Vlissingen hempstead Hempstead Maspeth Maspeth New Amersfoort New Amersfoort New Amersfoort Gravesend Gravesend New Utrecht Breuckelen Breuckelen Mdwout Midwout Boswyck Boswyck Midwout New Amersfoort Eastern Long Island Eastern Long Island Maspeth Hempstead Gravesend New Amersfoort Boswyck
 
Vlissingen (Flushing)

The town of Vlissingen on Long Island was named after a town in the Netherlands. It would become much better known, however, by the corrupted English form of the name: Flushing. Today it may summon images of serves and volleys-the National Tennis Center is at Flushing Meadow. But Flushing's true contribution to history came over a confrontation in the late 1650s and early 1660s. The Dutch had allowed a group of English religious dissidents from New England to settle the town, and among its early residents was a population of Quakers. Under the West India Company rules for New Netherland, there was an official state religion—the Dutch Reformed faith—and while "freedom of conscience" was allowed to residents under the Dutch constitutional document, only Dutch Reformed congregations were permitted. The Quakers of Vlissingen, however, insisted on proclaiming their faith publicly, and Petrus Stuyvesant responded with a crackdown.