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The Hudson River
The
English explorer Henry Hudson made four voyages between 1607 and
1611 in search of a northern sea passage to Asia. Three of them
were on behalf of English trading companies, and on all three of
these trips Hudson confined himself to the frozen reaches near the
Arctic Circle, failing every time to find a route through the ice
that would lead to the tropical climes and exotic goods of Asia.
As fate would have it, the one voyage Hudson undertook for a foreign
power - the Dutch - would have the most historic results. It was
on this trip, in 1609, in the small ship de Halve Maen (The Half
Moon) that Hudson, after first heading east, changed course and
sailed due west in an effort to find a river highway through the
North American continent, and wound up charting the rivers that
we know today as the Hudson, the Connecticut and the Delaware. Thus,
the area he navigated on that voyage was immediately claimed by
the Dutch. The results would be farreaching, leading to the founding
of the New Netherland settlement, and giving New York City a character
distinctly different from Boston, Philadelphia and other large East
Coast cities.
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