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Documents Relative to the Colonial History of New York, Vol. I — Passage 324

E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856) 220 words View original →

[E.B. O'Callaghan (ed.) (1856)] In the year 1G35 one Mr. Pinsen established a trading house and plantation ' on said Fresh river above Fort Hope, against which Director Twiller protested through one Andries Hudde, in the name of the Company. The English proceeding, notwithstanding, have founded about a small gunshot from Fort Hope, the town called Hertfoort, and other settlements on the Company's purchased lands, contrary to previous protests; so that the English of Hertfoort left to Fort Hope scarcely ground enough to supply the corn and vegetables necessary for the people of said fort; of those lands they robbed the Company by force, contrary to all public law. Apprehensive that they might experience hereafter some inconvenience on account of the aforementioned proceedings, the English of Hertfoort sent down three Deputies to enter into some arrangement with the Director of New Netherland, with which view they submitted some points, whereof the Governor of Hertfoort was to communicate the ratification; this has not been done to this date, and the difference has remained in statu quo. We have, thus far, spoken of the right whereby the aforesaid West India Company, in virtue of the Charter, have taken possession of those lands, to wit : by its lawful and voluntary sale and conveyance by the natives, which can be proved by Christians and Indians still living.