Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: Permission denied in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: mkdir() [
function.mkdir]: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
12
Warning: fopen(/home/templatecore2cache//*cluesnet.com/b1/b16a0ac98a540139c3c7ff12b552d66d31455d4f.tc2cache) [
function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
130
Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
131
Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in
/home/webs/affiliatelib2/CacheManager.php on line
132
New Sweden, or
Nya Sverige, was a small Sweden settlement along the Delaware River on the Mid-Atlantic coast of North America. It was centered at
Fort Christina, now in
Wilmington, Delaware,
Delaware, and included parts of the present-day
United States states of Delaware,
New Jersey, and
Pennsylvania. The settlement was founded March 29, 1638, and was incorporated into
Netherlands New Netherland on
September 15,
1655. Along with
Swedish people, a large number of the settlers were Finnish people and
Dutch people.
History
and war ensign, version used until the mid-1600s.By the middle of the 17th century, the Realm of Sweden had reached its greatest territorial extent and was one of the great powers of Europe. Sweden then included
Swedish Finland and Swedish Estonia along with parts of modern
Swedish Ingria, Swedish Pomerania,
Bremen-Verden and Swedish Livonia. The Swedes sought to expand their influence by creating an agricultural (tobacco) and fur-trading colony to bypass
France and
Great Britain merchants. The New Sweden Company was chartered and included Swedish, Dutch and German stockholders.
The first Swedish expedition to North America embarked from the port of
Gothenburg in late
1637. It was organized and overseen by Admiral
Clas Fleming (admiral), an ethnic
Swede from
Finland. A Dutchman, Samuel Blommaert, assisted the fitting-out and appointed
Peter Minuit to lead the expedition.
The members of the expedition, aboard the ships
Fogel Grip and
Kalmar Nyckel, sailed into Delaware Bay, which lay within the territory claimed by the Netherlands, passing Cape May and
Cape Henlopen in late March 1638, and anchored at a rocky point on the
Minquas Kill that is known today as
Swedes' Landing. They built a fort on the present site of the city of
Wilmington, Delaware, which they named
Fort Christina, after Queen
Christina of Sweden.
In the following years, 600
Swedes (and also a number of Dutchmen and
Germans in Swedish service) settled in the area. In actual fact, the settlement constituted an invasion of
New Netherland, since the river and the land in question had previously been explored and claimed for that colony.
Peter Minuit was to become the first governor of the newly established colony of New Sweden. Having been the Director of the Dutch West India Company, and the predecessor of then-Director William Kieft, Minuit knew the status of the lands on either side of the Delaware River at that time. He knew that the Dutch had established deeds for the lands east of the river (
New Jersey), but not for the lands to the west (Maryland, Delaware, and Pennsylvania).
Minuit made good on his appointment by landing on the west bank of the river, gathered the chiefs of the local Native American Tribes, held a conclave in his cabin on the
Kalmar Nyckel, and persuaded them to sign some deeds he had prepared for the purpose to solve any issue with the Dutch.
The segment of land he purchased from the Chiefs included the land on the west side of the South River from just below the Schuylkill River; in other words, today's
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, southeast Pennsylvania, Delaware, and Maryland.
Director Kieft objected to the landing of the Swedes, but Minuit ignored his missive because he knew that the Dutch were militarily impotent at the moment. Minuit finished Fort Christina during
1638, then departed to return to
Stockholm, Sweden for a second load, and made a side trip to the
Caribbean to pick up a shipment of tobacco for resale in Europe to make the voyage profitable. Minuit died while on this voyage during a tropical cyclone at
Saint Kitts in the Caribbean.
Thus, the official duties of the first governor of New Sweden were carried out by Lieutenant (then raised to the rank of Captain)
Måns Nilsson Kling, until the next governor was chosen and brought in from the mainland Sweden, two years later. Shorto, Russell,
The Island at the Center of the World, Part II; Chapter 6; Pages 115-117.
In 1643 the company expanded along the river from Fort Christina, and established
Fort Nya Elfsborg on the north bank near present-day
Salem, New Jersey. In May
1654, the Dutch Fort Casimir was captured by soldiers from the New Sweden colony led by governor Johan Rising. The fort was taken without a fight because its garrison had no gunpowder, and the fort was renamed Fort Trinity.
As reprisal, the Dutch — led by governor
Peter Stuyvesant — moved an army to the Delaware River in the late summer of
1655, leading to the immediate surrender of Fort Trinity and Fort Christina.
The Swedish and Finnish settlers continued to enjoy a degree of local autonomy, having their own militia, religion, court, and lands.
This status lasted officially until the
England conquest of the New Netherland colony, in October 1663-1664, and continued unofficially until the area was included in William Penn's charter for Pennsylvania, in 1682. During this later period some immigration and expansion continued. The first settlement and
Fort Wicaco were built on the present site of Philadelphia in
1669.
The historian
H. A. Barton has suggested that the greatest significance of New Sweden was the strong and long-lasting interest in North America that the colony generated in Sweden.Barton,
A Folk Divided, 5—7.
America was seen as the standard-bearer of
Age of Enlightenment and
Freedom (political), and became the ideal of liberal Swedes. Admiration for America was combined with the notion of a past Swedish
Golden Age, whose ancient Nordic countries ideals had supposedly been corrupted by foreign influences.Recovering the purity of these timeless values in the New World was a fundamental theme of Swedish, and later Swedish-American, discussion of America.
Since the imaginary Golden Age answered to shifting needs and ideals, the "timeless values" varied over time, and so did the Swedish idea of the new land. In the 17th and 18th centuries, North America stood for the rights of
conscience and
religious freedom.
In the political turmoil of 19th-century Europe, the focus of interest shifted to American respect for honest toil and to the virtues of republican government. In the early 20th century, the Swedish-American dream even embraced the
Welfare State ideal of a society responsible for the well-being of all its citizens. By contrast, America became later in the 20th century the symbol and dream of ultimate individualism.
A massive Swedish immigration to the United States was not to emerge until 1870-1910, most notably to Minnesota, with a total of over a million Swedes moving. With the exceptions of Germany,
Ireland and
Norway, no other European country has had a higher percentage of its population move to North America.
List of governors
All Governors lived at Fort Christina, except Johan Björnsson Printz who lived at Fort New Gothenborg.
Forts
- Fort Christina, now Wilmington, Delaware, Delaware 1638-1655
- Fort New Gothenborg, now Essington, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania 1643-1655
- Fort New Korsholm, now Southwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1647-1653
- Fort Nya Elfsborg, now near Salem, New Jersey 1643-1651
- Fort Casimir, now New Castle, Delaware, Delaware 1654-1655
Permanent settlements
- Christina, now Wilmington, Delaware 1638
- Finland (Chamassungh), now Trainer, Pennsylvania 1641
- Upland, now Chester, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania 1641
- Printztorp, now Chester, Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania 1643
- Tequirassy, now Eddystone, Pennsylvania 1643
- Tinicum Township, Delaware County, Pennsylvania 1643
- Province (Manaiping) Island, in the Schuylkill River, now Southwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1643
- Minqua's Island, now Southwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1643
- Kingsessing (Nya Vasa), now Southwest Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1644
- Mölndal, now Yeadon, Pennsylvania 1645
- Torne (Aronameck), now West Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 1647
- The Sidoland, now Wilmington, Delaware, Delaware 1654
- Timber Island, now Wilmington, Delaware, Delaware 1654
- Strandviken, now Wilmington, Delaware, Delaware 1654
- Ammansland, now Darby, Pennsylvania 1654
Rivers and creeks
Notes
References
- Barton, H. Arnold (1994). A Folk Divided: Homeland Swedes and Swedish Americans, 1840—1940. Uppsala: Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis.
See also
- Swedish emigration to North America
- European colonization of the Americas
- Possessions of Sweden
- Swedish American
- Finnish American
- American Swedish Historical Museum
- Rambo apple
External links
- A Brief History of New Sweden in America, at The Swedish Colonial Society
- The New Sweden Centre
New Sweden - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
New Sweden (Nya Sverige in Swedish) was a small Swedish settlement along the Delaware River on the Mid-Atlantic coast of North America. It was centered at Fort Christina, now in ...
New Sweden
Saturday, June 23: Midsummer Fest. To be held at the German American Cultural Center at 7901 S.E. Division Street. The Fest will be held from 11 ...
New Sweden - www.newsweden.se
New Sweden: 27 januari 2007 hade vi den stora glädjen att arrangera den första proffsboxningsgalan i Sverige på 37 år. Nu planerar vi för fler galor med titelmatcher inför ...
GRIN opens new Sweden studio // News
GRIN has announced that it is opening a new 700 square meter development studio in Gothenburg, Sweden, in January of 2008. The company, which currently employs over 190 ...
Made in Sweden: the new Tory education revolution | The Spectator
Fraser Nelson reports on the radical Swedish system of independent state schools, financed by vouchers, that has transformed the country’s education performance and is now ...
New Wine - Sweden
WORKING TOGETHER. Mark Aldridge reports on his visit to Sweden in January and shares what God can do when we unite and encourage one another in ministry
New Sweden - definition of New Sweden by the Free Online Dictionary ...
New Sweden. A Swedish colony in North America on the Delaware River. Founded in 1638, it included parts of present-day Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware.
New Statesman - Why Sweden's not perfect, after all
The Swedes seem to slide effortlessly into first place - or thereabouts - in bloody everything worth prizing
BBC NEWS | Europe | Iraqis choose Sweden as new home
Half of all Iraqis fleeing to Europe choose Sweden as their destination but the country is starting to feel the financial strain.
Immigration to Sweden rising from new EU states
Statistics Sweden is reporting increasing emigration from the country during the first six months of 2007, compared to the same time in 2006 -- contributing to a slight drop in ...