Bowery Number One

Probably the most famous property in Dutch-era Manhattan was the so-called Bowery Number One. When the West India Company sent its instructions for the development of the island, these included a provision for several large farms, or bouweries, extending north of the city of New Amsterdam. The road that connected these properties to the city was called, naturally enough, Bowery Lane. Over the centuries, this became the down-and-out avenue called the Bowery; today it connects Chinatown to the Lower East Side.

Those instructions from the West India Company indicated that the largest of the bouweries—80 rods by 450 rods—was to be reserved for the use of the director of the colony. This vast farm was thus the home of all New Netherland’s directors: Willem Verhulst, Peter Minuit, Wouter Van Twiller, Willem Kieft, and Petrus Stuyvesant. In 1651, Stuyvesant, not content merely to occupy the land, purchased it from the West India Company. He then added to it by purchasing adjacent tracts, so that the Stuyvesant Farm, as it came to be known, covered 120 acres of lower Manhattan. When the English took over the Dutch colony in 1664, Stuyvesant remained a resident of the new town of New York, and ensured that the new adminstration recognized his title to the property.