The Dutch claim the area south to …

Years: 1654 - 1654
June

The Dutch claim the area south to the Delaware (at this time called "South River"); the Swedes claim an area for the Realm of Sweden on the south side of the Delaware that encompasses much of the present-day U.S. state of Delaware, eventually including parts of present-day southeastern Pennsylvania and southern New Jersey on the north side of the river.

The colony of New Sweden remains in constant friction with the Dutch.

The Dutch under Peter Stuyvesant in 1651 had established Fort Casimir at present-day New Castle, only seven miles (twelve kilometers) south of Fort Christina, in order to menace the Swedish settlement.

On Trinity Sunday in 1654, Johan Risingh, Commissary and Councilor to New Sweden Governor Lieutenant Colonel Johan Printz, officially assumes his duties and begins to extricate all Dutch from the Delaware River.

Fort Casimir, its garrison having no gunpowder, surrenders and is renamed Fort Trinity (in Swedish Fort Trefaldighet).

The Swedes are now in complete possession of their colony.

The Susquehannocks meet with the Swedes on June 21, 1654, to reaffirm their ownership.

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