Walloons in New Netherland: Forgotten Settlers in a Forgotten Colony
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- Опубліковано 2 лют 2022
- In Battery Park, lower Manhattan, you’ll see a monument that reads…’in Memory of the Walloon Settlers who came over to America in the Nieu Nederland Under the Inspiration of Jesse De Forest”
So after half a dozen videos of me referring to New Netherland as a Dutch Colony… now I’m telling you it’s not even Dutch? But Walloon?
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Thanks to
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Roan van 't Land for help with the script as well as RareMaps.com for giving access to high-definition images of maps.
Books
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"The Island at the Center of the World" by Russell Shorto - amzn.to/3gmGsn8
Every Monday, I send out an email with new videos. This way, I can reach people even if the UA-cam algorithm isn't working for my videos. If that's for you, click here and put in your email address - eepurl.com/hSeKpj
most walloons came to england, they had a big community in canterbury and the churches around the city contain a lot of their graves
Yea! Thank you! We were French Huguenots and Wallons who settled New Amsterdam and New Paltz. Love this!
As one of the ~1 million descendants of Joris and Catalina Rapalje, I greatly enjoyed hearing their story at the end.
I am also one of the descendants! Hello cousin! And ty Geography Geek for this video!
I found your channel by chance and I'm impressed.
As a Finn it would be nice to see a video about my homeland and its history.
Don't get me wrong, your videos about various other things have have been superb so far!
Thank you! I don't have one planned at the moment but I am sure I will at some point.
Check out the settling of New Sweden in Florida. Many were really Finnish
@@dianethulin1700 New Sweden was in Delaware and Maryland
I'm enjoying your channel. I'm actually happy that you're posting several videos about America's forgotten Dutch history. I'm American but one of my great-grandfathers was from the Netherlands, so I'm fascinated in Dutch history.
I'm happy you're here and that's pretty cool!
Jesse DeForest is one of my ancestors through his daughter Rachel and her husband Jean Mousnier de la Montagne, the first physician on Manhattan Island.
He’s one of my ancestors through her brother Isaac!
@@camerontuck108 That makes us cousins (quite a bit removed).
Thank you for making this video and discussing the history of Walloons and Huguenots in the establishment of New Amsterdam. I’m a direct descendant of Jesse DeForest and it’s nice to see someone discuss the history that is mostly overlooked.
I a Genealogist originally from Connecticut
My wife’s English ancestors were hired by the Dutch to build a Church in lower Manhattan in the 1630
They eventually migrated to Connecticut
They were real Yankees
Apparently that term was a pejorative coming from a Dutch Revolutionary name Jan Keyes who was considered a crazy person .
In Dutch you wright Jan Kees! 😁
Great story by the way! 👌🏼✌🏼
Recently learned that I'm one of those Rapalje/Trico descendants. Pieter van Neste married their daughter, Judith, and here I am, 12 generations later (like a million others). Though, the name has changed to Van Ness. I've been fascinated by the history of New Netherland ever since. Thanks for making the video!
Jesse DeForest is my 9X great grandfather. It was fun to watch this video, hear the stories spoken, and see the documents and monuments that I found in my genealogical research. Thank you Geography Geek!
Once again you're engaging me and this time showing me how little I know about aspects of our history. I am a descendent of the Pilgrims but never put their time-line together with the Dutch settlements. Looking forward to learning more....
Very interesting content from a New York city tour guide! I'm sure your aware of the book The Island at the Center of the World about dutch Manhattan. It's fantastic
Catalyntje Trico is my 12x great grandmother. I stem from the Vandervoort line. It’s so cool to discover this! They were basically the Adam and Eve of New York! 😅
same
Good video GG
Thanks!
Ok, I did it. I've watched all of your videos. I am ready for new ones.
Ps: I am going to rewatched it more times so I can memorizd more information.
Thank you for your great work! I am pretty sure this channel is going to get big one day.
Dang! I really appreciate it! Hopefully so. I have more videos coming out shortly. The next one should be ready on the 8th or 9th.
My great grandfather Pierre Billiou (Bilyeu) came in 1661 and his home is still standing on Staten Island. He was a Walloon speaking Huguenot from Lille France in Artois region and fled with the Huguenots to Leiden before petitioning for land in the new world.
I presume a many generations ago grandfather. 1661 was a long time ago. 😊
weird tho since people in Lille were more likely to be Flemish, although after 300 years of French occupation I would understand he would speak french, but a Walloon going to Lille seems really exceptional. Very interesting history, would love to know the history behind that
Do you eventually plan on talking about the swedish colonies in the Americas
I don't have one planned but it's been in the back of my mind for a while. What was New Sweden is close enough to me to make a long weekend visit. I'm thinking about planning a trip this summer to check out the area and find some inspiration.
@@GeographyGeek cool thanks for the reply
I'm a descendant of Trico and her husband through their daughter Marret Rapalje their second daughter who married my however many great grandfather Paulus Vandervoort and I think it's worth stating that Joris Rapalje was actually Walloon as well because he was born in Valenciennes which is modern day France but at the time was in the southern part of the Spanish Netherlands or better now as the Wallonia region of Belgium other than that, incredible video and it's very detailed, I will say though there is Flemish ancestry through the Vandervoort line.
New Netherland is a big part of my genealogy, and I found out recently that it's my DNA as well! Some of my ancestors in New York had surnames like Van Lanen and De Forrest , and were from Belgium. I also had a La Montagne from Sedan France. Their actual DNA was closer to Dutch than Latin/Roman, etc. Great video!!
If your ancestors were from Belgium, you would be Flemish or Walloon, but not Dutch.
@@jasonarthurs3885 The Walloon families who emigrated from Leiden, Netherlands in 1624 had been in Leiden for many years. My great-great grandfather who wrote about our DeForest ancestors (all descended from Jesse) said in his family history written in the 1870's: "[The] family fled to Holland for asylum. They intermarried with the Hollanders & became Dutchmen in all but the name. From Holland they came to this country...[and] settled New York & along the banks of the Hudson & up the Mohawk. The Dutch language was in common use when Mother [born 1800] was a girl. She spoke it more fluently than English, but lost it all in her later years."
@@jasonarthurs3885 Dutch can refer to anyone from the lowlands in the delta of the Meuse and Rhine rivers, historically the word doesnt only refer to people who lived in the borders of what is now the Netherlands. In fact about 800 years ago everyone all the way down the coast to Calais and east from there would have been speaking Old Dutch, and therefore historically referred to as Dutch. This area encompassed many ethnicities including Belgians, Batavians, Frisians, Saxons, etc.
@@jasonarthurs3885 Some of my ancestors were Belgian, but most were Van der Beck, Ten Broeck (originally Van den Broeck), Eckerson, Brut, and many other Dutch, via Holland, surnames. Mixed into my Van Rensselaes and Ten Broecks lines are a few Du Cloix, Van Laanen, and De Forrest Belgian names. Belgium was part of the Netherlands back then, and I just visited northern Zeebrugge Belgium, and they're still very Dutch, which I found interesting. The southern part is almost identical to Northern France, and I really enjoyed that as well. Peace
@@TheSuperappelflap I should have read your very thorough response first - you explained it better than I could! Peace
I’m a direct descendant of one of the first Finnish immigrants to New Sweden, the settlement made possible by Minuit.
Pretty cool!
This was really interesting video. Watching from the Philippines
This video is so interesting, and it is also a great job of research and edition. As a walloon myself, i learned things i diid not know. I have heard somewhere that Wall street was named after walloon workers involved in its construction. You probably know more about it. good continuation
Thanks for this, really enjoyed it.
Yes more dutch vid to fuel my dutch ego
right there no Germany who was wheels that nowhere it's Deutscheland "dutchland like danish like karen😊"
I love Russell Shorto’s book. I was wondering if you were familiar with it. It’s one of few books that I have read , or listened to multiple times.
Your videos are excellent. I’m looking forward to this series.
Thank you! Same here, I use audible a lot.
Thank you for this video. These were my direct ancestors.
thank you! I am a descendant of Phillipe Du Trieux, a Walloon, so this is very interesting to me. Not all early settlers were English.
Love the dutch theme! You should make a video about how the danish have changed their rivers and streams.
Jesse DeForest was my 10th great grandfather. my mother spent the last 40 years of her life tracing our family history,i believe she made it back to the year 1007
Fascinating. Makes it all so tangible. To think each ancestor had his own life's story. Maybe in the future, descendants will browse through their ancestor's digital history. All the best.
Rooky numbers, if you have Dutch heritage you should be able to make it to around 700 at least. We have public genealogy websites in the Netherlands, maybe you can take a look at those if youre interested.
Again great video Zack, thank you! I can also recommend Russell Shorto's book Amsterdam. Basically about birth of capitalism amongst other things. Very nice read.
Thanks again! I agree, another great book as well.
Very interesting!
Great video my guy 😂😁
Thanks as always!
@@GeographyGeek lol your welcome
11 generations for me to Peter Minuit, though we had to get to Upper Canada in the 1780s, after generations on Long Island, Hoosick, Kinderhook and Albany, and intermarrying with the English.
What about Hoboken? I read a lot of the origin of the name. But isn’t it interesting that there is an twelfth century settlement and thirteenth village near Antwerp that is called Hoboken, (from the Medieval Dutch ‘hooge boeken’ or ‘high beeches’). It was destroyed during the siege of Antwerp, Antwerp was then a Protestant city and the centre of the resurrection against the Spanish regime of The Netherlands. After the capture of Antwerp in 1585, Protestant got a four year period to settle their businesses and depart. The northern part of the Netherlands became independent the southern part, inclusive the France speaking ‘Walonië’ stayed katholicisme under Spanish rule. Isn’t it possible that some of the Antwerp refuses direct or indirect through Holland and Nieuw Amsterdam, settled in what became Hoboken and gave it its name, some of the first European settlers were Dutch farmers, had a lease of the WIC and were due to bring in more farmers to start a community.
Thank you for this video! I just found out today that Catalina and Joris are my 9th Great Grandparents. I never knew about this story until now!
Funny, rapalje is actually an oldfashioned derogatory term used to describe 'deplorables' or scoundrels
That's pretty funny
Thanks for your interesting video's! Im from the Netherlands myself, and I am curius where your interest about the Netherlands comes from?
This is a question I get a lot and I'm eventually going to make a short video to answer it but the main reason is the Age of Exploration is one of my favorite periods of history. Naturally, the Dutch are a big part of that not only for their own explorations but they made the best maps.
A cool video would be about how Philadelphia is originally a Swedish colony which is why our municipal flag still has the Swedish colors.
I've been thinking about making a video on New Sweden. It's within a full-days drive of where I live. I thought about making a long weekends trip out of it to find some inspiration for a video.
Great 🙂
Can you do a video on the origins of the first Manhattan map, the Castello Plan by Jacques Cortelyou? He was a teacher and a geographer.
Good idea. I may actually do that at some point.
there is some recently translated info on minuet or whatever minWhee
I would not be surprised if "de Forest" was a translated surname. Might have been "de Horst" originally, but Google doesn't really lend itself to finding this out.
Small correction, Walloon is not a French dialect, it is a distinct language, it split from very early French more than a 1000 years ago.
Thanks for your Video. Too bad they didn't keep the area around the Fort - including the Fort.
I believe I'm a descendant of de Forest so this was nice to see.
I can trace my lineage to Jesse Deforest a French religious refugee
Very cool!
@@GeographyGeek my Bilyeu ancestors also founded staten Island. Pierre Billiou
Your concluding story was inspiring. Can you imaged Joris saying to Katerina, "Let's take a three months honeymoon across the Atlantic on cramped ship and live in the wilderness for the rest of our lives." How many other immigrants have a similar family story?
'Flemish' (as used in this video) is not a Dutch dialect, but the Dutch standard language as spoken in Belgium. Calling 'Flemish' a Dutch dialect would be the same as calling 'American' a dialect of English. Dutch and Flemings use exactly the same spelling, contrary to Americans who use a slightly different spelling from the one used by the British.
It says Nieu Nederland / Novum Belgium, and you are surprised by Walloons?
During the eighty years war, the front line shifted constantly, in the north west Holland was relatively safe and in the south east Luxemburg.
In between the battle to control the Netherlands (entirely) went in all directions.
Many went to Holland or Namur/Luxemburg to be safe against plunder and massacre.
Those with sympathy for protestants went north west, those with sympathy for catholics went south east.
Though the Netherlands and Belgium are now two countries, their names BOTH cover the entire BeNeLux.
Even nowadays coins minted in the north can contain the latin text: Gold coin of the Belgian Provincial Confederation, Mo Au Conf Prov Belg
Min-way.
Nevah heard it said that way.
If you cross the bridge to Brooklyn I'll bet,
Those in the know will say Min-you-ette.
Not forgotten but wiped out of history by the Brits.
👌🏼👍🏻✌🏼
👋
@@GeographyGeek Hi, i came across this one last week and i didn't know about it! 🙄 Do you know about April the 19th?! ✌🏼
NLintheUSA
Dutch-American Friendship Day
ua-cam.com/video/BwajnqWECUU/v-deo.html
Are they truly forgotten if they have their surnames everywhere?
My 6 great grandfather
My ancestors were dutch
only the American dream has failed total !!!
Don't confuse the French speaking peoples of the Netherlands as Wallons since due the fact that French was a spoken language in the whole educated people Southern of the 3 mayor Rivers in The Netherlands. The Catholic mayority of the South of educated they where more French spoken than Dutch spoken. This was practiced due to the fact that with a different religion in the South Latin or French was more spoken than Dutch which was the language of the lower classes until 1920. So please recheck your facts again and again. Even in the Belgium Revolution French was the language used to support the Freedom fights and rebellion against the repression of the Protestant Dutch Government which let to a Apartheid in the Dutch society from 1585 until 1918 with some practices even reaching the 1975. Even until to day the Western population finds itself more superior to the people in the North, East and South. Hopefully things will change to the better after the latest General Election of 2024.