*Includes pictures *Includes accounts of Henry Hudson's
expedition around Manhattan and relations with the Lenape natives
*Includes accounts of trade and warfare between the Europeans and
natives around New Amsterdam *Includes online resources and a
bibliography for further reading *Includes a table of contents
Manhattan has long been part of a bustling community, even before
it formed the back of New York City. Centuries before New
York City became a shining city of steel that enthralled millions
of immigrants, Lenni-Lenape Indians, an Algonquin-speaking tribe
whose name means “the People,” lived in what would become New
York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. They had lived there for at
least 1,500 years and were mainly hunters and gatherers who would
use well-worn paths that would one day bear the names of Flatbush
Avenue, King’s Highway, and Broadway. The first known European
ings of the island and its inhabitants were made by the
Italian explorer Giovanni da Verrazzano in 1524 and by the black
Portuguese explorer Estaban Gomez in 1526. After the Englishman
Henry Hudson, under the aegis of the Dutch East India Company,
sailed by Manhattan in 1609, he returned home with good news and
bad news. Like the other explorers before him, he hadn’t been
able to find a water route to the Orient. He had, however,
returned with s (confiscated by the British) and beaver pelts.
With that, it became clear that the region around the bay that
would take Hudson’s name was a very promising new territory for
trade and settlement, which would become a serious of
contention between the Dutch and the British for the rest of the
century. 1626 was also the year that the famous “purchase” of
Manhattan took place, a transaction for which no record has
survived. Peter Minuit, the Director-General of New Amsterdam,
paid out sixty guilders’ worth of trade goods like cloth,
kettles, tools, and wampum—an a that’s come down in history
as being worth $24. While that sounds perversely low today,
accountant types like to speculate with this a, if the
Lenni-Lenapes had invested it at a 10% interest rate over the
centuries, it would today be worth $117 quadrillion—enough to buy
present-day Manhattan many, many times over. Many such purchases
took place, but because Native Americans and Europeans had very
different concepts of what it meant to “own” or “sell” land,
misunderstandings—and violence—would frequently break out on both
sides. Minor (and often unsubstantiated) thefts of property could
ignite the colonists’ wrath, resulting in such bloody skirmishes
as the Pig War (1640) and the Peach Tree War (1655), named for
the items allegedly stolen. When the West India Company, which
presided over Dutch trade in the Americas, was created in 1621,
the little settlement at the tip of Manhattan began to both grow
and falter. When Willem Kieft arrived as director in 1638, it was
already a sort of den of iniquity, full of “mischief and
perversity,” where residents were given over to smoking and
drinking grog and . Under Kieft’s reign, more land was
acquired mostly through bloody, all-but-exterminating wars with
the Native American population, whose numbers also dwindled at
the hands of European-borne diseases. Ultimately, of course,
conflict between England and the Netherlands across the Atlantic
brought about changes that affected the New World and led to the
English taking over New Amsterdam and renaming it New York City.
Indeed, Dutch possessions in North America only lasted about 50
years, but by then, they had paved a path for New York to become
a diverse financial center. New Amsterdam: The History of the
Dutch Settlement Before It Became New York City chronicles the
origins of the settlement and profiles the indigenous people who
were there. Along with pictures of important people, places, and
events, you will learn about New Amsterdam like never before, in
no time at all.