My Friends at Brook Farm

John Van Der Zee Sears

Friends at Brook Farm, by John Van Der Zee Sears

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Title: My Friends at Brook Farm
Author: John Van Der Zee Sears
Release Date: January, 2005 [EBook #7302] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on April 9, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII
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[Illustration: John Van Der Zee Sears]

MY FRIENDS AT BROOK FARM
BY
JOHN VAN DEE ZEE SEARS

TO MY FRIEND
JOSEPH HORNOR COATES, Esq.
OF PHILADELPHIA

CONTENTS
I. THE OLD COLONIE
II. FRIEND GREELEY
III. A STRANGER IN A STRANGE LAND
IV. A BAD BEGINNING
V. A GOOD ENDING
VI. ENTERTAINMENTS
VII. THE SCHOOL
VIII. ODDMENTS
IX. FOURIER AND THE FARMERS
X. UNTO THIS LAST

ILLUSTRATIONS
JOHN VAN DER ZEE SEARS Frontispiece
HORACE GREELEY
RALPH WALDO EMERSON
THE BROOK FARM CALL
"THE HIVE"
CHARLES A. DANA
THE PAGEANT
A PIONEER KINDERGARTEN
NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE
CHAPTER I
THE OLD COLONIE
In May, 1624, the Dutch packet New Netherlands sailed up the Hudson River to the head of navigation, bringing a company of eighteen families under the leadership of Adrian Joris. The immigrants landed at a little trading post called Beaverwick kept by one Tice Oesterhout, a pioneer hunter, married to a Mohawk Squaw. In a few days a party of Indians, probably Mohawks, waited on the newcomers and politely made inquiry as to their object in entering upon Indian lands without notice or permission; Tice Oesterhout and his wife acting as interpreters. Joris replied that they came in peace and hoped to abide in peace on friendly terms with the Indians. He was told that he and his people would be welcome if they joined the universal peace union of the Iroquois, and not otherwise. This proposition the settlers agreed to by acclamation. In due course the General Council of the Five Nations accepted the Colony as a member of the Iroquois Federation. Joris was recognized as the Civil Chief of the little community, and, as he was a Walloon, his people became the Walloon Nation of the Great Peace Alliance. The Great Peace was the treaty forming the basis of the Iroquois Federation. The Colonists, instead of making a treaty with the Indians, gave their adhesion to one already made, thereby securing safety and a practical monopoly of the fur trade on the upper Hudson. They sent annual presents to the Iroquois General Council, which were doubtless received as tribute in recognition of sovereignty, but the Walloon Nation did not seem to care very much about the sovereignty business so long as the fur business continued to prosper, as it did for the next half century.
Two score or so of Walloons did not constitute a very formidable nation but the men were reinforced by the women who had an equal voice not only in local affairs but in the General Council of the Federation.
The settlers built their houses on the Indian trail leading Westward to which they gave the name of Beaver street--their grand boulevard which must have been two or three squares long. Beaver Street was the main highway of the Walloon Nation and was the center of the "Old Colonie" as the Dutch neighborhood was subsequently called. Under English rule, the "Old Colonie" or Beaverwick was merged with Fort Orange and Rensselaerwick, these, collectively, being named Albany in honor of the Duke of York, Albany being one of his titles.
The Dutch of the "Old Colonie" did not take kindly to the supremacy of the English. They obeyed the laws and the constituted authorities but they stubbornly maintained their autonomy as far as practicable, holding aloof from their English neighbors, keeping to their own language, their own manners and customs, and their own habits of life, generation after generation. As the "Old Colonie" extended its borders and new elements were added to its population, these Dutch characteristics were gradually modified and finally disappeared altogether, but they resisted modern influences many years and as late as the middle
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