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Esopus
Throughout the 1620s and 1630s traffic on the North River moved
steadily between New Amsterdam-the capital of New Netherland, located
on the island of Manhattan-and Fort Orange, the outpost 150 miles
to the north, which would eventually become the city of Albany.
But, as Henry Hudson discovered on first exploring the region in
1609, the river grew shallower about halfway up. Dutch sea captains
soon realized it made sense to move cargo onto lighter vessels once
they reached this point. In 1652, a group of about 60 Fort Orange
settlers moved south to this spot and formed a village. They named
it Esopus after the Esopus Creek, a waterway that fed into the river
here, and along whose fertile banks they farmed.
They weren't alone, however. The Esopus Indians also farmed this
stretch. The Dutch had known the Esopus for years; in 1640, the
famed Dutch adventurer David deVries wrote in his journal on coming
up the river: "The 27th, we came to Esoopes, where a creek
runs in; and there the savages had much maize-land, but all somewhat
stony."
For a time after the founding of the village relations were peaceful,
but eventually the two sides squared off in a series of bloody encounters
called the Esopus Wars. In 1657, Peter Stuyvesant, the director-general
of New Netherland, built a stockade to protect the Dutch, and renamed
the village Wiltwyck.
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