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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
October 19, 2007
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Friday, October 19, 2007
Thomas Pell Was Feared Drowned or Lost at Sea in 1656
A paper delivered by the Director-General, Peter Stuyvesant, to the
Council at a meeting in Fort Amsterdam, New Netherland on January 26, 1656
contained indications that the man most hated by the Dutch -- Thomas Pell
-- had drowned or was presumed lost at sea. The Dutch were unhappy that
Pell had established a small village of Enlgish settlers in an area known
as VreedLandt. VreedLandt was among the lands claimed by the Dutch under
purchase from local Native Americans. The text of the entire paper is
transcribed immediately below, followed by a citation to its source.
"PAPER READ BY DIRECTOR STUYVESANT TO THE COUNCIL, CONTAINING INFORMATION
ON THE CAUSES OF THE LATE DIFFICULTIES WITH THE INDIANS.
26th January.
To-day the following letter was read by the Noble Hon ble Director-General
to the Council at the meeting in Fort Amsterdam.
I informed your honors partly by word of mouth, that on the 22d inst. I
had a visit from a Mr. Weyls, formerly a resident of Stamford,
now schoolmaster at Onckeway, who among other reports of news
from Europe told me in presence of Do Drisisus and
Willem Harcke, that he had had in his house lately an Indian from
Wiequasskeck, who was a good friend of Vander Donck and had
tended his cows for a time; he thought, his name was Joseph and
he spoke pretty good English, anyway so much that he could
understand him. He had talked with this Indian about the late troubles
between his and our nations and these were the details:
First, why they had killed and captured so many Dutchmen?
Second, why they do not return the captured Dutchmen and whether they are
not afraid, that the Dutch will again attack them?
Third, what they and their neighbors intended to do with the captives?
He answered to the first that they had not been the first cause or that
they did not bgin and that they were afraid, the Dutch would not
forget it, and they comprehend, why the Dutch kept so quiet.
As to the captives, they were a burden to them, for they had to feed them,
but they retained them, as they knew well and expected, that, as long as
the prisoners were with them, the Dutch would not trouble them
and they were resolved, to have the prisoners ransomed in the spring or
[Page 59 / Page 60] to offer them to the Dutch. To the question,
whether they would then make peace with the Dutch, the Indian
answered the Dutch would not keep the peace and that therefore
they did not intend to ask for peace nor to make it. Asked, what they
would do against the Dutch, who were so strong and it being
impossible to kill all or drive them out of their strong positions, he
said, they knew that well, therefore they would not visit them in their
castles nor make war upon them, but they would hide in small parties in
the underwood, to surprise any one, who came out, hinder them in planting
and kill their cattle, when it came into the woods, until they finally
would have no more food and so forth; the aforesaid Wyles thought
it his duty as neighbor, to inform us hereof.
He stated in regard to the massacre and unlucky engagement, that the
matter had been received by the Commissioners and other principal persons
of New-England with great and heart-felt [regret] and that it was
their opinion, they were, considering their neighborhood, close union and
the congruity of the divine service of the two nations in duty bound, to
assist us against the barbarous tribes, if they were requested and many
were astonished, that we thus passed over the affair, disregarding the
Christian nations.
He said also, he had heard to his regret, that many here believed, the
people of New-England had had something to do with it, with the
intention to get under that retext possession of Long-Island or
the new plantation at Westchester : he affirmed with great
confidence, that to favor such belief was unneighborly and unchristianlike,
that they were so far from it, that they did not want more of
Long-Island, than what was agreed to in the treaty made at
Hartford and they themselves did not approve of the action of Mr.
Pel [sic] in establishing a village upon somebody else's territory.
He thought, this was now broken up, because Mr. Pel was drowned
or as is supposed shipwrecked with his vessel and property. This is the
substance of his statement to me, made in the presence of the aforesaid
Do Drisius and William Harck, which I have thought
necessary to communicate to your Honors and to have inserted, with your
knowledge, into the minutes, also to recommend it to your Honors' further
consideration, to which I must add, that, as your Honors know, some
savages, about 30 in number, have [plundered] the yacht 'Endracht',
stranded on the Sandpoint, and robbed the sailors under threats,
although they did not hurth them, of their property, which has caused me,
to prevent further mischief and bloodshed, to take away the sailors and
the things, easiest to transport, from the stranded yacht and to abandon
the yacht, until better times and opportunity. I stop here and impress it
upon your Honors' mind, whether it would not be well, to remove also the
small garrison on Staten-Island, which has no more protection,
but much less than the sailors on the yacht, before something like, what I
spoke of before, if not worse may happen to them and to order Captain
Post, to proceed with his cattle and the few soldiers with him to
Nayeeck and join the troops of Mr. Werckhoven, where a
suitable refuge of stockades has been made, sufficient to defend it with
soldiers against an attack by the Indians. Date as above. (26th January
1656)."
Source: Fernow, Berthold, Documents Relating to the Colonial History of
the State of New York, Vol. XIII, pp. 59-60 (Albany, NY: Weed, Parsons and
Company 1881).
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posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:43 AM
Comment
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Posting for October 19, 2007.
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