Kieft's War
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Kieft's War, also known as the Wappinger War, was a conflict between Dutch settlers and Native Americans in the colony of New Netherland from 1643 to 1645. The war is named for Willem Kieft, who was the Director-General of New Netherland at the time.
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[edit] Background
Appointed director general by the Dutch West India Company, Willem Kieft arrived in New Netherland in 1639 with the task of increasing profits from the port at Pavonia. In 1638, the New England colonies had defeated the Pequots in the Pequot War, after which the colonies received large amounts of wampum in tribute. Kieft's first solution to increase profits was to similarly tax the Lenape, or Delaware Indians living in the region, with claims that the money would buy them protection from rival tribes. In addition, the settlers in New Amsterdam were in intermittent conflict with their Wappani neighbors.[1] Tensions mounted between the natives and the Dutch settlers, eventually leading to violence. The death of a Dutch settler, Claes Swits, at the hands of a Weckquaesgeek (Wappani on the east side of the Hudson River) particularly angered many of the Dutch when the tribe would not turn over the murderer.
[edit] War
Although the Council of twelve men advised against it, Kieft decided to punish the Indians by attacking at Pavonia (in today's Jersey City), which he ordered on February 25, 1643. The initial strike was a massacre: 129 Dutch soldiers killed 120 Indians, including women and children. Historians differ on whether or not the massacre was Kieft's idea[2][3], but all sources agree that he thanked and rewarded the soldiers for their deeds. The attacks united the Algonquian peoples in the surrounding areas, including Lenape and Wappani, to an extent not seen before. In autumn of 1643, a force of 1,500 natives invaded New Netherland, famously killing dissident preacher Anne Hutchinson. In retaliation that winter, 500 Weckquaesgeeks were killed by Dutch forces.
For the next two years the united tribes harassed settlers all across New Netherland, killing sporadically and suddenly. The sparse forces were helpless to stop the attacks, but the natives were kept too spread out to mount more effective strikes. A truce was finally agreed to by the last of the eleven united tribes in August of 1645.
[edit] Outcome
The resulting attacks by the natives caused many Dutch settlers to return to Europe, shaking confidence in the Dutch West India Company's ability to control their territory in the New World. Kieft was recalled to the Netherlands to answer for his conduct in 1647, but he died in a shipwreck near Swansea before his version of events could be told. His successor was Peter Stuyvesant, who ran New Netherland until it was ceded to the British.
The war was extremely bloody in proportion to the population at the time: more than 1,600 natives were killed in Kieft's War at a time when the European population of New Amsterdam was only 250.[3] A relative peace lasted until the early hostilities of the Esopus Wars began in the 1650s.
[edit] References
- ^ Sultzman, Lee (1997). Wappinger History. Retrieved on July 5, 2006.
- ^ Winkler, David F. (1998). Revisiting the Attack on Pavonia. New Jersey Historical Society.
- ^ a b Beck, Sanderson (2006). New Netherland and Stuyvesant 1642-64.