III.
All such shall be acknowledged Patroons
of New Netherland who shall, within the space of four years next after
they have given notice to any of the Chambers of the Company here or to
Me Commander or Council there, undertake to plant a Colonie there of fifty
souls, upwards of fifteen years old; one-fourth part within one year, and
within three years after Me sending of the first, making together four
years, the remainder, to the full number of fifty persons . . . ; but it
is to be observed that the Company reserve the Island of the Manhattes
to themselves.
IV.
They shall, from the time they make
known the situation of the places where they propose to settle Colonies,
have the preference to all others of the absolute property of such lands
as they have there chosen; but in case the situation should not afterwards
please them, or they should have been mistaken as to the quality of the
land, they may, after remonstrating concerning the same to the Commander
and Council there, be at liberty to choose another place.
V.
The Patroons, by virtue of their power,
shall and may be permitted, at such places as they shall settle their Colonies,
to extend their limits four leagues along the shore, that is, on one side
of a navigable river, or two leagues on each side of a river, and so far
into the country as the situation of the occupiers will permit; provided
and conditioned that the Company keep to themselves the lands lying and
remaining between the limits of Colonies, to dispose thereof, when and
at such time as they shall think proper, in such manner that no person
shall be allowed to come within seven or eight leagues of them without
their consent, unless the situation of the land thereabout be such that
the Commander and Council, for good reasons, should order otherwise. .
. .
VI.
They shall forever possess and enjoy
all the lands lying within the aforesaid limits, together with the fruits,
rights, minerals, rivers and fountains thereof; as also the chief command
and lower jurisdictions, fishing, fowling and grinding, to the exclusion
of all others, to be holden from the Company as a perpetual inheritance,
without it ever devolving again to the Company, and in case it should devolve,
to be redeemed and repossessed with twenty guilders per Colonie, to be
paid to this Company, at the Chamber here or to their Commander there,
within a year and six weeks after the same occurs, each at the Chamber
where he originally sailed from; and further, no person or persons whatsoever
shall be privileged to fish and hunt but the Patroons and such as they
shall permit. And in case any one should in time prosper so much as to
found one or more cities, he shall have power and authority to establish
officers and magistrates there, and to make use of the title of his Colonie,
according to his pleasure and to the quality of the persons. . . .
X.
The Patroons and colonists shall be
privileged to send their people and effects thither, in ships belonging
to the Company, provided they take the oath, and pay to the Company for
bringing over the people, as mentioned in the first article. . . .
XII.
Inasmuch as it is intended to people
the Island of the Manhattes first, all fruits and wares that are produced
on the lands situate on the North river, and lying thereabout, shall, for
the present, be brought there before being sent elsewhere. . . .
XIII.
All the Patroons of Colonies in New
Netherland, and of Colonies on the Island of Manhattes, shall be at liberty
to sail and traffic all along the coast, from Florida to Terra Neuf, provided
that they do again return with all such goods as they shall get in trade
to the Island of Manhattes, and pay five per cent duty to the Company,
in order, if possible, that, after the necessary inventory of the goods
shipped be taken, the same my be sent hither ,
* *
XV.
It shall be also free for the aforesaid
Patroons to traffic and trade all along the coast of New Netherland and
places circumjacent, with such goods as are consumed there, and receive
in return for them all sorts of merchandise that may be had there, except
beavers, otters, minks, and all sorts of peltry, which trade the Company
reserve to themselves. But the same shall be permitted at such places where
the Company have no factories, conditioned that such traders shall be obliged
to bring all the peltry they can procure to the Island of Manhattes, in
case it may be, at any rate, practicable, and there deliver to the Director,
to be by him shipped hither with the ships and goods; or, if they should
come here without going there, then to give notice thereof to the Company,
that a proper account thereof may be taken, in order that they may pay
to the Company one guilder for each merchantable beaver and otter skin;
the property, risk and all other charges remaining on account of the Patroons
or owners.
XVI.
All coarse wares that the Colonists
of the Patroons there shall consume, such as pitch, tar, weed-ashes, wood,
grain, fish, salt, hearthstone and such like things shall be conveyed in
the Company's ships, at the rate of eighteen guilders per last. . . .
XVIII.
The Company promises the colonists of
the Patroons that they shall be free from customs, taxes, excise, imposts
or any other contributions for the space of ten years; and after the expiration
of the said ten years, at the highest, such customs as the goods pay here
for the present. . . .
XX.
From all judgments given by the Courts
of the Patroons for upwards of fifty guilders, there may be an appeal to
the Company's Commander and Council in New Netherland.
XXI.
In regard to such private persons as
on their own account. . . . shall be inclined to go thither and settle,
they shall, with the approbation of the Director and Council there, be
at liberty to take up and take possession of as much land as they shall
be able properly to improve. . . .
XXIII.
Whosoever, whether colonists of Patroons
for their Patroons, or free persons for themselves, or others for their
masters, shall discover any shores, bays or other fit places for erecting
fisheries, or the making of salt ponds, they may take possession thereof,
and begin to work on them as their own absolute property, to the exclusion
of all others. And it is consented to that the Patroons of colonists may
send ships along the coast of New Netherland, on the cod fishery. . . .
XXVI.
Whoever shall settle any Colonie out
of the limits of the Manhattes Island, shall be obliged to satisfy the
Indians for the land they shall settle upon, and they may extend or enlarge
the limits of their Colonies if they settle a proportionate number of colonists
thereon.
XXVII.
The Patroons and colonists shall in
particular, and in the speediest manner, endeavor to find out ways and
means whereby they may support a Minister and Schoolmaster, that thus the
service of God and zeal for religion may not grow cool and be neglected
among them, and they shall, for the first, procure a Comforter of the sick
there. . . .
XXIX.
The Colonists shall not be permitod
to make any woden, linen or cotton cloth, nor weave any other stuffs there,
on pain of being banished, and as perjurers, to be arbitrarily punished.
XXX.
The Company will use their endeavors
to supply the colonists with as many Blacks as they conveniently can, on
the conditions hereafter to be made, in such manner, however, that they
shall not be bound to do it for a longer time than they shall think proper.
XXXI.
The Company promises to finish the fort
on the Island of the Manhattes, and to put it in a posture of defence without
delay. |