Conquest of New Netherland
Part of the Second Anglo-Dutch War

"The Fall of New Amsterdam" by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris
DateMay 25, 1664 (1664-05-25) – October 4, 1664 (1664-10-04)
Location
Result

English victory

Belligerents
 England  Dutch Republic
Commanders and leaders
Richard Nicolls
Samuel Maverick
Peter Stuyvesant
Johannes de Decker
Strength
4 warships Unknown
Casualties and losses
None 3 killed
10 wounded

The conquest of New Netherland occurred in 1664 as an English expedition led by Richard Nicolls that arrived in New York Harbor effected a peaceful capture of New Amsterdam, Fort Amsterdam and the Articles of Surrender of New Netherland were agreed. The conquest was mostly peaceful in the rest of the colony as well, except for some fighting in New Amstel.[1]

Background

The commercial rivalry between the Dutch and the English, which provoked the First Anglo-Dutch War was not resolved by the Treaty of Westminster (1654). Hostilities continued between the countries' trading companies. Religious and political differences between the Anglican royalists in England and the Calvinist republicans that ruled the Netherlands also hampered peace.[2] During the Anglo-Spanish War of 1654–1660, Dutch traders supplanted the English in trade with Spain and its possessions in Italy and America.[3]

Conflict developed between the States of Holland and Charles II of England's sister Mary, the widowed Princess of Orange, over the education and future prospects of her son William III of Orange.[4] Charles was influenced by his brother James and Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington as he sought a popular and lucrative foreign war at sea to bolster his authority as king. Many naval officers welcomed the prospect of a conflict with the Dutch.[5]

In the year before the invasion, Captain John Scott harassed several Dutch settlements on Long Island.

Campaign

Surrender of New Amsterdam

A 1664 illustration of New Netherland

In March 1664, Charles granted American territory between the Delaware and Connecticut rivers to James. On May 25, 1664 Colonel Richard Nicolls set out from Portsmouth with four warships and about three hundred soldiers. They arrived at Gravesend Bay on Long Island on August 27 and enlisted the support of militias from the English towns there as they moved west to Breuckelen.[6] Having arrived at Fort Amsterdam on Manhattan Island, Nichols sent director-general Peter Stuyvesant a letter offering lenient terms of surrender. James authorized generous terms because he preferred the profits of an intact colony to the spoils of a ruined one.[7] Despite Fort Amsterdam's limited supply of gunpowder, Stuyvesant was inclined to resist. On September 4, the English ships began to maneuver closer to the fort. Stuyvesant was confronted by ninety-three burghers and his own son, and conceded.[8]

A group of prominent merchants then met at Stuyvesant Farm with Nicholls' officers to draft Articles of Capitulation.[8] The Dutch colonists were guaranteed in the possession of their property rights, their laws of inheritance, and the enjoyment of religious freedom. Article 2 specified that all "publick houses" would remain open.[6] The Articles were signed on September 6, 1664 onboard ship by Johannes de Decker, Stuyvesant's lawyer and chief negotiator. The following day being Sunday the transfer did not take place until September 8 when the Dutch forces marched down Beaver Street and embarked on board the Gideon bound for Holland, and Nicolls assumed the position of deputy-governor.

Surrender of Fort Orange

On September 10, Johannes de Decker sailed north to Fort Orange to warn them the English were coming and to rally opposition. Nicholls sent troops to demand the fort's peaceful surrender. Realizing that control of the mouth of the river, controlled the settlement's future, on September 24, 1664 that vice-director of New Netherland Johannes de Montagne surrendered the fort to the English, and Colonel George Cartwright took command. The next day, Captain John Manning was given charge of the fort, which was renamed Fort Albany, after the Duke of York's title in the Peerage of Scotland. While he was there, Cartwright renewed the Dutch treaty with the Iroquois.

On his way back down river, Cartwright landed at Esopus and the settlement surrendered without resistance. Cartwright took the same precautions as at Albany to conciliate the residents and left the local Dutch officials to continue in power. A garrison of regular soldiers was placed in charge of the fort under the command of Captain Daniel Brodhead of the grenadiers.[9] Brodhead and his wife settled in the area; his grandson, Daniel Brodhead II, founded Dansbury, Pennsylvania.

Capture of New Amstel

Around the same time that Nicholls sent Cartwright north to Fort Orange, he dispatched Sir Robert Carr, a relative of the Earl of Arlington, south to the territory the Dutch had previously seized from Sweden. The English took Fort Altena peacefully. Alexander D’Hinoyossa director of New Amstel retreated with some followers to Fort Casimir. Carr fired two broadsides into the fort, then took it by storm. His soldiers then pillaged the surrounding settlements,[10] even though the residents had made no resistance. He seized property, harvests, some 200 sheep, horses, and cows, destroyed a brewery, and a sawmill. He then proceeded further south and plundered Pieter Corneliszoon Plockhoy's Mennonite settlement near present day Lewes, Delaware.

Aftermath

Carr handed over Dutch soldiers to the merchantman as payment for services rendered and they were subsequently transported to Virginia to be sold.[11]

Carr's behavior angered Nicholls, whose policy had been to avoid conflict between the settlers and the new government. He was also outraged that Carr looked to profit from his excesses while the soldiers were in need. He visited New Amstel, renamed it New Castle, and appointed a new commander, but was unable to compel Carr to give up any of his spoils, and returned to New York without him.[12]

The Peace of Breda that ended the Second Anglo-Dutch War left New York in English hands. But on 9 August 1673 (N.S.), during the Third Anglo-Dutch War, a Dutch naval squadron under the joint command of Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest and Jacob Binckes retook New York in the Reconquest of New Netherland and the Dutch held on to the colony under governor Anthony Colve for more than a year, until they exchanged it for the colony of Suriname under the Treaty of Westminster (1674).

References

  1. Lee, Guy Carleton; Thorpe, Francis Newton (1904). "English Conquest of New Netherland, 1655-1664". The History of North America. Vol. 4. pp. 117–146.
  2. Pincus, S. C. A., Protestantism and Patriotism: Ideologies and the Making of English Foreign Policy. Cambridge University Press. 2002, pp. 246–262 ISBN 9780521893688
  3. Israel, J. I. (1995). The Dutch Republic: Its Rise, Greatness, and Fall, 1477–1806. Oxford University Press. p. 727. ISBN 9780198730729.
  4. Israel 1995, pp. 751–753.
  5. Rodger, N. A. M., The Command of the Ocean: A Naval History of Britain, 1649–1815. London: Penguin. 2004 p. 65 ISBN 9780713994117
  6. 1 2 "The surrender of New Netherland, 1664", The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
  7. Plantenga, Bart. "The Mystery of the Plockhoy Settlement in the Valley of Swans", Mennonite Historical Bulletin, April 2001
  8. 1 2 Middleton, Simon. "Conflict and Commerce: The Rise and Fall of New Netherland", The Gilder Lehrman Institute of American History
  9. Schoonmaker, Marius. The History of Kingston, New York: From Its Early Settlement to the Year 1820, Higginson Book Company, 1888, p. 49Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  10. Gehring, Charles T., "New Amsterdam", Colonial Wars of North America, 1512-1763, Routledge, 2015, p. 491ISBN 9781317487197
  11. O'Callaghan, Edmund Bailey. History of New Netherland: Or, New York Under the Dutch, Vol. 2, 1848, p. 538Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. Ritchie, Robert C., The Duke's Province: A Study of New York Politics and Society, 1664-1691, UNC Press Books, 2012, p. 24ISBN 9781469610221
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.