Broadway

As they extended their empire around the world, the Dutch had a way of adapting local customs to their own purposes. English settlers in New England tended to follow English principles of town design in laying out their settlements. On Manhattan, as elsewhere, the Dutch made use of what had previously worked. The Indians of the region had long before carved trails through the wilderness of Manhattan Island. The principal one of these was called the Wickquasgeck Trail, after one of the Delaware-speaking tribes of the Lower Hudson region. It traversed the island from north to south, undulating as it went to skirt swamps and rocky outcrops. It was only natural that the Dutch would take this same road as their main way of getting from New Amsterdam at the southern tip to other points on the island. The Dutch explorer and entrepreneur David de Vries, in his journal for the year 1642, gives the first mention of it—“the Wickquasgeck Road over which the Indians passed daily”

The Dutch widened the southern reaches of the trail, making it into a proper road where it led straight into Fort Amsterdam. They called it de Heere Straat—the Gentlemen’s Street. Under the English it became Broadway.