Wednesday, December 26, 2018

DELAWARE RIVER CONTROL 1630

HISTORY OF DELAWARE RIVER
THR STRUGGLE FOR THE DELAWARE RIVER
The Swedish, Dutch and English struggle for control of Delaware
River goes back to the 1630's, then became more urgent in late 1650
and early 1660. European settlements on it's shores were a cultural
crossroads

The late 1620's the Dutch West Indies Company, set up forts, along
the South River, later the Delawarer, to carry on a fur trade. .More
permanent settlements failed until 1631 when the West Indies Company
opened the New Netherland's to private investors. Swanendael, at the
Delaware Capes, was established by Samuel Godjin to export whale
oil, furs, tobacco and grain.

This was a grate step, however, no one ever asked nor told the
Sickoneysincks of the Lenap tribe of ten thousand Indians which had a control over Coastal Delaware and southern New Jersey lands and
traded skins to the Dutch for finished cloth and metal wares as early as
1615. As this trade picked up Susquehannocks aka Minquas, became
greedy , challenging the Lenapes for the fur trade.

It became apparent to the natives that the settlers were headed towards
a plantation agricultural permanent settlement, not trading station.
It had become known by the Indians that the plantation settlers of the
Chesapeake region were a threat to their hunting lands. Sickonysincks
attacked Swanendeal killing all thirty two settlers.

This attack made it sure that European settlers would only succeed ' if '
the Lenape said they could and were compatible with their interest..


Abstract 2018: Biography of a Map In Motion, Augustine Herrman's Chesapeake, by
Christian J. Koot

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