Unsubscribe
View in your browser
eMarcurius masthead

September 2023
Vol. 39 No. 3

From the Director's Desk

Dear Friends,

The summer was very busy at NNI.  Several NNI-funded Wendell Fellows and Student Scholars arrived from all over the country to conduct research in the New Netherland Research Center, the New York State Archives, and the New York State Library on a variety of intriguing topics, including the salt trade and Anglo-Dutch relations.  

We also welcomed Dr. Chelsea Teale as associate director of the New Netherland Research Center, where she will work with Dr. Charles Gehring.  Among other projects, she’s immediately made an impact with her research in the fascinating papers of A.J.F. van Laer, the archivist and translator of New Netherland documents in the first decades of the 20th century. 

As we look to the Fall, we are eager to welcome you to Albany on October 7th for the New Netherland Institute’s 45th Annual Conference, Get a Sense of New Netherland: Approaching the Dutch through Sight, Sound, Taste, and Touch.  With performances, historical lectures, and a touch table, we anticipate a day of both learning and entertainment.  I also invite you to join us for the reception immediately after the conference, where we will have the opportunity to reconnect over our shared interest in New Netherland as we have done at so many conferences past.

Warmly,

Deborah Hamer. Executive Director

Upcoming Events and Announcements
NNI Annual Conference - Register Now

We invite you to register for our 45th Annual Conference, Get a Sense of New Netherland: Approaching the Dutch through Sight, Sound, Taste, and Touch.  To be held all day Saturday, October 7th at the Huxley Theater at the New York State Museum in Albany, New York, the program explores how New Netherland’s residents experienced the world around them. 

While we know a great deal about the politics and trade of the seventeenth-century colony, we know less about the everyday lives of the people – indigenous, free, and enslaved – who lived there.  What were some of the sounds, smells, tastes, and textures of North America, and how did Europeans or Africans reproduce those of their homelands in New Netherland?

For the full program, visit https://www.newnetherlandinstitute.org/programs/events/.  And to register, visit https://crm.newnetherlandinstitute.org/conference/.

NNI thanks Dutch Culture USA for their generosity in supporting this program.

New Sweden Conference

The American Swedish Historical Museum is hosting a November 4th conference in Philadelphia emphasizing “Contested Spaces: Colonial and Indigenous Concepts of Landscape Along the Delaware River Valley.”  The program has not yet been released, but presentations will consider the relationship between cultural groups in the region in the context of land use.  The groups include Swedes, Dutch, Lenape, British, Finns, Susquehannock, and Haudenosaunee (Iroquois).

 

Click here for more information
Live from New Amsterdam

On Thursday, October 26th, Russell Shorto will speak to Deborah Hamer about the work of translating 17th century Dutch documents with a particular focus on what we can learn from the most recent volume of translations, Janny Venema's Correspondence, 1659-1660.

Click here for more information
Matthew Bender IV Fall Lecture
Historic Albany Foundation

This annual lecture series, in its third year, takes place each October, when HAF invites speakers on a regional or national level to present on current topics in the preservation, architecture and advocacy fields.   This lecture is named in memory of Matthew Bender IV, HAF’s first board president and long-term supporter.

 

This year’s lecture, on October 23rd, will be about the Van Ostrande-Radliff House at 48 Hudson Avenue, the oldest building remaining in Albany.  HAF will welcome Michael Lynch, retired architect, and former director at the NYS Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation to give an overview of this building’s context locally, nationally and internationally.  The lecture will also include a panel of experts speaking on who lived and worked in the building, the archeology found during the project, and the clues that led to many discoveries of the building’s appearance.

Click here for more information
New Netherland Institute Scholars' Seminar

The New Netherland Institute hosts a zoom seminar where academics, public historians, and graduate students meet to discuss a piece of chapter or article length pre-circulated work on New Netherland and the Dutch Atlantic World. Moderated by NNI’s director, Dr. Deborah Hamer, the seminar meets four times per semester on Wednesdays from noon to 1:30 (EST). This time was selected to enable the participation of both American and European scholars.

The 2023-2024 academic year will include papers by Hilde Neus (University of Suriname), Lou Roper (SUNY New Paltz) [Pictured], BJ Lillis (Princeton University), Neal Degree (University of Houston-Clear Lake), Esther Baakman (Radboud University), Stephanie Porras and Aaron Hyman (Tulane University and Johns Hopkins University), and Simon Middleton (College of William & Mary).

Recent Events and Announcements
Past Episodes of Live from New Amsterdam

You can now access all the past episodes of Live from New Amsterdam, NNI's half-hour interview program done in collaboration with the New Amsterdam Project at New-York Historical Society.  Past topics include Dutch-Indigenous relations, the early history of New Netherland, and the Little Ice Age.

View the recordings here
Nationaal Archief blog series

In the Nationaal Archief's latest blog - the 18th - in the series ‘400 years of Dutch-American Stories,' guest author Kees Wouters describes the enthusiastic reception of American (jazz) music and dance in the Netherlands in the 1920s, and the consternation it caused among different groups in society.

 

 

Click here for the blogs
New Archaeological Search for Fort Zwaanandael

Archaeologists continue to look for the site of the short-lived fort at the Dutch colony in Zwaanandael (now Lewes, Delaware).  So far, the dig has produced inconclusive results, but NNI hopes that further exploratory work will be done.  

Follow the Story in the Cape Gazette
Grant Winners

The New Netherland Institute has awarded three Wendell Fellowships and two Student Scholar awards this year.  Wendell fellows are Esther Baakman, Lecturer, Radboud University, Neal Dugre, Associate Professor, University of Houston-Clear Lake, and Elizabeth Hines, Ph.D. candidate, University of Chicago.  For more on their projects visit here.

Student Scholars are Marian Leech, Ph.D. candidate, University of Pennsylvania and Amanda Faulkner, Ph.D. candidate, Columbia University.  For more on their topics, visit here.

Recent Publications and Resources
New Book on Dutch Art and Architecture

Marsely Kehoe's book, Trade, Globalization, and Dutch Art and Architecture: Interrogating Dutchness and the Golden Age is out now from Amsterdam University Press.  Although the book does not explore New Netherland specifically, it asks how art and architecture have been used to evoke Dutch identity overseas.

Click for more information
New Book on New Netherland

The University of Amsterdam Press has published Stephen Staggs' new book Indians in the Northeastern Woodlands.  In his new book, Staggs explores the impact of the Dutch Reformation on the cross-cultural relations between those living in and around New Netherland. 

Click to explore the Project
New Issue of New York History

In the latest issue of New York History (Volume 104, no. 1, Summer 2023), there are a number of articles of interest to those who follow New Netherland history.  Jaap Jacobs writes about the arrival of the first enslaved Africans in New Amsterdam and Anne-Claire Faucquez thinks about the memory of slavery in Dutch New York.  Evan Haefeli, former NNI Wendell fellow, investigates the relationship between the Haudenosaunee and the Lenape.

Click to view the issue
Grants and Awards

New for the 2024 grant application season!  The Wendell Fellowship and the Student Scholar Award will have the same submission deadline: February 15, 2024. Nominations for the Hendricks Award and the Clague and Carol van Slyke Article Prize will continue to be due on January 15 and April 1 respectively.

Click for more information
Fulbright-NNRC Student Scholar Research Grant

NNI partners with the Fulbright Center to provide a $5,000 grant to a Dutch student university who plans to conduct research using New Netherland records in the New Netherland Research Center, New York State Library, or the New York State Archives.  The application deadline is November 1.

Click for more information
Help Support NNI

Thanks to the generosity and commitment to this organization of people like you, NNI has been around since 1986. We believe you share an interest in exploring and preserving the history and legacy of the seventeenth-century Dutch colony of New Netherland. Your support and encouragement will enable us to continue to reveal and publicize this often-overlooked chapter of the American story. We encourage you to keep us in mind as you consider your donations s

There are several ways to donate:

Through the NNI website or through PayPal

Write a check made out to the New Netherland Institute, and mail it to NNI at P.O. Box 2536, Empire State Plaza Station, Albany NY 12220-0536.

For information, email us at nni@newnetherlandinstitute.org or call 518-992-3274.

I thank you now for your willingness to help us fulfill our unique and important historical work.

Sincerely,

Marilyn E. Douglas, President


Back issues of the eMarcurius can be found here.

Donate here!

New Netherland Institute
518-992-3274
nni@newnetherlandinstitute.org

 Facebook  Twitter  Web  Instagram  Youtube