From Library Journal
Historians of New Netherland (1609-64) have traditionally focused on the failures of the Dutch West India Company. Rink's study, however, presents a colony which, on the eve of English conquest was thriving. He contends that private Amsterdam merchants played a larger role in the colony's development than has hitherto been recognized; they successfully circumvented the company, which was an "enfeebled giant" from the start. In the process, Rink casts new light on trade and commerce, immigration, demography, patroonships, Anglo-Dutch rivalry, and slavery. This is a major new interpretation, frankly "imperial and Dutch" in perspective, buttressed by research in previously neglected sources. Highly recommended for academic libraries. Roy H. Tryon, Delaware State Archives, Dover
Copyright 1986 Reed Business Information, Inc.
About the Author
Oliver A. Rink is Professor of Early American History at California State University, Bakersfield.
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