There is no “Peter
Stuyvesant” found in historical records.
The man known as Peter was actually Pieter Stuyvesant. Pieter was born around 1612 in Peperga, Friesland in the Netherlands and grew
up in Scherpenzeel. His parents were
Balthazar Johannes Stuyvesant (a minister) and Margaretha Hardenstein.
Pieter Stuyvesant studied
languages and philosophy in Franeker and received a good education; he also
served in the Dutch military. He joined
the West India Company about 1635 and was the director of Curacao, the Dutch
West India Company’s colony from 1642 to 1644.
Pieter lost the lower part of his right leg to a cannonball when he
attacked the Spanish-held island of Saint Martin in April 1644. His right leg was amputated and replaced with
a wooden peg upon his return to the Netherlands. He supposedly used a “stick of wood driven
full of silver bands as a prosthetic limb” and was given the nickname “Old
Silver Leg.”
In May 1645 Pieter was named the
Director-General of the new Netherlands colony and arrive in New Amsterdam on
May 11, 1647. He made friends with the
Native Americans but apparently punished them severely for intruding. When his people complained of his treatment
of the Native Americans, he imprisoned them.
He was appointed as one of nine men to sit on an advisory council as
representatives of the colonists on New Amsterdam.
Stuyvesant married Judith Bayard
(c. 1610-1687) in 1645, and Judith nursed him back to health from the loss of
his leg. Her brother Samuel Bayard was
married to Pieter’s sister Anna. Pieter
and Judith had a daughter named Judith who married Benjamin Winthrop, the son
of John Still Winthrop and his second wife Elizabeth Shirreff; they also had a
son, Nicolaes Willem Stuyvesant (1648-1698) who married Maria Beeckman,
daughter of Willem Beeckman.
Pieter Stuyvesant and Theophilus
Eaton, the governor of New Haven Colony, disputed over the border of the two
colonies. Another conflict started in
1648 between Stuyvesant and Brant Aertzsz van Slechtenhorst, the commissary of
the patroonship Rensselaerwijck. In 1649
Stuyvesant marched to Fort Orange with a military escort and ordered the
burning of houses to better defend the fort in case Native Americans
attacked. Van Slechtenhorst refused, and
Stuyvesant sent soldiers to enforce his orders.
The result of this controversy was the founding of Beverwijck.
Commissioners met in Hartford,
Connecticut, in September 1650 to determine boundaries. The council of nine men was dissatisfied with
the border arrangements who thought “the governor had ceded away enough territory
to found fifty colonies each fifty miles square.” The discord was settled in the Netherlands,
and the area was named “New Amsterdam” on February 2, 1653.
In 1655, Stuyvesant sailed into
the Delaware River with a fleet of seven vessels and about 700 men; he captured
all New Sweden, which included lands in what are now New Jersey, Delaware and
Pennsylvania. The area was renamed “New
Amstel.” While Stuyvesant was away, Native
Americans attacked New Amsterdam.
Stuyvesant did not tolerate full
religious freedom in the colony. Being
strongly committed to the supremacy of the Dutch Reformed Church, he refused
Lutherans the right to organize a church and passed an ordinance that forbid
them to worship in their own homes. The
directors of the Dutch West Indies Company (some were Lutherans) told him to
rescind the order and allow private gatherings of Lutherans.
Stuyvesant refused to allow Jews
from Northern Brazil to settle permanently in New Amsterdam (without passports)
and told them to join the existing community of Jews who came from Amsterdam
with passports. He encouraged Jews “in a
friendly way” to leave the colony. In a 1654
letter to the Amsterdam Chamber of the Dutch West India Company, Stuyvesant
referred to the Jews as “the deceitful race, -- such hateful enemies and blasphemers
of the name of Christ” and suggested that they “be not allowed to further
infect and trouble this new colony.”
Called the Jews a “repugnant race” and “usurers;” he was concerned that “Jewish
settlers should not be granted the same liberties enjoyed by Jews in Holland,
lest members of other persecuted minority groups, such as Roman Catholics, be
attracted to the colony.”
The directors of the Company
pressured Stuyvesant to rescind his decision.
He “allowed Jewish immigrants to stay in the colony as long as their
community was self-supporting, but – with the support of the company – would
not allow them to build a synagogue, forcing them to worship instead in a
private house.”
Stuyvesant continued to fight
against freedom of religion when Quakers arrived in the colony in 1657. Under his orders, Robert Hodgson, a
23-year-old Quaker convert and influential preacher, was tortured publicly. He then made an ordinance against anyone
found guilty of harboring Quakers and made it punishable by fine and
imprisonment. The citizens of Flushing,
Queens, protested, and their action became known as the Flushing
Remonstrance. Some people believe the
Flushing Remonstrance was a precursor to the United States Constitution’s
provision on freedom of religion in the Bill of Rights.
Stuyvesant’s rule came to an end
in 1664 when King Charles II of England ceded a large tract of land that
included New Netherland to his brother, the Duke of York (later King James
II). Under the command of Richard Nicholls,
four English ships bearing 450 men seized the Dutch colony. On August 1664, George Cartwright sent
Stuyvesant a letter demanding surrender.
The letter also promised “life, estate, and liberty to all who would
submit to the king’s authority.” On
September 9, 1664, Stuyvesant signed a treaty at his Bouwerij house, and Nichols
was declared governor. The city was
renamed New York City, and Stuyvesant was a major figure in the early history
of the city.
Stuyvesant was able to obtain
civil rights and freedom of religion in the Articles of Capitulation. The Dutch settlers mostly belonged to the
Dutch Reformed church, a strict Calvinist denomination while the English
settlers were Anglican, theologically closer to the Roman Catholic Church.
Stuyvesant went to the
Netherlands in 1665 to report on his term as governor and returned to New York
to spend the remainder of his life on his sixty-two acre farm – the Great
Bouwerie – located outside the city.
Beyond his farm the woods and swamps of the village of Haarlem
stretched. He supposedly brought a pear
tree from the Netherlands and planted it in 1647; it remained at the corner of
Thirteenth Street and Third Avenue until 1867 and bore fruit nearly to the end
of its days. His house burned in 1777.
Governor Stuyvesant died in
August 1672, and his body was entombed in the east wall of St. Mark’s Church
in-the-Bowery in New York City at the site of the Stuyvesant’s family chapel on
their former farm. Augustus van Horne Stuyvesant,
Jr. was the last direct descendant of Stuyvesant to bear his name; Augustus
died a bachelor in 1953 at the age of 83 in his mansion at 2 East 79th
Street. The 19th century New York developer
Rutherford Stuyvesant 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.
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