[Peter Stuyvesant, the Last Dutch Governor of New Amsterdam by John S. C. Abbott]@TWC D-Link book
Peter Stuyvesant, the Last Dutch Governor of New Amsterdam

CHAPTER IX
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The city government not only gave them an asylum, but voted large sums from its treasury, for their support.
Carrying out this policy, the city decided to establish a colony of its own in New Netherland, to be composed mainly of these Waldenses.
The municipal authorities purchased of the West India Company, for seven hundred guilders, all the land on the west side of South river, from Christina kill to Bombay Hook.

This gave a river front of about forty miles, running back indefinitely into the interior.

This region was named New Amstel.

The colonists were offered a free passage, ample farms on the river, and provisions and clothing for one year.

The city also agreed to send out "a proper person for a schoolmaster, who shall also read the holy Scriptures in public and set the Psalms." A church was to be organized so soon as there were two hundred inhabitants in the colony.
[Illustration] The Company wrote to Stuyvesant saying, "The confidence we feel about the success and increase of this new colony of which we hope to see some prominent features next spring, when to all appearance, large numbers of the exiled Waldenses will flock thither, as to an asylum, induces us to send you orders to endeavor to purchase of the Indians, before it can be accomplished by any other nation, all that tract of land situated between the South river and the Hook of the North river, to provide establishments for these emigrants." On Christmas day of 1656, three vessels containing one hundred and sixty emigrants, sailed from the Texel.


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