1524 -- Giovanni da
Verrazano (an Italian explorer in the service of Francis I of France) sails
into New York
Harbor on the Dauphine in search of the Northwest Passage. (From the statue in Battery Park by _______.)
1525 -- Esteban Gomez (a Portuguese explorer
of African descent
in the service of Charles V of Spain), searching for gold and silver,
sojourns briefly in the estuary of the river later to be called the Hudson River.
1609 -- Henry Hudson (an English explorer in the
service of the Dutch) sails into New York Harbor on the Half Moon.
1610 -- Fur trading, in the hands of a few experienced,
profit-seeking traders, begins on the Atlantic Coast.
1613 -- Adriaen Block (a Netherland's mariner)
sails into the East River. Marooned on Manhattan Island, he
builds the Onrust (Restless)
with native timber and sails through
Hell Gate.
1621 -- The Dutch West India Company is chartered
by businessmen to seek a profit and protect Dutch interests from other
imperial powers.
1624 - -Belgian and Dutch settlers arrive at Manhattan,
mostly French-speaking Walloons employed by the Dutch West India
Company. The new colony is called New Amsterdam.
1626 -- Peter Minuit, the first director general
of New Amsterdam, purchases Manhattan Island from the Algonquian Indians,
for beads, trinkets, cloth and axes and other items valued at approximately
$24 (est. in 1869 currency).
1628 -- The Dutch Reformed Church is founded under
the ministry of Jonas Michaelius. There are 50 communicants
at the first service. The Manhattan census for this year ( informal
and of questionable accuracy), nevertheless states that there are 270 colonists, 30 houses and a half dozen farms.
1633 -- Wouter Van Twiller arrives with a troop
of 104 musketeers, and assumes the Director Generalship of New Amsterdam.
Only 27 years old and formerly a clerk in an Amsterdam warehouse, he is
related by marriage to Van Rensselaer, a wealthy businessman associated
with the Dutch West India Company.
1635 -- Fort Amsterdam is completed,
with four bastions mounted with artillery, but also with earthen ramparts that crumble
away.
1635 -- Caesari Alberti, the first Italian settler arrives from __________. 1638 -- The first ferry runs between Manhattan
and Brooklyn.
1640 -- By a decade before mid-century,
the Dutch already own most of the New York area, comprising what
is now Metropolitan New York and the lands that extend up the
Hudson River and into Albany. In another few years, additional
purchases from native Indians add all the boroughs
and almost all the islands of present-day New York to the Dutch
empire in the New World.
1641 -- The first tavern opens and it's called the
Wooden Horse.
1647 -- Peter Stuyvesant becomes governor of New
Amsterdam. Addressing the colonists and those in charge, he
says: "I shall govern you as a father his children, for the advantage of
the chartered West India Company...." His rule is despotic. During
his tenure he establishes a curfew, deprecates and punishes
the abuse of alcohol. Albeit no doubt under public pressure, he
permits the first election in New Amsterdam.
1653 -- New Amsterdam receives its own charter,
separating it from the province of New Netherland, and ending the supervision
and control of the Dutch West India Company. Peter Stuyvesant and the
colonists celebrate their elevated status with a parade down Broadway.
Also in this year Peter Stuyvesant oversees the creation a palisade wall, along
the present route of Wall Street. The wall spans
a length of 2,340 feet (almost half a mile).
1654 -- Jewish settlers arrive, firstly
Jacob Barsimon in the summer; and then some 23 Sephardic
Jews (from Spain and Portugal), and they form the congregation known as Shearith Israel. Stuyvesant's
persecution and arrests of the Quakers in Flushing result in the
signing of the Flushing Remonstrance, a protest demanding absolute
religious freedom that is subsequently upheld by the courts in Amsterdam.
Results of Early Informal Surveys
of New Amsterdam and Colonial New York
|
| 1628 |
270
colonists |
30
houses |
6
farms |
| 1656 |
1,000
residents |
120
houses |
|
| 1698 |
4,937
residents |
|
|
| 1731 |
8,622
residents |
|
|
| 1733 |
11,000
residents |
|
|
1664 -- The Duke of York sends an
armada of four British men-of-war carrying 500 soldiers, under Colonel
Richard Nicholls, to the Port of New York which is coveted for its growing
trade. Nichols
anchors in the Narrows and captures Staten Island.
On August 34th, Nichols makes demands to Peter Stuyvesant that he surrender
New Amsterdam. Stuyvesant hesitates, and Nichols then anchors
opposite Fort Amsterdam and disembarks troops in Brooklyn.
On September 6, prominent citizens urged Stuyvesant to yield to Nichols
demands, and and two days later he signed articles of capitulation.
To make the transfer of ownership definitive, Nichols promptly renamed
New Amsterdam -- New York!
1665 -- Thomas Willett is appointed the
first Mayor of the city of New York.
1674 -- The Treaty of Westminster is signed, formally ending
the Anglo-Dutch War and confirming the earlier cession of New Netherland to the English.
The Dutch receive in exchange
the Caribbean islands of Curacao and Demerara.
1676 -- The Broad Street Canal is
filled and and the area above it paved, thus making it a street.
1685 -- Thomas Dongan, the first Catholic Governor
of New York, drafts a charter for the colonial Assembly, providing for
government by election, consensual taxation, trial by jury and religious
freedom.
1697 -- Trinity Church is established as a place
of worship for Anglican colonists, under a royal charter from William III.
The first service in a new church at the present location, on Broadway
and Wall Street, is celebrated on March 13, 1698.
1701 -- Captain William Kidd is hanged in London
for piracy, while his family continues to dwell in New York
1702 -- Queen Anne appoints her cousin, Lord
Cornbury, Governor of New York. He engages in cross-dressing,
and sometimes shocks conservative colonists with his bizarre behavior.
More importantly, Yellow fever strikes New York in epidemic proportions
and carries away some 500 souls, or about 1 in 9 of the City's
dwellers.
1712 -- As the number of slaves increases and their treatment
worsens under British rule, they determine to rebel.
On April 7th, a band of some 20 slaves sets fire to several houses and
kills ten white residents.
1719 -- Fraunces Tavern, a Georgian-style townhouse
is built is as residence for the wealthy merchant, Etienne de Lancey.
In 1760 it's converted into a tavern by George Washington's steward,
Samuel Fraunces. This is where George Washington bids farewell
to his officers in 17___.
1722 -- The City's first Presbyterian Church is
completed on the north of Wall Street
1725 -- William Bradford publishes the City's
first newspaper, the New York Gazette, a weekly organ
in the service of the British government.
1731 -- A Smallpox epidemic rages
through the City and sweeps away some 600 souls.
|