A Town Called Hudson (April/May 2004 | Volume: 55, Issue: 2)

A Town Called Hudson

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Authors: Gene Smith

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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April/May 2004 | Volume 55, Issue 2

All those thousands of leagues outward bound from Amsterdam, and they reached a land bisected by a vast channel doubtless connecting Atlantic to Pacific and fabled China. The captain had looked for that route, even through Arctic ice floes. Now, he and his less-than-two-dozen-man crew thought they saw it. Logic indicated that they were in India, so the dark-skinned people gaping from shore were obviously … Indians. The sailors headed north to chart the future spice-trade passage.

But then, the channel narrowed and showed difficult currents, and the water became less salty and finally turned fresh. Was this really the seaway to China? A launch was sent to explore ahead while the captain and his mate went ashore. It was September 18, 1609. They met Mohicans, who made them feel very welcome, offering a dinner of pigeons and what the mate described as a “fat dog” that had been skinned using shells from the river.

Invited by gestures to spend the night, the visitors hesitated. Their hosts showed that they had no evil intent by breaking bows and arrows and throwing them into a fire. The launch returned with word that what had been taken for a sea passage was in fact a river. Captain and crew “unanimously concluded that there was little chance of getting to China in this direction,” says one account. They sailed away.

We are told by Washington Irving that Captain Henry Hudson and his men returned for one day of sport and drinking every 20 years thereafter, to “keep guardian eye on the river and the great city called by his name.” (The Rip Van Winkle Bridge, named for Irving’s informant on the festivities, crosses the water near where the stubby Half Moon dropped anchor.) Great city? That seems a little much for a place whose population even in its heyday never exceeded 15,000—twice what it is today—and which was far smaller than that for nearly 200 years after the Half Moon’s arrival.

 
 

The Dutch, Hudson’s employers—he was English—partitioned New Netherlands into vast patroonships, aristocratic holdings of hundreds of thousands of acres. One was the Van Rensselaer estate, which included tiny Claverack Landing, where there lived a handful of families and a ferryman with a canoe to take you across the river. There was a toll road whose inscribed-on-wood pricings are viewable today at the local Daughters of the American Revolution chapter house: for up to a score of steers, hogs, or lambs passing through, 20 cents; each additional animal, a penny. Sloops took them to New York City.

In time, the British evicted the Dutch, and in time, the American colonists rebelled against the British. Far away in New England, the Revolution decided Claverack Landing’s destiny. Rhode Island and Massachusetts Quakers who had been amassing unheard-of profits in the whaling trade found the marauding Royal Navy very bad for business. The Friends