DELAWARE HISTORIC SPOTS
SEWELL P. MOORE
WILMINGTON NEWS JOURNAL
MONDAY OCTOBER 13 1930
SWEDES AT CHRISTINA
Had it not been for some
internal trouble in the Dutch West India Company the Swedes
would not have had a part in
the settlement of Delaware. There were misunderstandings between
the men who controlled the
money and the men who set the policies of the Dutch Company.
In 1624, William Usselinx
of Antwerp who had been a director in the New Amsterdam
enterprize left Holland
and wemt to Sweden with hopes to interest King Gustavus Adolphus in
a claim to land on the
western bank of the Delaware River. Usselinx descriptions of the
richness
and possibilities of the
new world were so convincing the King granted a charter that same
year, however, no action was taken for another charter was granted in
the year 1626.
This new company was the
Swedish South Sea Company which proposed to tke up lands
in America and other parts
of the world.
An expedition set sail for
America in 1626 but was captured by the Spanish. If this expedition
had reached the Delaware
river, the Swedes would have taken the peninsula and a different
history
of Delaware would have been
written. Nothing came of the Swedish company and the 1631 voyage
was the first to reach Delaware shores.
The year the Dutch, upon
returning to the Lewes settlement and found it in ashes, the king
Adolphus was killed in
battle between Sweden and Germany and there was no Swedish patron nor
capital for any explorations
and the South Seas Company was disbanded without taking an acre of
new world land.
The Swedish King, needing
to give his full attention to matters at home, was still interesed
in an American Swedish
colony had early on urged the project to be continued. At his
death, an
infant daughter, Christina,
ascended to the throne, and, Axel Oxenstierna, became
Chancellor,
the ruler of Sweden. One
of the chancellor's first acts was to send Peter Spiring to Holland
seeking
a man willing and capable of
undertaking the colonaziation of America.
1636 , in May, Spiring
reported that Peter Minuet was the ideal leader, since he had
been
governor of Dutch New
Ansterdam, dismissed to return to Holland and was anxious to
undertake
any expedition in
competition to the Dutch Company. Minuet organized the
Swedish-Dutch
Company with money from both
Swedish and Dutch Banks which established fur trade post in any
part of the New World not
already occupied by English or Dutch, caled the land Nova Swedia on
the west bank of Delaware
before the dutch could send another lot of immigants to settle it.
In 1737 Minuet went to
Sweden to take active charge of preparations and the little band of
colonists set sail in 1638. There were 50 imigrants, with cattle,
sheep, and other animals, trading materials, food, seeds, and
ammunitions. In March, 1638, they arrived at Cape Henlopen and
renamed the river “New
Swedens River”.
The first landing place
was on a point which they named ' Paradys Udden' meaning
Paradise Point located
land just south of Muderkill Creek, originally “ Morders Kylen”
.
They decided not to stay
here and sailed up the bay to Minquas Creek and changed the Indian
name
to “Christina” in honor
of their infant Queen. Entering the creek they sailed up two miles
above
the Brandywine to land at
the “Rocks” being still March.
All of this land was
claimed by the Indian Chief Mattahoon which was bought from the chief
as much as lay between six
trees marked a good distance apart. At the rocks was built a square
fort
of logs and called “Fort
Christina”. Emigrant cabins were built and the settlement was
called New Sweden. This settlement was protested by the Dutch,
however, no serious trouble happpened
until many years afterwards.
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