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Dutch New Netherland
Excerpts from Voyages of the Slavers St. John and Arms of Amsterdam, 1659, 1663, documenting the Dutch slave trade to New Netherland.

Excerpts from Voyages of the Slavers St. John and Arms of Amsterdam, 1659, 1663, documenting the Dutch slave trade to New Netherland.

New Netherland’s last director, Peter Stuyvesant, dramatically expanded New Netherland’s, and specifically New Amsterdam’s, role in the slave trade among Africa, the West Indies, and North America. While slavery in New Netherland was unique in some ways, it was similar to practices elsewhere in the American colonies in that Africans were kidnapped, exported, traded, and sold against their will for the purpose of unpaid labor. Most enslaved Africans in New Netherland belonged to the West India Company and labored to help build and support the colony. (This document uses the long “s,” which looks like an “f.” The Caribbean island of Curaçao was another Dutch West India Company colony.)

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Citation Information
Excerpts from “Voyages of the slavers St. John and Arms of Amsterdam, 1659, 1663: together with additional papers illustrative of the slave trade under the Dutch,” Digital Public Library of America, https://dp.la/item/b41bd16ab2c6692c2366d13ae4b8a59a.
Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
Courtesy of HathiTrust.

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Item 12 of 15 in the Primary Source Set Dutch New Netherland

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An 1858 print depicting the encounter between Henry (Hendrick) Hudson and Native Americans.
A Dutch map depicting North America from present-day Canada to Virginia, circa 1655.
An eighteenth-century wampum belt.
The West India Company’s Charter of Freedoms and Exemptions, 1629.
A contract recording the sale of land along the Hudson River from Mahican Indians to Kiliaen van Rensselaer, 1630.
A series of drawings for the proposed coat of arms of New Netherland, 1630.
A print depicting the early settlement of New Amsterdam, published in 1651.
A map showing the original land grantees in New Amsterdam, 1897.
A 1660 map of the city of New Amsterdam called the Castello Plan.
An excerpt from A Description of The New Netherlands by Adriaen van der Donck, ca. 1653.
A transcript of the ordinance from the Director and Council of New Netherland granting “half freedom” to a group of enslaved men, 1644.
Excerpts from Voyages of the Slavers St. John and Arms of Amsterdam, 1659, 1663, documenting the Dutch slave trade to New Netherland.
An excerpt from the minutes of the court of Fort Orange and Beverwyck, circa 1652.
An excerpt from the Journal of Jasper Danckaerts on his arrival in New York, formerly New Amsterdam, in 1679.
An excerpt from the Journal of Jasper Danckaerts on his travels in present-day Brooklyn, formerly part of New Netherland, in 1679.

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