One day in
1633, Dutch soldiers and traders posted at the lonely little fort
called House of Hope, one hundred miles from New Amsterdam and the
center of Dutch North America, were surprised to see an English
ship come sailing up the Fresh River. Jacob Van Curler, in command
of the fort, called to the ship and asked where she was headed.
"Up the river to trade," came the answer from her captain,
William Holmes. The Dutch trained their guns on the ship; Van Curler
demanded that it heave to or be fired on. But the gutsy Holmes ignored
the threat and kept pushing northward. Van Curler decided not to
fire, and the English eventually reached their destination. It was
a choice spot ten miles north of the Dutch fort, which they had
purchased from the Pequot Indians. There, they put up a single wooden
house and a palisade. Soon after, sixty more of their fellow members
of a church congregation in the Plymouth colony joined them. They
named their town Windsor. It is considered the first permanent European
settlement in the state of Connecticut.