June 12, 2008

June 12, 1665: New what?

On this day in 1665, the English renamed New Amsterdam, New York.

New Amsterdam was the first permanent European settlement in the area, founded in 1624 by the Dutch East India Company at the mouth of the Hudson River on the southern part of Manhattan Island. The city would be the capital of New Netherland from 1626 till its capture by the British in 1664.

When England and Holland’s vie for economic supremacy spread to the American colonies it was no mystery that New Amsterdam, the pearl of the New Amsterdam Colony, would be a target. Five hundred professional soldiers, aboard four English warships arrived at the harbor on August 18, 1664. The current governor of New Amsterdam, Stuyvesant, wanted to prepare for battle and fight but the citizens had something else in mind. Resentful of his autocratic rule and with the best navy in the world at the time at their doorsteps they refused to fight and surrender. New Amsterdam was conquered quickly and without a fight.

In 1665 the English renamed the city (or more like a large town at the time) New York in honor of the Duke of York, brother of King Charles II of Britain. The name was later applied to the entire colony.

Consolidated in 1898, New York City now consists of five boroughs: Brooklyn, Queens, Manhattan, the Bronx, and Staten Island. The city has become a major economic and cultural hub for the country hosting (to name just a few) the New York Stock Exchange, 40 Fortune 500 companies, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and an array of sports teams such as the Yankees, Mets, Rangers, Giants, and Knicks. NYC is the largest city in the United States, with a current population of over 8.2 million people (excluding its metropolitan areas), which is more than double that of L.A., the second largest city in the U.S. (bet the Dutch wish they fought a little harder for it now).

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