A new plan of municipal government had …
Years: 1653 - 1653
A new plan of municipal government had been arranged in the Netherlands, and the name "New Amsterdam" is officially declared on February 2, 1653.
Stuyvesant makes a speech for the occasion, saying that his authority will remain undiminished.
A meeting of the commissioners on boundaries had taken place in September 1650, in Hartford, Connecticut.
The border had been arranged to the dissatisfaction of the Nine Men, who declared that "the governor had ceded away enough territory to found fifty colonies each fifty miles square."
Stuyvesant had then threatened to dissolve the council.
Stuyvesant is now ordered to the Netherlands, but the order is soon revoked under pressure from the States of Holland and the city of Amsterdam.
Stuyvesant prepares against an attack by ordering the citizens to dig a ditch from the North River to the East River and to erect a fortification.
A convention of two deputies from each village in New Netherland in 1653 demands reforms, and Stuyvesant commands that assembly to disperse, saying: "We derive our authority from God and the company, not from a few ignorant subjects."
Locations
People
Groups
- Netherlands, United Provinces of the (Dutch Republic)
- New Netherland (Dutch Colony)
- Dutch West India Company
- New Haven Colony (English)
