Maryn Adriansen
Maryn Adriansen (1600 – c.1654) (also spelled Maryn Adriaensen, Marinus Adriaensz, Marijn Adriaensz, Marin Adriaensz, Marinus Ariaens) was an early settler to New Netherland.[1] Originally emigrating under an Indenture agreement he later became a prominent member of society. His conflict with the governor led to accusations and, eventually, acquittal. He owned property in New Amsterdam and a large plantation at Awiehaken.
Background
Maryn Adrieansen was born in Holland in 1600, and he came from Veere, in the Province of Zeeland. He was a boatswain from 1621 to 1627 under Captain Claes Gerritssen Compaen. He married Lysbet Thyssen around 1628 and may have been in New Amsterdam as early as 1630 where an unnamed son was born. He died sometime before March 1654, and his widow, Lysbet Thysen, remarried Geerlief Michelsen.
Rensselaerwyck
Adriansen contracted with Kiliaen van Rensselaer to serve as a tobacco planter for the period of three years on January 12, 1631. He sailed with his wife Lysbet Thysen and a child and a few farm worker from Texel aboard De Eendracht shortly after July 7, 1631. He arrived at Fort Orange, part of the patroon of Rensselaerwyck, located on the Hudson River (in today's Capital District near Albany, New York. His indenture was for a period of three years for half of 4 guns, 8 axes, 4 adzes, 12 spades, to fl.74,10.[2] In 1632 he was named schepen. As his name does not appear later in the colony's accounts, he likely left at the end of his term in 1634.[3]
New Amsterdam
Adriaensen engaged in the North River (Hudson River) trade, establishing himself near the present-day Pearl and Wall Street in New Amsterdam and purchased a house in the Smit's Vly (along the shores of the East River[4] at the foot of today's Maiden Lane[5][6]).
On August 29, 1641 he was elected a member of Director of New Netherland Willem Kieft's advisory board, the Twelve Men. in 1643 he took part in a Shrovetide dinner meeting at the home of Jan Jansen Damen, with other guests including Kieft, Cornelis van Tienhoven and Abraham Isaacsen Verplanck[7] During dinner, the men discussed the Indian situation and Van Tienhoven produced a petition advocating the massacre of the Native American population. All those in attendance signed the document and Kieft agreed. The Pavonia Massacre took place, February 25–26. Eighty Native Americans were brutally massacred. Kieft ordered Adriaensen and a band of volunteers to go to Corlaers Hook to attack the refugees assembled there. Forty of the tribe, men, women and children, were killed in the Massacre at Corlears Hook. Retaliation was swift, and the colonists suffered greatly that winter from Native American attacks during what is known as Kieft's War.[8][9]
Adriaensen, realizing that Kieft intended to shift public blame to him, went to Kieft armed with a loaded pistol and cutlass and demanded "What devilish lies are these you've been telling about me?". Counsellor La Montagne grappled for the pistol, which misfired without causing injury. Meanwhile, Robert Pennoyer, one of the company's soldiers, drew Adriaensen's sword from its scabbard and flung it away. (Pennoyer later testified in regard to the matter, on the 23d of March, 1643; that he had heard Adriaensen's wife Lysbet Tyson say in the tavern after he had asked her twice what ailed her, "Robert, my husband, will kill the commander; go and catch him" [10]). Adriaensen was overpowered and jailed but under pressure from Adriaensen's followers, Kieft agreed to return Adriaensen to Amsterdam for trial. Bound in chains, Adriaensen was put on board a ship sailing for Holland, where he was acquitted.[8][11] and afterwards returned.[12]
Weehawken
Bergen, along the Hudson and Hackensack Rivers, that would become contemporary Hudson and Bergen Counties. Though it only officially existed as an independent municipality from 1661, with the founding of a village at Bergen Square, Bergen began as a factorij at Communipaw circa 1615 and was first settled in 1630 as Pavonia, with settlements at Harsimus, Paulus Hook, Hoboken and Vriessendael were in the following years. They were along the banks of the North River (Hudson River) across from New Amsterdam, under whose jurisdiction they fell.
Maryn Adriansen acquired land on the west bank of the Hudson. As seen on the Manatus Map of 1639, depicts a land holding numbered 32 and described as the "plantation of Maerynes".[14] At some point Adriaensen returned to New Netherland some years and on May 11, 1647, Director Kieft granted him patent for fifty morgens[15] him lands on the west side of the North River, known by the name of "Awiehaken", now Weehawken[13]
On April 18, 1670, the government of the Province of New Jersey (posthumously) confirmed the grant to Maryn Adriaensen for a parcel of land called Wiehacken in the jurisdiction of Bergen on Hobooken Creek, 50 morgen Dutch measure originally given on May 11, 1647.[16]
See also
New Netherland series |
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Exploration |
Fortifications: |
Settlements: |
The Patroon System |
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People of New Netherland |
Flushing Remonstrance |
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References
- "Marinus Adriaensz (Marijn Adriaensz, Maryn Adriaensen, Marin Adriaensz, Marinus Ariaens/De Eendracht - Brabants Historish Informatie Centrum". www.bhic.nl. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
- O'Callaghan, Edmund Bailey (1846), History of New Netherlands: Or, New York Under the Dutch, vol. 1, G.S. Appleton
- Van Laer, A. J. F (2014), Settlers of Rensselaerswyck, 1630-1658, Genealogical Publishing Company (reprint), ISBN 9780806303598
- A Maritime History of New York. Going Coastal, Inc. 26 May 2017. ISBN 9780972980319. Retrieved 26 May 2017 – via Google Books.
- Pound, Arthur; Huffman, Philip (1935), The Golden Earth: The Story of Manhattan's Landed Wealth, Macmillan
- "T. Smit's Vly [or, "Smith's Valley"] in early times. (Present foot of Maiden-lane, 1861)". NYPL Digital Collections. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
- "BILL'S BROWNSTONE - Maiden Lane, A Walking Tour of New Amsterdam". www.billsbrownstone.com. Archived from the original on 22 July 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
- "Maryn Adriaensen". www.courts.state.ny.us. Historical Society of the New York Courts - New York Legal History / Colonial New York Under Dutch Rule: 1609-1664; 1673-1674. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
- Ruttenber,E.M.,Indian Tribes of Hudson's River, ISBN 0-910746-98-2 (Hope Farm Press, 3rd ed, 2001)
- Shorto, Russell, The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony that Shaped America ISBN 0-385-50349-0 (New York, Doubleday, 2004). book's website
- Moscow, Henry (1 January 1995). The Book of New York Firsts. Syracuse University Press. p. 115. ISBN 9780815603085. Retrieved 26 May 2017 – via Internet Archive.
Maryn Adriaensen.
- O'Callaghan, Edmund Bailey (1865), Calendar of Historical Manuscripts in the Office of the Secretary of State, vol. 11, Albany, New York
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - Kirk, Edward J. (October 16, 1932). "Weehawken History, 1932". Hudson County Archives Society. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
Among the legended references on the famous Manatus Map of 1639, which has so happily preserved the beginnings of Pavonia for us, is one "No. 32", showing the "plantation of Maerynes". That was the cartographers shorthand for Maryn Adriaensen, who was in what is now Weehawken for many years before he got that May 11th 1647, patent for the 50 morgens, (about 100 acres) "extending from the kill of Hobocken and the north to the mouth of the next kill" and so on.
- "Earliest known Manhattan map made in 1639" (PDF). The New York Times. March 25, 1917. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
- History of the Land Titles in Hudson County, New Jersey - 1609-1871 by Charles H. Winfield (published 1872) - page 37.
- Nelson, William (1899), Patents and Deeds and Other Early Records of New Jersey, 1664-1703, vol. 21, Genealogical Publishing Company, ISBN 9780806307114