Document: Translation of a letter from gov. Endecott into Dutch

Holding Institution
Document ID
NYSA_A1809-78_V08_1065
Description

Translation into Dutch of the above letter.

Document Date
1658-09-15
Document Date (Date Type)
1658-09-15
Document Type
Document Type Unlinked
Translation
Full Resolution Image

Translation
Translation

Translation of the letter above.[i]

[ ? ]

sioners [

My lord

Three of your honors’ neighbors came to us here when we gathered at Boston, namely Mr. Jan Cuts, Richard Cuts, and Hendrick Woolcot, informing us of a matter in which they had suffered and made a loss [several lines lost] [ an inhabitant or free ] Manhatoes presenting the [ with severitie ] and in a manner [ unknown ] to the burghers of that [ ] as they say) in which they— considering [ our ] interest of neighborly correspondence, applied in an amicable manner of mediation to your honors, who might be of some help for their release—have requested these, our letters concerning their business, and so far as their innocence may appear they brought about that we write on their behalf. They say the case to be the seizing of a parcel of beavers in the hands of their agent Jan Laurens, because it was carried from one burgher’s house at the Manhattans to another being a small distance away from the other, without the boundary set for the confiscation of beavers to prevent the defrauding of the customs or recognition fee. By this procedure (the aforesaid beavers being held as a fine, your honors were pleased to levy the sum of 25 pont upon their aforesaid agent) they pretend to suffer great loss and request your honors’ just favor to cancel this, and also that their friend and agent Jan Laurens, being an Englishman, may not suffer merely because of failing an exact observation of some circumstance or subdivision in your law because they had honestly ordered Mr. Steenwijck, one of your own magistrates, obliging him to pay the customs. The truth is sir, we [ neather know ijour lawes nor the equitable grounds upon which they are made nor desire to intermeddle with your executions of the[m ] but to request that with favour to the inno[ cent ] acts and] intention[ s of honest Englishmen ijow would please to review and consider whither the cariage off ijour fiscael in this businis maij ] not be mixed [ with more regidnes ] toward Englishmen to [ ] your nation in our area, which [ if your ] honors will have done, we have [ no ] doubt that the matter will succeed successfully to mutual satisfaction and as may be favorable between neighborly republics, on which assumption we stop bothering your honors any longer and remain, My lord, your honors’very dear friends, the ambassadors of the United Colonies,

John Endecot president Simon Bradstreate Tho: Prence

Jos: Winslew John Winthrop John Talbott Francis Newman William Leete

Boston, Sept: 15th, anno 1658

Translation Superscripts
[i]: The text of the following document is in Dutch and is here translated into English. Missing text is recovered from 8:1064.
References

From the collections of the New York State Archives, Albany, New York.  https://www.archives.nysed.gov/  

Translation link see: http://iarchives.nysed.gov/xtf/view?docId=tei/A1809/NYSA_A1809-78_V08_1065.xml

Published bound volume is also available: Translation: Scott, K., & Stryker-Rodda, K. (Ed.). New York Historical Manuscripts: Dutch, Vol. 4, Council Minutes, 1638-1649 (A. Van Laer, Trans.). Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc.: 1974.

Copyright to the published bound volume is held by the Holland Society of New York.
A complete copy of this publication is available on the
New Netherland Institute website.

From Party 1
From Party 1 Text Unlinked
Endecott
From Party 1 Entity
From Party 2
From Party 2 Entity
A1809 Additional Party
Document Location