[Peter Stuyvesant, the Last Dutch Governor of New Amsterdam by John S. C. Abbott]@TWC D-Link bookPeter Stuyvesant, the Last Dutch Governor of New Amsterdam CHAPTER VII 21/25
Here he received from Boston a commission, "to take all Dutch ships and vessels as shall come into his power, and to defend himself from the Dutch and all enemies of the commonwealth of England." The report of the agents who had visited Manhattan was such that the General Court at Boston voted that they were not "called upon to make a present war with the Dutch." There were eight commissioners from the New England colonies in Boston.
Notwithstanding this decision of the General Court, six of them were in favor of instant war.
They sent back to Governor Stuyvesant an abusive and defiant reply, in which they said, "Your confident denials of the barbarous plot with which you are charged will weigh little in the balance against the evidence, so that we must still require and seek due satisfaction and security." The Connecticut colonists were ever looking with a wistful eye to the rich lands west of them.
The Court at New Haven and that at Hartford sent messengers to Massachusetts to urge that "by war if no other means will serve, the Dutch, at and about the Manhattoes, who have been and still are like to prove injurious, may be removed." The General Court nobly replied, "We cannot act in so weighty a concernment, as to send forth men to shed blood, unless satisfied that God calls for it.
And then it must be clear and not doubtful." "In speaking of these events Mr.Brodhead says, "At the annual meeting of the Commissioners, Massachusetts maintained her proud position with a firmness which almost perilled the stability of the confederation.
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