Home / Bolton, Robert Jr. A History of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Alexander S. Gould, 1848. / Passage

A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. I

Bolton, Robert Jr. A History of the County of Westchester, from its First Settlement to the Present Time, Vol. I. New York: Alexander S. Gould, 1848. 265 words

Shrouding his evil purpose under the cloak of a friendly or business visit, he called a-t the house of one Claes Cornelisz Smits, the '• raadmaker,"^ an aged settler resident on the west side of the river, under pretence of making some purchases. The old man suspecting no harm, (for the Indian had been in the habit of working for his son,) set some food before him, and proceeded to get from a chest, in which it lay, the cloth which the other wished to purchase. The moment he stooped, the savage seized an axe, struck him dead, and then wiihdreWj having rifled the house of all its contents.

• O'Callaghan's Hist. N. N. p. 105. lb Raadmaker (wheelright.)

COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER. 167

*• This aggression on an old and helpless man excited, when it became known, considerable feeling at Fort Amsterdam."* " Director Kieft promptly demanded satisfaction from the chiefs of the Weckquaskecks. "But the sachem" (who was doubtless Mongockonone) " refnsed to make any atonement. He was sarry that twenty Christians had not been immolated ; the Indian had but avenged, after the manner of his race, the murder of a relative whom the Dutch had slain nearly twenty years before. On receipt of this answer, armed parties were sent out to retaliate, but they returned, having effected nothing,"*^ - /

Aug. 29, I641y it was proposed to wait -'until the hunting season, when it was suggested that two expeditions should be got np ; one to land in the neighborhood of the ' Archipelago,' or Norwalk Island -- the other, at Weckquaskeck."