This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the Kindle edition includes wireless delivery.
A lot of this history was covered in the New York school system but not to the depth and clarity of this book. I came away not liking Peter Stuyvesant and finally understood what the Zenger Trial was all about. A short book butthe author gave a good feel for political life was like in that time frame - a real roller coaster ride for the early settlers of New York.
Written in 1919, it is interesting to read a perspective from that time, on such things as Indians and slavery. A short book, it often contradicts itself (for example, reports that the early colony was flourishing are followed on the next page by statements that colony was losing money) and has no unifying theme. It did state some facts about the world in the 1700s that I didn’t know.
The pace of this seventh volume of the Chronicles series is vastly slowed from that of the previous volumes in that it serves to explain the foundation and development of only one New World colony: New York. That being said, however, the pace is still enough to cover the Dutch settlement on the island, the many transfers to and from English rule, the politics behind the movements and the daily lives of the inhabitants, leaving off just before the colony itself delves into its third transformation to American possession. Rather than the modernity that we expect to fill the pages of a history of New York, it is within these pages that we are informed of the humble beginnings of the Empire State, a colony like any other yet unique in many aspects; the history in these pages is a true kind of prehistory to the civilization that rose into the great power that it has become today.