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Documents Relative to the Colonial History of New York, Vol. I — Passage 207

E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856) 248 words View original →

[E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856)] by every opportunity, to endeavor by all means to restore peace. 68. The ship Beninjo, belonging to Sieur Bensio, being come within the limits and charter of the Company, without permit, or consent of the Chamber at Amsterdam, much less without having paid duty, was taken out of the bay in front of New Haven, and confiscated in New Netherland. The owner is in Amsterdam; had he thought that he suffered any wrong, he should long since have brought it before the court. And it is worthy remark, tliat some of the petitioners offered a reward for the seizure or arrest of this interloper. The grounds of the confiscation appear in the judgment. We cannot discover from the Remonstrance of the delegates from New Netherland, with what view these people have come hither, inasmuch as the entire of their complaints is filled with calumnies, not only against the Director, but especially against us, their Patroons, who, therefore, cannot presume otherwise but that these people intend, on the one hand, to rid themselves of all government, or on the other, to pay in this wise the Company, what many of Vol. I. 44 346 NEW-YORK COLONIAL MANUSCRIPTS. them are for a long time indebted to it; and principally to escape the tenths of their incomes now due by many for several years, and which, on account of their iterated complaints of the losses they had experienced, were remitted up to the year 1648, when the Director first mentioned them.