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Nut Island
If
you were to enter New York Harbor by ship, as the first explorers
and settlers did, before reaching Manhattan you would come to a
smaller island jutting out into the harbor - an ideal base for establishing
a small settlement and fort for defending the harbor and the Hudson
River from would-be invaders. The Dutch explorers of the early 17th
century thought as much, and they chose this, which they named Noten
Eylant, or Nut Island, after the walnut and chestnut trees that
grew there, as their initial base. We know it today as Governor's
Island.
In 1624, the ship Nieu Nederlandt (New Netherland) put in at the
island, under the command of Cornelis Jacobsz May. May's passengers
comprised a group of 30 families from an area of the Low Countries
or Spanish Netherlands called Wallonia. The Netherlands was in the
midst of a long war with Spain, and at the time Wallonia was under
Spanish rule. Spain hoped to reconvert the Walloons to Catholicism;
thus, along with the Pilgrims who had arrived at Cape Cod just four
years earlier, these were among first of what would be droves of
refugees coming to America seeking religious freedom. Soon after
arriving, most of these settlers were transported further up the
Hudson River, to present-day Albany. A party of eight men was left
on Nut Island, as the West India Company, their employer, thought
to make this the center of its fur-trading operations.
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