Documents Relative to the Colonial History of New York, Vol. I — Passage 148
[E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856)] High Mightinesses in behalf of Jochum Pieters' Cuyter and Cornells Melyn being read to the Assembly, it is, after previous deliberation, held as enacted, and it is further ordered to be dispatched and issued. Mesolution of the States General to grant Safeguard to Messrs. Cuyter and [From the Register of West India Affairs, 1633—1651, in the Royal Archives at the Hague. ] Wednesday, 6"" May, 1648. A certain other petition presented to their High Mightinesses in the name and Cuyter and Cornells Melyn, their High Mightinesses' subjects and inhabitants in New Netherland, is read to the Assembly, Mandamus. Setting forth, that their High Mightinesses were pleased on the 28"" April last, to grant them, the petitioners, a Mandamus in case of appeal, with the clause suspending the sentence which Peter Stuyvesant, Director of New Netherland under the West India Company, with the advice of his Council, pronounced against them on the 25"" July, 1647, and that their High Mightinesses, in addition, have granted them, the petitioners, liberty, pending the case in appeal, to return hence to New Netherland aforesaid, and use and enjoy their property there free and unmolested, the same as other colonists and inhabitants. They, the Petitioners, praying their High Mightinesses to be pleased to extend their favor further, so far as to advise the Assembly of the XIX.