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It is the early 1640s. The Dutch, who have done their level best to foster good relations with the local Indians because war isn’t good for business, have a new governor in charge at New Amsterdam. Willem Kieft is a man of extraordinary ego and bad judgment, a coward and a weasel. Kieft launches an incredibly violent war with the many tribes on and around Manhattan on a tissue-thin pretext. The bloodletting is shockingly wasteful and sad, even across the years. In the end, he turns to John Underhill, the Puritan captain who led the forces of the Massachusetts Bay against the Pequots years before. The results are every bit as ugly. The episode ends with a story about a stonemason named John Ogden, without whom you would not be listening to this podcast.
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Selected references for this episode
Russell Shorto, The Island at the Center of the World: The Epic Story of Dutch Manhattan and the Forgotten Colony That Shaped America
J. Franklin Jameson, Narratives of New Netherland 1609-1664
Donna Merwick, The Shame and the Sorrow: Dutch-Amerindian Encounters in New Netherland
Katherine A. Grandjean, “The Long Wake of the Pequot War,” Early American Studies, Spring 2011.
Nicholas Klaiber, “Kieft’s War and Tributary Politics in Eastern Woodland Colonial Society”
Walter Giersbach, “Governor Kieft’s Personal War,” Military History Online.
Love how you worked the genealogical into your narrative. When you get to the founding of English NJ, John Ogden (and his sons) will be back in the spotlight. See Hatfield’s History of Elizabeth (1868), Thayer’s “As We Were; the Story of Old Elizabethtown NJ (1964), and Wheeler’s 1907 Ogden Genealogy. Probably all three are at Indian Gap.