Exploring Dutch Heritage Through Research 

Exploring Dutch Heritage Through Research 

9 months Ago

This collection comprises a great variety of papers, including journals of voyages, deeds, leases, contracts, accounts and inventories of cattle; but the most important item...

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Translation from Van Laer, Van Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts, pp. 137-153
Image: Title page of the “Freedoms and Exemptions,” published in 1630.

Created by NNI

Unlike the plantation systems of the southern and Caribbean colonies, New Netherland's economy did not rely on a cash crop cultivated by unfree laborers. Nevertheless, the enslaved population proved very valuable to the colony's growth and development.

Created by NNI

In June of 2015, Mayor Bill De Blasio unveiled a plaque in lower Manhattan to commemorate the eighteenth-century slave market that once operated at the foot of Wall Street.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In the 1970s, planned development threatened the Flatts. Excavations, advocacy, and community support preserved the site. By 2002, it became Schuyler Flatts Cultural Park, a National Historic Landmark and public treasure.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1650, Arent van Curler joined an embassy to the Mohawks, shaping its diplomacy. Len Tantillo’s painting imagines everyday trade—bark canoes, Flatts horses, and gifts of sewant exchanged along the river.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 2004, archaeologists Paul Huey and Jim Bradley led Len Tantillo across a recently turned field along a creek on the east side of the Hudson...

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

From the estate of Rutger Jacobsen, Arent bought a painting for 85 guilders, a ring for 39, and a silver beaker for 68. These articles joined other staples and luxuries which a prosperous burgher expected to enjoy.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent grew up in a hallehuis, a Dutch farmhouse combining home and barn. Excavations at the Flatts reveal similar features—cellars, structural upgrades, and artifacts—matching his 1643 description and rising prosperity.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

By 1648, Arent van Curler traded Edward Bird pipes and custom firearms at the Flatts. Excavations reveal over 125 EB pipes and evidence of on-site gun assembly, repair, and Native trade.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1651, Captain Slijter called Arent van Curler’s Flatts the best farm in the Colonie—44 morgens of rich land, fine horses, thriving cattle, and Dutch tools unearthed centuries later.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1643, Arent van Curler farmed the Flatts but dreamed of land beyond the pines. By 1660, he founded Schenectady; the Flatts later passed to Philip Schuyler.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1644, Arent van Curler delayed his return to New Netherland, securing a six-year lease to the Flatts. There, he built a thriving farm—despite wolves, runaway pigs, and hard decisions.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent did not wait for the patroon’s blessing to develop the Flatts. He built a house 30 feet long for carpenters and farmhands. His men planted oats on a dozen morgens of land. By the next autumn he hoped for as much grain as the best farm in the Colony.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent van Curler was a 17th-century Dutch settler known for his fair dealings with Indigenous peoples, he played a key role in expanding Dutch influence in New Netherland beyond the Hudson River Valley.

Created by NNI
10 months Ago

In 1631, Dutch investors established the patroonship of Swaanendael on Delaware Bay, hoping to profit from whales. Despite earlier claims, Dutch settlement lagged due to prosperity back home and colonization risks.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

This collection comprises a great variety of papers, including journals of voyages, deeds, leases, contracts, accounts and inventories of cattle; but the most important item...

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Translation from Van Laer, Van Rensselaer Bowier Manuscripts, pp. 137-153
Image: Title page of the “Freedoms and Exemptions,” published in 1630.

Created by NNI

Unlike the plantation systems of the southern and Caribbean colonies, New Netherland's economy did not rely on a cash crop cultivated by unfree laborers. Nevertheless, the enslaved population proved very valuable to the colony's growth and development.

Created by NNI

In June of 2015, Mayor Bill De Blasio unveiled a plaque in lower Manhattan to commemorate the eighteenth-century slave market that once operated at the foot of Wall Street.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In the 1970s, planned development threatened the Flatts. Excavations, advocacy, and community support preserved the site. By 2002, it became Schuyler Flatts Cultural Park, a National Historic Landmark and public treasure.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1650, Arent van Curler joined an embassy to the Mohawks, shaping its diplomacy. Len Tantillo’s painting imagines everyday trade—bark canoes, Flatts horses, and gifts of sewant exchanged along the river.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 2004, archaeologists Paul Huey and Jim Bradley led Len Tantillo across a recently turned field along a creek on the east side of the Hudson...

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

From the estate of Rutger Jacobsen, Arent bought a painting for 85 guilders, a ring for 39, and a silver beaker for 68. These articles joined other staples and luxuries which a prosperous burgher expected to enjoy.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent grew up in a hallehuis, a Dutch farmhouse combining home and barn. Excavations at the Flatts reveal similar features—cellars, structural upgrades, and artifacts—matching his 1643 description and rising prosperity.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

By 1648, Arent van Curler traded Edward Bird pipes and custom firearms at the Flatts. Excavations reveal over 125 EB pipes and evidence of on-site gun assembly, repair, and Native trade.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1651, Captain Slijter called Arent van Curler’s Flatts the best farm in the Colonie—44 morgens of rich land, fine horses, thriving cattle, and Dutch tools unearthed centuries later.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1643, Arent van Curler farmed the Flatts but dreamed of land beyond the pines. By 1660, he founded Schenectady; the Flatts later passed to Philip Schuyler.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

In 1644, Arent van Curler delayed his return to New Netherland, securing a six-year lease to the Flatts. There, he built a thriving farm—despite wolves, runaway pigs, and hard decisions.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent did not wait for the patroon’s blessing to develop the Flatts. He built a house 30 feet long for carpenters and farmhands. His men planted oats on a dozen morgens of land. By the next autumn he hoped for as much grain as the best farm in the Colony.

Created by NNI
9 months Ago

Arent van Curler was a 17th-century Dutch settler known for his fair dealings with Indigenous peoples, he played a key role in expanding Dutch influence in New Netherland beyond the Hudson River Valley.

Created by NNI
10 months Ago

In 1631, Dutch investors established the patroonship of Swaanendael on Delaware Bay, hoping to profit from whales. Despite earlier claims, Dutch settlement lagged due to prosperity back home and colonization risks.

Created by NNI
About New Netherland Institute

For over three decades, NNI has helped cast light on America's Dutch roots. In 2010, it partnered with the New York State Office of Cultural Education to establish the New Netherland Research Center, with matching funds from the State of the Netherlands. NNI is registered as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Contributions are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.

About New Netherland Institute

For over three decades, NNI has helped cast light on America's Dutch roots. In 2010, it partnered with the New York State Office of Cultural Education to establish the New Netherland Research Center, with matching funds from the State of the Netherlands. NNI is registered as a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization. Contributions are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.