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Peter Stuyvesant

Painting of Petrus Stuyvesant, c. 1660

In office
1647–1664
Preceded by Willem Kieft
Succeeded by Office abolished

Born 1592
Peperga, Dutch Republic
Died August 1672 (aged 80)
New York, Province of New York

Peter Stuyvesant (originally Pieter or Petrus; Peter is never mentioned in historical records) (c. 1612 – August 1672) served as the last Dutch Director-General of the colony of New Netherland (New York) from 1647 until it was ceded provisionally to the English in 1664. He was a major figure in the early history of New York City.

Stuyvesant's accomplishments as director-general included a great expansion for the settlement of New Amsterdam (later renamed New York) beyond the southern tip of Manhattan. Among the projects built by Stuyvesant's administration were the protective wall on Wall Street, the canal that became Broad Street, and Broadway.

Contents

Biography

He was probably born in Peperga, Friesland in the Netherlands, to Balthazar Johannes Stuyvesant, a minister, and Margaretha Hardenstein in 1612. He grew up in Scherpenzeel. He studied in Franeker, and joined the West India Company about 1635, and was director of the Dutch West India Company's colony of Curaçao from 1642 to 1644.

In April 1644, he attacked the Spanish-held island of Saint Martin and was wounded, the lower part of his right leg was struck by a cannon ball. He returned to the Netherlands, where his right leg was amputated and replaced with a wooden peg. Supposedly, Stuyvesant was given the nickname "Old Silver Leg" because he used a stick of wood driven full of silver bands as a prosthetic limb.[1]

Peter Stuyvesant's arrival in Nieuw Amsterdam

In May of 1645 he was selected by the Dutch West India Company to replace Willem Kieft. He arrived in New Amsterdam on May 11, 1647. In September 1647, he appointed an advisory council of Nine Men as representatives of the colonists.

He married Judith Bayard (c. 1610-1687) in 1645. She was born in Breda, the sister of Samuel Bayard of Amsterdam, who was married to Anna Stuyvesant, his sister. She nursed him back to health following the loss of his right lower leg at Saint Martin and subsequent return to the Netherlands to re-cuperate. Petrus and Judith had a son, Nicolaes Willem Stuyvesant (1648-1698), who married Maria Beeckman, the daughter of Willem Beeckman.

Stuyvesant became involved in a dispute with Theophilus Eaton, the governor of New Haven Colony, over the border of the two colonies. In 1648, a conflict started between him and Brant Aertzsz van Slechtenhorst, the commissary of the patroonship Rensselaerwijck. Stuyvesant claimed he had power over Rensselaerwijck despite special privileges granted to Kiliaen van Rensselaer in the patroonship regulations of 1629.

In 1649, Stuyvesant marched to Fort Orange with a military escort and ordered houses to be razed to permit a better defense of the fort in case of an attack from the Native Americans. When Van Slechtenhorst refused, Stuyvesant sent a group of soldiers to enforce his orders. The controversy that followed resulted in the founding of Beverwijck.

Peter Stuyvesant's house

In September 1650, a meeting of the commissioners on boundaries took place in Hartford, Connecticut. The border was arranged to the dissatisfaction of the Nine Men, who declared that "the governor had ceded away enough territory to found fifty colonies each fifty miles square." Stuyvesant then threatened to dissolve the council. A new plan of municipal government was arranged in the Netherlands, and the name "New Amsterdam" was officially declared on 2 February 1653. Stuyvesant made a speech for the occasion, saying that his authority would remain undiminished.


Petrus was now ordered to the Netherlands, but the order was soon revoked under pressure from the States of Holland and the city of Amsterdam. Stuyvesant prepared against an attack by ordering the citizens to dig a ditch from the North River to the East River and to erect a fortification.

In 1653, a convention of two deputies from each village in New Netherland demanded reforms, and Stuyvesant commanded that assembly to disperse, saying: "We derive our authority from God and the company, not from a few ignorant subjects."

In 1655, he sailed into the Delaware River with a fleet of seven vessels and about 700 men and took possession of the colony of New Sweden, which was renamed "New Amstel." In his absence, New Amsterdam was attacked by Native Americans, during the "Peach War".

On the Castello map, 1660, Whitehall stands out by its white roof and extensive garden
New Amsterdam in 1664

In 1657 Stuyvesant, who did not tolerate full religious freedom in the colony, and especially the presence of Quakers, ordered the public torture of Robert Hodgson, a 23-year-old Quaker convert who had become an influential preacher. Stuyvesant then made an ordinance, punishable by fine and imprisonment, against anyone found guilty of harboring Quakers. That action led to a protest from the citizens of Flushing, Queens, which came to be known as the Flushing Remonstrance, considered by some a precursor to the United States Constitution's provision on freedom of religion in the Bill of Rights. Freedom of religion was also tested when Peter Stuyvesant refused to allow Jews from Northern Brazil to settle permanently in New Amsterdam (without passports) and join the existing community of Jews (with passports from Amsterdam). His decision was overturned in Amsterdam.

In 1664, Charles II of England ceded to his brother, James II of England, a large tract of land that included New Netherland. Four English ships bearing 450 men, commanded by Richard Nicolls, seized the Dutch colony. On 30 August 1664, George Cartwright sent the governor a letter demanding surrender. He promised "life, estate, and liberty to all who would submit to the king's authority." Stuyvesant signed a treaty at his Bouwerij house on 9 September 1664. Nicolls was declared governor, and the city was renamed New York City. Stuyvesant obtained civil rights and freedom of religion in the Articles of Capitulation. The Dutch settlers mainly belonged to the Dutch Reformed church, a strict Calvinist denomination. The English were Anglican, theologically closer to the Roman Catholic Church.

In 1665, Stuyvesant went to the Netherlands to report on his term as governor. On his return, he spent the remainder of his life on his farm of sixty-two acres outside the city, called the Great Bouwerie, beyond which stretched the woods and swamps of the village of Haarlem. A pear tree that he reputedly brought from the Netherlands in 1647 remained at the corner of Thirteenth Street and Third Avenue until 1867, bearing fruit almost to the last. The house was destroyed by fire in 1777. He also built an executive mansion of stone called Whitehall. He died in August of 1672 and he was interred at St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery in Manhattan New York.

For reference, see Adriaen van der Donck

Legacy

New York Governor Hamilton Fish was descended from Stuyvesant
  • Freedom of religion was tested during his governorship and provided a lasting legacy.
  • Stuyvesant was a great believer in education. In 1660 he was quoted as saying that “Nothing is of greater importance than the early instruction of youth”. In 1661, New Amsterdam had one grammar school, two free elementary schools, and had licensed 28 masters of school. To honor Stuyvesant's dedication to education and New Amsterdam's legal-cultural tradition of toleration under Stuyvesant, Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan was named after him, in spite of his initial objections to the arrival, in 1654, of a large group of Sephardim from Dutch Brazil without West India Company passports. Stuyvesant High School was a predominantly Jewish school for boys at the time of its founding in 1904.
  • Stuyvesant and his family were large land owners in the northeastern portion of New Amsterdam, and the Stuyvesant name is currently associated with the Stuyvesant Town housing complex and Stuyvesant High School, among other locations. This farm, called the "Bouwerij" (the seventeenth-century Dutch word for farm, which was also used for other farms in New Netherland) was the source for the name of the Manhattan street Bowery, and the chapel facing Bouwerie's long approach road (now Stuyvesant Street) developed into St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery. Stuyvesant's grand official residence at the very tip of Manhattan was renamed "Whitehall" by the English and survives in another New York street name, Whitehall Street.
  • More modestly, Peter Island in the British Virgin Islands is also named after Stuyvesant during the Dutch West India Company's administration of that Territory. Also named after him are the hamlets of Stuyvesant and Stuyvesant Falls in Columbia County, New York, where descendents of the early Dutch settlers still live and where the Dutch Reformed Church is still an important part of the community.
  • Stuyvesant is credited with introducing tea to the American colonies.
  • The last direct descendant of Pieter Stuyvesant to bear his surname was Augustus van Horne Stuyvesant, Jr., who died a bachelor in 1953 at the age of 83 in his mansion at 2 East 79th Street. Rutherford Stuyvesant, the 19th century New York developer, and his descendants are also descended from Pieter Stuyvesant. However, Rutherford Stuyvesant changed his name from Stuyvesant Rutherford in 1863 to satisfy the terms of a will.[1]
  • Nicholas Bayard, the sixteenth Mayor of New York City from 1685 to 1686, was Peter Stuyvesant's brother in law and owned a substancial farm on the site of much of SoHo and elsewhere in Lower Manhattan, including Sullivan Street.[2]

Popular uses of Stuyvesant's name

  • In Sid Meier's Colonization computer game, Stuyvesant can be elected to the Continental Congress, allowing the player to build Custom Houses which automate trade with the mother country.
  • In Sid Meier's Civilization IV: Colonization, Peter Stuyvesant is one of the leaders of the Dutch colonies. Adriaen van der Donck is the other possible Dutch leader.
  • Stuyvesant was a key figure in the Belgium strip Suske en Wiske. This was episode 269, "De Stugge Stuyvesant"
  • Cornelius Gould Stuyvesant is the name of a villain believed to exist by the schizophrenic protagonist of The Caveman's Valentine by George Dawes Green. Stuyvesant has no face, lives at the top of the Chrysler Building, and affects people by shooting down beams of Y- and Z-rays. The protagonist explicitly acknowledges the connection to Peter Stuyvesant.

In musical theatre

Peter Stuyvesant is a major character in the 1938 Kurt Weill-Maxwell Anderson musical Knickerbocker Holiday. He is the main villain of the piece. He sings the famous song September Song in the show. In the stage production he was portrayed by Walter Huston; in the much-altered 1944 film version he was portrayed by Charles Coburn in his only singing role.

Stuyvesant is mentioned in the song Kurious Orange by The Fall (band) . The song was featured in the ballet I Am Kurious, Oranj and on the album of the same name.

Footnotes

References

External links

Government offices
Preceded by
Willem Kieft
Director-General of New Netherland
1647–1664
Succeeded by
Richard Nicolls as Governor of the Province of New York

Quotes

Up to date as of January 14, 2010

From Wikiquote

Peter Stuyvesant

Peter Stuyvesant (also Pieter or Petrus) (c. 1612 – August 1672) served as the last Dutch Director-General of the colony of New Netherland from 1647 until it was ceded provisionally to the English in 1664. He was a major figure in the early history of New York City. He is currently regarded as the greatest Director-General of New Netherland.

Sourced

  • Nothing is of greater importance than the right early instruction of youth.
    • 1660 on the education of Youth-History of the State of New York By John Romeyn Brodhead, pg 508
  • I shall govern you as a father his children.
    • What he told to colonists when he arrived-Liberty Magazine
  • We derive our authority from God and the West India Company, not from the pleasure of a few ignorant subjects.
    • On complaints by frontier folks on his reforms-Liberty Magazine

Unsourced

  • I am sustained by the tranquility of an upright and loyal heart.
    • -Tranquility quotes
  • The Jews who have arrived would nearly all like to remain here.
    • On the arival of Jews from Brazil, September 22, 1654-Heritage Civilization and the Jews
  • * The attack on St. Martin did not succeed as well as I had hoped, no small impediment having been the loss of my right leg.
    • Stuyvesant in a report to his employers of the West India Company-Claude J. Peck, Jr, Delivered to The Chicago Literary Club
  • Our little force will march on tomorrow or the day after.
    • -Annie Thoms, Christopher Marshall
  • I value the blood of one Christian more than that of a hundred Indians.
    • -Annie Thoms, Christopher Marshall
  • Your patience would fail you if I should continue to relate all the disrespectful speeches and treatment which your servants have been obliged to listen to and patiently to bear.
  • We pray that the deceitful race - such hateful enemies and blasphemers of the name of Christ -be not allowed to further infect and trouble this new colony.
  • To let her dail would be the greatest profit both for the company and for the merchants.
  • The people are grown very wild and loose in their morals.
  • The design of those commissioners, frigates and warlike force is directed rather against Long Island and these your Honors' possessions, than to the imagined reform of New England.
  • Praise the Lord, O England's Jerusalem: and Netherland's Zion, praise ye the Lord! He hath secured your gates, and blessed your possessions with peace, even here, where the threatened torch of war was lighted.
  • Powder and provisions failing, and no relief or reinforcement being expected, we were necessitated to come to terms with the enemy.
  • It would be altogether too tedious to insert here all the annual petitions for powder which were sometimes repeated two or three times a year.
  • It is not the least anxiety that we have so little powder and lead on hand.
  • It is my intention to proceed slowly with our trenches.

External links

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1911 encyclopedia

Up to date as of January 14, 2010
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Simple English

File:Peter
Peter Stuyvesant

Peter Stuyvesant (c. 1612 – August 1672), served as the last Dutch Director-General of the colony New Netherland (known today as New York City) from 1647 to 1664, when the English took control of the island. He is a major figure in the early history of New York City. In Brooklyn, there are neighborhoods and streets named after him, such as named after him called Stuyvesant Heights and Bedford-Stuyvesant (often shortened to Bedstuy).

Early life

Stuyvesant was born in Holland, the son of a clergyman.[1] He joined the army and served in the West Indies where he lost a leg in an attack on the Portuguese island of St. Martin.[1] He became the governor of the colony of Curaçao, and finally went home to Holland in 1644.[1]

Popular culture

In 1924 a 30 minute silent movie, Peter Stuyvesant, was made about him, starring William Calhoun and directed by Frank Tuttle.[2]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Peter Stuyvesant". peterstuyvesant.org. http://www.peterstuyvesant.org/. Retrieved 31 December 2010. 
  2. "Peter Stuyvesant (1924) - IMDb". imdb.com. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0348713/. Retrieved 31 December 2010. 








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