Peter Minuit | |
3rd Director-General of New Netherland
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In office 1626–1632 |
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Preceded by | Willem Verhulst |
Succeeded by | Sebastiaen Jansen Krol |
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Born | 1580 Wesel (modern North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany) |
Died | August 5, 1638 St. Christopher |
New Netherland series | |
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Exploration | |
Fortifications: | |
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Settlements: | |
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The Patroon System Charter of Freedoms and Exemptions |
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Directors of New Netherland: Cornelius Jacobsen May (1620-25) |
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People of New Netherland New Netherlander |
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Flushing Remonstrance |
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Peter Minuit, Pieter Minuit, Pierre Minuit or Peter Minnewit (1580 – August 5, 1638) was a Walloon from Wesel, in present-day North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, then part of the Duchy of Clèves. He was the Director-General of the Dutch colony of New Netherland from 1626 until 1633, and he founded the Swedish colony of New Sweden in 1638. According to tradition, Minuit purchased the island of Manhattan from Native Americans on May 24, 1626 for goods to the value of 60 Dutch guilders, which has erroneously been said to be the equivalent of $24 USD.
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Peter Minuit was born in 1580 in Wesel. This was during a period of religious tensions between Protestants and Catholics polities following the Protestant Reformation that culminated in the Thirty Years' War. Minuit's Walloon family, originally from the French-speaking city of Tournai in modern day Belgium, was among those Protestants who migrated away from suppression under the Roman Catholic government of the Spanish Netherlands. In 1580, Minuit's family took refuge in the city of Wesel, which had become a haven for Protestants as early as 1540.
The Eighty Years' War split the Netherlands into a Catholic South and a Protestant North. The religious wars were concluded by the Peace of Westphalia in 1648. They would leave much of Germany devastated, though Westphalia suffered less than some areas. Protestant refugees from German states and France migrated to sympathetic nations and cities such as London. The neighboring Dutch Republic emerged in the 17th century as a dominant force in Europe.
At some point, Minuit moved to Utrecht.
At the age of 45 in December 1625, Minuit was appointed the third director-general of New Netherland by the Dutch West India Company. He sailed to North America and arrived in the colony on May 4, 1626.[1]
On May 24, 1626, Minuit was credited with purchasing the island from the natives (most likely the Lenape tribe [2]) in exchange for trade goods valued at 60 guilders.
The figure of 60 guilders comes from a letter by a member of the board of the Dutch West India Company, Pieter Janszoon Schagen, to the States-General in November 1626[2][3]. In 1846 a New York historian converted the figure of Fl 60 (or 60 guilders) to US$24. "[A] variable-rate myth being a contradiction in terms, the purchase price remains forever frozen at twenty-four dollars," as Edwin G. Burrows and Mike Wallace remarked in their history of New York.[4] Sixty guilders in 1626 had the approximate value of $1000 in 2006, according to the Institute for Social History of Amsterdam[5]
The transaction is often viewed as one-sided, usually to the benefit of the Dutch, though one popular history of Manhattan claims that Minuit actually purchased the island from the wrong tribe (the Canarsee[6], who lived on Long Island)[7]. In any event, there is no evidence that either the Dutch or the Indians believed they had swindled, or been swindled by, the other party to the deal [7]. An 1877 embellishment of the myth claimed that the Dutch offered "beads, buttons and other trinkets," though there is no evidence for this[8]. A contemporary purchase of rights in nearby Staten Island, to which Minuit was also party, involved duffel cloth, iron kettles and axe heads, hoes, wampum, drilling awls, "Jew's harps", and "diverse other wares". "If similar trade goods were involved in the Manhattan arrangement", Burrows and Wallace surmise, "then the Dutch were engaged in high-end technology transfer, handing over equipment of enormous usefulness in tasks ranging from clearing land to drilling wampum".
In 1631, the Dutch West India Company (WIC) suspended Minuit from his post. He returned to Europe in August 1632 to explain his actions, but was dismissed.[1] He was succeeded as director-general by Wouter van Twiller.
His friend Willem Usselincx, also disappointed by the WIC, drew Minuit’s attention to Swedish efforts to found a colony on the Delaware River south of New Netherland. In 1636 or 1637, Minuit made arrangements with Samuel Blommaert and the Swedish government to create the first Swedish colony in the New World. Located on the lower Delaware River within territory earlier claimed by the Dutch, it was called New Sweden. Minuit and his company arrived at Swedes' Landing (now Wilmington, Delaware), in the spring of 1638. Minuit constructed Fort Christina that year, then returned to Stockholm for a second load of colonists. He made a side trip to the Caribbean on the return to pick up a shipment of tobacco for resale in Europe to make the voyage profitable. Minuit died during this voyage during a hurricane at St. Christopher in the Caribbean. The official duties of the governorship were carried out by the Swedish Lieutenant Måns Nilsson Kling, whose rank was raised to Captain for about two years. It took the government that long for the next governor from mainland Sweden to be appointed and travel to North America.
The story of Minuit's buying Manhattan is one of the first schoolchildren in New York learn.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Willem Verhulst |
Director of New Netherland May 4, 1626–1631 |
Succeeded by Sebastiaen Jansen Krol |
New title new colony
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Governor of New Sweden March 29, 1638 – June 15, 1638 |
Succeeded by Måns Nilsson Kling |