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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
April 13, 2006
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Thursday, April 13, 2006
Rumors in 1657 That Thomas Pell Manipulated Local Native Americans To
Protect His Land Acquisition From Incursions by the Dutch
Thomas Pell of Fairfield in the colony of Connecticut acquired the lands
that later became Pelham, New York and surrounding areas on June 27, 1654.
The "treaty"
by which Pell acquired the lands was enlightened in one respect. It
constituted more than a mere sale of the lands. It also required future
cooperation and interaction between representatives of the Native
Americans and the English settlers to protect the acquired lands against
incursions.
In addition to the provisions that dealt with the Native Americans'
transfer of land to Thomas Pell, there was a separate section at the foot
of the treaty entitled "Articles of Agreement". That section affirmatively
obligated both the English settlers and the Native Americans to choose two
representatives one day in the Spring of "every yeare" to inspect the
boundaries of the land that was the subject of the sale agreement so that
"Right Knowledge may be kept wh out [without] injury to Either side yt
Mutuall peace & love may be mayntayned."
The objective sounds noble. There are indications, however, that Thomas
Pell expected more of the local Native Americans than merely inspecting
the boundaries of the land he acquired once each spring. Rumors circulated
in 1656 and 1657 that Pell "daily" told local Native Americans either to
"return his money" or to protect the land he had acquired from them
against incursions by the Dutch.
These rumors are reflected in an English translation of a fascinating
Dutch report prepared in 1657. The report details a trip by a group of
Dutch emissaries appointed by Director General Peter Stuyvesant that
departed from Fort Amersterdam near the tip of today's Manhattan Island on
December 29, 1656. The group traveled to Oostdorp (later the town of West
Chester, located in Westchester County, until it was annexed by New York
City and became part of today's Bronx).
The men who made the trip were: Brian Nuton, "Captn Lieutenant"; Cornelis
Van Ruyven, "Secretary"; and Carel van Brugge, "Commissary". They traveled
to Oostdorp to lodge objections, for the second time, to the English
settlers' claims on the land. Those settlers reportedly had acquired the
land from Thomas Pell.
According to the report, the object of the mission was to communicate that
of the six individuals that the little settlement had nominated as
possible Magistrates for Oostdorp, Director General Peter Stuyvesant had
selected three to serve: "Mr. Newman, Mr. Lord and John Smith". The drum
used to call the inhabitants together was beaten and the Dutch read to the
assembled group the commission granted to the Magistrates. The Dutch
representatives took oaths from a number of the inhabitants swearing
allegiance to the Director General and his appointed Magistrates and laws
"so far as these harmonized with the laws of God".
The group then presented a number of complaints to the Dutch that they
asked the representatives to deliver on their behalf to the Director
General and the Council at Fort Amsterdam. Among those complaints was one
founded on the rumors surrounding Thomas Pell and his dealings with local
Native Americans. The report stated, in pertinent part, as follows:
"The preceding being accomplished, divers of the Inhabitants made the
following complaints which they requested us to present to the Hr General
& Council, in order that a timely remedy may be applied: -
Firstly, regarding the insolence of the Indians; that they daily threaten
to destroy them if they repair under the Dutch which some told us
proceeded from Mr. Pel [sic] who purchased that piece of land from the
Indians on this condition, as they said, that the Indians should deliver
it to him unembarrassed, and maintain him in it against all who may have
claims to it, and that the said Pel now daily importuned the Indians to
return his money, or otherwise that the Indians according to Deed of Sale,
should free him from the Dutch nation who claim it as their property. . .
. "
Source: Papers Relating to Westchester County, Vol. XIII, pp. 924-25 (Ward
Parsons 1849).
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Web Site
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http://www.historicpelham.com/
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single index of all Historic Pelham Blog Postings to date.
posted by Blake A. Bell @
4:49 AM
Comment
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Posting for April 13, 2006.
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