Colony formed the Connecticut Colony in 1639, and the New Haven Colony soon followed. Petrus Stuyvesant attempted to prevent further competition for the area and agreed to a border 50 miles west of the river in the Treaty of Hartford. This did some not stem the flow of New Englanders to Long Island and the mainland along Long Island Sound, however.North River
The port called the Manhattans grew up at the mouth of the North River. New Amsterdam was the capital of the province and received its municipal charter in 1652; this included the isle of Manhattan, Staaten Eylandt, Pavonia, and the Lange Eylandt towns, including Gravesend, Breuckelen, and Nieuw Amersfoort.A municipal charter was also granted to Beverwijck in 1652, which had grown from a trading post to a bustling town in the midst of Rensselaerswyck. In 1657, the homesteads scattered along the west bank of the Hudson Valley in Esopus country were required to build a garrison that became the province's third largest town of Wiltwijk.
The Dutch Belt
Colonial settlers spread throughout the region after the final transfer of power to the English with the Treaty of Westminster, establishing many of the towns and cities that exist today. The Dutch Reformed Church played an important role in this expansion. Settlers followed the course of the Hudson River in the north via New York Harbor to the Raritan River in the south along what George Washington called the "Dutch Belt".Demographics
Population estimates do not include Native Americans.- 1628: 270
- 1630: 300
- 1640: 500
- 1650: 800 -1,000
- 1664: 9,000
Settlement pre-1674
- Fort Nassau on Castle Eylandt in the North River, now Westerlo Island
- Fort Nassau on the Zuyd River, dismantled and relocated in, now Gloucester City
- Noten Eylant at the mouth of the North River, now Governors Island
- Fort Orange to replace Fort Nassau on the North River, now Albany
- Fort Wilhelmus, on the Zuyd Rivier
- Roduins or Rodenbergh, now New Haven
- Kievets Hoek, now Old Saybrook
- New Amsterdam, now Lower Manhattan
- Fort Amsterdam, at the tip of the isle of Manhattan
- Rensselaerswyck, patroonship Kiliaen van Rensselaer on the North River, now Capital District
- Pavonia on the North River, attempted patroonship of, now Hudson County
- Zwaanendael, on the Zuyd Rivier, soon after plundered by the local population., now Lewes
- Fort Huis de Goed Hoop near the Fresh River, now Hartford
- Communipaw, as Jan de Lacher's Hoeck, now Liberty State Park
- Noortwijk, now Greenwich Village
- Connecticut Colony, by New Englanders near Fort Huis de Goed Hoop
- Quetenesse, now Dutch Island in Rhode Island, and possibly nearby Fort Ninigret
- Nieuwe Haarlem and municipal charter
- Pelham, a New Englander's homestead
- New Haven Colony New Englander towns found at mouth of Quinnipiac River
- Fort Christina, first of Swedish settlements on the Zuyd Rivier, Fort Altena in 1655, now Wilmington
- Broncks now The Bronx, settled by Jonas Bronck
- Paulus Hoeck, a patent at Pavonia
- Staaten Eylandt, an attempted patroonship of Cornelius Meyln ]
- Southhold
- Achter Col, an attempted patroonship on the Hackensack River
- Vriessendael, homestead of David Pietersen de Vries, now Edgewater
- Greenwich, English manor under Dutch jurisdiction
- Vriedelandt, Englishman John Throckmorton settles, now Throg's Neck
- Maspat, under a charter granted to Rev. Francis Doughty, now Maspeth
- Beverwijck a trading post surrounded by Rensselaerswyck, municipal charter
- Peekskill
- Hemsteede, New England settlement on Lange Eylandt
- Hoboken, a lease at Pavonia
- Eastchester homestead of Anne Hutchinson's family and followers
- Gravesend settled under Dutch patent by English Anabaptist Lady Deborah Moody and followers
- Vlissingen under Dutch patent, mostly English colonists, many of them Quakers, now Flushing
- Breuckelen, now Brooklyn Heights
- Colen Donck, homestead of Jonkheer Adriaen van der Donck, now Yonkers
- Constable Hook patent
- Nieuw Amersfoort, now Flatlands
- Minkakwa, now Caven Point
- Weehawken, a land patent
- Fort Beversreede on the Schuylkill River
- De Bouwerij homestead of Petrus Stuyvesant
- Fort Casimir now New Castle
- Midwout, now Midwood
- Esopus now Ulster County
- Nieuw Utrecht, or New Utrecht
- Oester Baai, at the 1650 border between New England and New Netherland, now Oyster Bay
- Pelham Manor, Englishman Thomas Pell's purchase New Netherland/Siwanoy territory
- Pamrapo Achter Col patents, now Bayonne
- Nieuw Amstel, now New Castle
- Rustdorp land patent, now Jamaica
- Wiltwyk , now Kingston
- Poughkeepsie, by Barent Baltus
- Bergen, now Hudson County
- Rye, land purchase by English settlers
- Oude Dorpe, now Old Town on Staten Island
- Boswijck, now Bushwick
- Schenectady
- Claverack, now Hudson
- Plockhoy Zwaanendael, by Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy
- English Neighborhood, eastern Bergen County
- Rotterdam, as Woestina
- Nieuw Dorp, now New Dorp
Reformed Congregations pre-1776 (selection)
- 1683 - New Pfaltz
- 1684 - Sleepy Hollow
- 1686 - Hackensack
- 1693 - Acquackanonk in Passaic
- 1694 - Tappan
- 1699 - Brick in Marlboro
- 1700 - Second River in Belleville
- 1703 - Six Mile Run
- 1710 - Ponds in Oakland
- 1716 - Claverack
- 1716 - Fishkill
- 1716 - Poughkeepsie
- 1717 - New Brunswick
- 1717 - Schaghticoke
- 1719 - North Branch
- 1720 - Fairfield
- 1723 - Herkimer
- 1724 - Schraalenburgh now Dumont
- 1725 - Paramus
- 1725 - Stone Arabia in Palatine
- 1727 - Harlingen
- 1731 - Rhinebeck
- 1736 - Pompton Plains
- 1740 - Ramapo in Mahwah
- 1750 - Canajoharie
- 1750 - Clarkstown
- 1755 - Totowa in Paterson
- 1756 - Schodack
- 1756 - Montivlle
- 1758 - Caughnawaga now Fonda
- 1758 - New Hackensack in Town of Wappinger
- 1758 - Bedminster
- 1763 - Betlehem
- 1765 - Ghent
- 1770 - English Neighborhood, now Ridgefield
- 1774 - Kakiat now West New Hempstead
- 1776 - Hillsdale