Half Moon from New York to historic Hoorn ~ Halve Maen
Join the
Half Moon on her trip from
New York (
Hudson river) to the historic
Hoorn Dutch India Company harbour. The original ship was launched in
Amsterdam in 1608.
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Dutch East India Company (
VOC) ~
Dutch Colonization of America In
1602, the government of the
Republic of the
Seven United Netherlands chartered the Dutch East India Company (
Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie), or VOC with the mission of exploring it for a passage to the
Indies and claiming any uncharted areas for the
United Provinces, which led to several significant expeditions which led to
the creation of the province of
New Netherland.
In 1609, the VOC commissioned
English explorer
Henry Hudson who, in an attempt to find the so-called northwest passage to the Indies, discovered and claimed for the VOC parts of the present-day
United States and Canada. In the belief that it was the best route to explore,
Hudson entered the
Upper New York Bay sailing up the river which now bears his name. In 1614,
Adriaen Block led an expedition to the lower Hudson in the
Tyger, and then explored the
East River aboard the Onrust, becoming the first known
European to navigate the Hellegat enter
Long Island Sound.
Block Island and its sound were named after him. Upon returning,
Block compiled a map, the first to apply the name "New Netherland" to the area between English
Virginia and
French Canada, where he was later granted exclusive trading rights by the
Dutch government.
After some early trading expeditions, the first Dutch settlement in the
Americas was founded in 1615:
Fort Nassau, on
Castle Island in the Hudson, near present-day
Albany. The settlement served mostly as a factorij for fur trade with the natives and was later replaced by
Fort Orange. In 1621, a new company was established with a trading monopoly in the Americas and
West Africa: the
Dutch West India Company (Westindische Compagnie or
WIC). The WIC sought recognition for the area in the
New World – which had been called New Netherland – as a province, which was granted in 1623. That year, another Fort Nassau was built on the
Delaware River near
Gloucester City, New Jersey.
In 1624, the first colonists landed at
Governor's Island and Initially were dispersed to Fort Orange,
Fort Wilhelmus and
Kievets Hoek. In 1626,
Director of the WIC
Peter Minuit purchased the island of
Manhattan from the
Lenape and started the construction of
Fort Amsterdam, which grew to become the main port and capital,
New Amsterdam The colony expanded to outlying areas at
Pavonia,
Brooklyn,
Bronx, and
Long Island. On the
Connecticut River,
Fort Huys de Goede Hoop was completed in
1633 at present day
Hartford. By 1636, the English from
Newtown (now
Cambridge, Massachusetts) settled on the north side of the
Little River. In the
Treaty of Hartford, the border of New Netherland was retracted to western
Connecticut and by
1653, the English had overtaken the Dutch trading post.
Expansion along the Delaware River beyond Fort Nassau did not begin until the 1650s, after the takeover of the colony of
New Sweden, which had been established at
Fort Christina in 1638. Settlements at Fort Nassau and the short-lived
Fort Beversreede were abandoned and consolidated at
Fort Casimir in 1655. Fort Christina, at today's
Wilmington, was renamed
Fort Altena.
In 1664, the English naval expedition ordered by the
Prince James,
Duke of York and of Albany (later
King James II &
VII) sailed in the harbor at New Amsterdam, threatening to attack. Being greatly outnumbered, Director-General
Peter Stuyvesant surrendered after negotiating favorable articles of capitulation. The province was renamed New York (from
James's English title). Fort Orange was renamed
Fort Albany (from James's
Scottish title). The region between the lower Hudson and the
Delaware was deeded to proprietors and called
New Jersey.
The loss of New Netherland led to the
Second Anglo–Dutch War during 1665–1667. This conflict ended with the
Treaty of Breda in which the Dutch gave up their claim to New Netherland in exchange for
Suriname. From 1673 to 1674, the territories were once again briefly captured by the Dutch in the
Third Anglo–Dutch War, only to be returned to
England at the
Treaty of Westminster. In 1674,
Dutch navy captain
Jurriaen Aernoutsz also briefly captured two forts in the
French colony of
Acadia, which he claimed as the Dutch territory of
New Holland. However, Aernoutsz's appointed administrator,
John Rhoades, quickly lost control of the territory after Aernoutsz himself left for
Curaçao to seek out new settlers, and with effective control of Acadia remaining in the hands of
France, Dutch sovereignty existed only on paper until the
Netherlands surrendered their claim in the
Treaties of Nijmegen.
iPhone recorded. Hudson river footage found on YouTube.