1609 A.D.
DURING the first forty years of its existence, the
great city which we call New York was a Dutch settlement, known among men as
New Amsterdam. That region had been discovered for the Dutch East India
Company by Henry Hudson, who was still in search, as Columbus had been, of a
shorter route to the East. The Dutch have never displayed any aptitude for
colonizing. But they were unsurpassed in mercantile discernment, and they
set up trading stations with much judgment. Three or four years after the
Pilgrims landed at Plymouth, the Dutch West India Company determined to
enter into trading relations with the Indians along the line of the Hudson
river. They sent out a few families, who planted themselves at the southern
extremity of Manhattan Island. A wooden fort was built, around which
clustered a few wooden houses just as in Europe the baron's castle arose and
the huts of the baron's dependants sheltered beside it. The Indians sold
valuable furs for scanty payment in blankets, beads, muskets, and
intoxicating drinks. The prudent Dutchmen grew rich, and were becoming
numerous.
1643 A.D.
But a fierce and prolonged war with the Indians broke
out. The Dutch, having taken offence at something done by the savages,
expressed their wrath by the massacre of an entire tribe. All the Indians of
that region made common cause against the dangerous strangers. All the Dutch
villages were burned down. Long Island became a desert. The Dutchmen were
driven in to the southern tip of the island on which New York stands. They
ran a palisade across the island in the line of what is now Wall Street.
To-day, Wall Street is the scene of the largest monetary transactions ever
known among men. The hot fever of speculation rages there incessantly, with
a fury unknown elsewhere. But then, it was the line within which a
disheartened and diminishing band of colonists strove to maintain themselves
against a savage foe.
1645 A. D.
The war came to an end as wars even then required to
do. For twenty years the colony continued to flourish under the government
of a sagacious Dutchman called Petrus Stuyvesant. Petrus had been a soldier,
and had lost a leg in the wars. He was a brave and true-hearted man, but
withal despotic. When his subjects petitioned for some part in the making of
laws, he was astonished at their boldness. He took it upon him to inspect
the merchants' books. lie persecuted the Lutherans and "the abominable sect
of Quakers."
It cannot be said that his government was faultless.
The colony prospered under it, however, and a continued emigration from
Europe increased its importance. But in the twentieth year, certain English
ships of war sailed up the bay, and, without a word of explanation, anchored
near the settlement. Governor Petrus was from home, but they sent for him,
and he came with speed. He hastened to the fort and looked out into the bay.
There lay the ships--grim, silent, ominously near. Appalled by the presence
of his unexpected visitors, the Governor sent to ask wherefore they had
come. his alarm was well founded. For Charles II. of England had presented
to his brother James of York a vast stretch of territory, including the
region which the Dutch had chosen for their settlement. It was not his to
give, but that signified nothing either to Charles or to James. These ships
had come to take possession in the Duke of York's name. A good many of the
colonists were English, and they were well pleased to be under their own
Government. They would not fight. The Dutch remembered the Governor's
tyrannies, and they would not fight. Governor Petrus was prepared to fight
single-handed. No had the twenty guns of the fort loaded, and was resolute
to fire upon the ships. So at least lie professed. But the inhabitants
begged him, in mercy to them, to forbear; and he suffered himself to be led
by two clergymen away from the loaded guns. It was alleged, to his
disparagement, afterwards, that lie had "allowed himself to be persuaded by
ministers and other chicken-hearted persons." Be that as it may, King
Charles's errand was done. The little town of 1500 inhabitants, with all the
neighbouring settlements, passed quietly under English rule. And the future
Empire City was named New York, in honour of one of the meanest tyrants who
ever disgraced the English throne. With the settlements on the Hudson there
fell also into the hands of the English those of New Jersey, which the Dutch
had conquered from the Swedes. |