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Long
Island
Place names tell the story of Long Island in the history of New
Netherland. The eastern end of the island—North Fork, South
Fork, Southampton, Suffolk—is Old England, while in the west
you find names (with an occasional spelling change) that come straight
from the Dutch: Nassau, "Heemstede," New Utrecht, and
of course "Breuckelen." The island—1,400 square
miles of woodland, bay and beach, a rich microcosm of the continent
it lay astride—-became the principal battleground between
the Dutch of New Netherland and the English of New England as they
struggled for control of the Eastern Seaboard of North America.
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