In 1651, while serving as director, Stuyvesant purchased the land from the company. He capitulated the colony to the English in 1664 and went to Europe for three years, returning to retire to his farm in 1667. The land was kept in the
Stuyvesant family for many generations into the American period, and was the namesake of numerous local sites and institutions.
Prior to
Dutch colonization, the land where Stuyvesant Farm sat was most likely used or inhabited by Native Americans. The
Wappinger and
Lenape peoples inhabited Manhattan, using the land as seasonal hunting grounds and also establishing permanent villages there.[1] The
Dutch Republic formed the colony of
New Netherland in the early 17th century, and Cryn Fredericks of the
Dutch West India Company set out six estates north of
New Amsterdam to be farmed to support the commanding officers of the colony. The land which made up Stuyvesant Farm was formerly part of two of these estates, the entire Bowery No. 1 and parts of Bowery No. 2 (bowery is an
anglicization of the archaic
Dutch word for "farm", spelled bouwerie or bouwer
ij).[2] These boweries were laid out along a Native American footpath, part of the Northeastern
Great Trail and later the
Boston Post Road, that would become known as the
Bowery Lane after
its destination at the Great Bowery.[2]
In 1632,
Wouter van Twiller took control of Bowery No. 1 when he became Director of New Netherland. During his stewardship over the farm he oversaw many improvements, including adding a house, a brewery, and barns. The largely self-sufficient farm's primary product is thought to have been the staple wheat, rather than a cash crop like tobacco. The building that would become Stuyvesant's Bowery Mansion was most likely a structure originally erected by the Dutch West India Company's carpenters in 1633. Van Twiller was fired in 1637 and when his replacement,
Willem Kieft, arrived in 1638, he found the colony in disarray outside of the impressive Bowery No.1. The
Manatus Map of 1639 indicates only half of the six company boweries were in operation, referring to Boweries 2–6 as “five run down bouweries of the Company, which stand idle whereof now, [in] 1639, 3 are again occupied.”[3]
Under Stuyvesant
In 1645,
Peter Stuyvesant was selected to replace Kieft as Director of New Netherland, and took on the role in 1647. On March 12, 1651, the company directors in Amsterdam authorized the sale of the farm with its dwelling house, barns, woods, six cows, two horses and two African slaves for
ƒ6,400 to Stuyvesant, acting through his agent Jan Jansen Damen.[4][5] By the mid-17th century, an estimated 40 people were enslaved on Stuyvesant Farm.[2] Stuyvesant was the largest private slaveholder on Manhattan; only the company of which he was director held more. Stuyvesant diminished free African-owned properties in the neighboring
Land of the Blacks settlement by appropriating some of them to himself, through both purchases and fiat, though most stayed intact.[6]
When England moved to take over New Netherland in 1664, a delegation of twelve met at Stuyvesant Farm to negotiate the
Articles of Surrender of New Netherland, and papers were later signed by
Johannes de Decker on an English ship in the harbor.[7] Terms were generous enough that Stuyvesant kept his estate and lived the rest of his life there, after a three-year trip back to the Netherlands until the
Peace of Breda.[8]
After Stuyvesant
The property was inherited in
Stuyvesant family, sometimes with new land acquisitions.[9][10] The family continued to hold slaves into the early 19th century.[11] The family land area gradually declined into the 19th century as pieces were sold off, both commercially and in some cases to local institutions for a nominal price. The tract of land that comprised Stuyvesant Farm covered what is today's
East Village and
Stuyvesant Town.[12]
Timeline
1625 Six Company Bouweries surveyed, Willem Verhulst controls Bouwerie No. 1[3]
The Bouwerie House was a
manor house perhaps originally built for Van Twiller, that became the personal property of Stuyvesant and later of his family until it was burned on October 24, 1778.[24] An informal settlement, known as Stuyvesant Village or Bowery Village, grew up adjoining the house to its west.[25] The Bouwerie House is to be distinguished from the
governor's house downtown at what became known as Whitehall Street.[26][27]
The estate included a wetland known as Stuyvesant Meadows, part of which was later filled and converted to form Tompkins Square Park. Two creeks, noted for their eel populations, passed through the wetland, Stuyvesant Creek and a feature later called Ninth Street Creek.[30] Stuyvesant Creek also passed by the Bouwerie House and was used in winter for ice skating.[31] The creeks emptied into the East River on Stuyvesant Cove, between Kip's Bay and Corlears Hook.[30]
Stuyvesant Pear Tree
In 1647, Stuyvesant brought a pear tree from the Netherlands and planted it on his farm. The tree stood at the corner of Thirteenth Street and
Third Avenue until 1867, where it lived for two hundred years, with New York City growing around it.[32] The 1811 street grid covered over the farm but spared the Stuyvesant Pear Tree. The tree remained there, through the founding of
Kiehl's Pharmacy at the same corner in 1851, until February 1867 when, weakened by a massive winter storm, it toppled by a wagon collision.[32][33]
A plaque marking the Stuyvesant tree's spot remains at the corner of 13th Street and Third Avenue.[32] In this neighborhood, pear trees are still planted to commemorate the original pear tree planted by Stuyvesant.[34] A Stuyvesant descendant gifted a cross-section of the original trunk to the
New-York Historical Society.[34] Kiehl's planted a new pear tree at the same spot in 2003.[35][36]
^Feirstein, Sanna (2001). Naming New York : Manhattan places & how they got their names. New York: New York University Press. p. 31.
ISBN978-0-8147-2712-6.
OCLC45209072.
^Oser, Alan S.
"The Upscaling of Stuyvesant Town", The New York Times, January 28, 2001. Accessed December 18, 2016. "There are 11,250 apartments within 110 buildings in the two projects.... Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village house an estimated 25,000 to 30,000 people in 11,250 apartments on 80 acres of land from First Avenue to the East River between 14th Street and 23rd Street."