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Fort Oranije (Fort
Oranje or Fort Orange)
(1624 WIC)
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In 1624 A.D., the WIC of the United Nederlandt
(Netherlands) Company built this fortified trading house, of the Roman
fortification design, at the west bank of the what the Dutch named North
River, now called Hudson River as a beaver and otter fur outpost fortified
trading house with the local natives commonly known as the Mohawk to the
west of the river, and the Mahican to the east of the river.
Fort
Oranije is the name given to the
fur trading
post erected in 1624 on the west bank of the Hudson just south of the
future site of
Albany. The Dutch West India Company built similar structures to serve
as their headquarters in many parts of their worldwide trading empire. The
small, wooden structure with four bastions shown below was to be the West
India Company's official outpost in the upper Hudson Region.
The Company staffed the
"fort" with
employees to conduct business, kept a small detachment of soldiers to
protect the outpost and maintain order, and sponsored a number of
farmers to provide food and other necessities. Some
of each of those groups of settlers lived in small huts within the fort.
The others lived in separate structures located outside the walls.
However, before long, employees, soldiers, and farmers alike realized
the great potential of bartering for furs and many of those living in the
area committed their best energies to securing beaver and other skins from
Native American hunters. By 1639, the Company realized the folly of trying
to maintain its fur trading monopoly and instead sought to tax the furs
exported from Fort Orange. By the 1640s, these new traders had come
together in a community of interest surrounding but mostly north of the
fort. In 1652, a court was created to help structure activities in the
fledgling, multi-purpose settlement called
Beverwyck.
By that time, the almost annual spring overflow of the Hudson had taken
its toll on flood plain-sited Fort Orange. As the fur trade became less
and less profitable to the West India Company, the company committed fewer
resources to maintaining Fort Orange. During the late 1640s, New
Netherland Governor Petrus Stuyvesant sought to rehabilitate the fort as a
military outpost and also granted permits to individual traders to build
within the fort's walls. However, despite considerable refurbishing, his
efforts were shortlived. With the emergence of Beverwyck and another
devestating flood in 1654, this initial center of settlement was all but
abandoned by the end of the decade.
In 1664, New Netherland fell to the English and Beverwyck was renamed
"Albany." Fort Orange fell into further decay as the English looked
instead to a more elevated location for their headquarters. By 1676, the
English had built a
new fort
overlooking the community on upper
State Street.
As time passed, the image of Fort Orange faded from view. In 1687, the
new city of
Albany sold the land around the old fort to the
Dutch Reformed Church
for use as pastureland. The ruins remained. During the eighteenth century
it was shown on
contemporary
maps and labeled "ruins of an Old Fort." By 1769, traveller Richard
Smith observed that there was "nothing to be seen of Fort Orange . . . but
the Ditch which surrounded it."

Notes
An exposition on"Fort Orange" is basic to any comprehensive
history of Albany. Although first hand study of Albany's original
incarnation is beyond the scope of the
Colonial
Albany Social History Project, this section must be more fully
developed.
Any consideration of the topic must begin with Paul R. Huey's
comprehensive historical/archeological study entitled: "Aspects of
Continuity and Change in Colonial Dutch Material Culture at Fort Orange,
1624-1664" (Ph.D. dissertation, University of Pennsylvania, 1988). That
work provides a detailed history of the use of that site over more than
350 years.
Len Tantillo's visualization of Huey's scholarship in a painting
entitled "Fort Orange,
1635" offers the most engaging access to this historical icon. More on
all of this in the future!
Detail showing location of Fort Orange from a
seventeenth-century map in the Library of
Congress. The map detail and discussion of West India Company "forts"
are from Visions of New York State: The Historical Art of L. F.
Tantillo (Wappingers Falls, NY, 1986), 46-47.
These farmers were called "Walloons" - French-speaking
Protestants from the Spanish Netherlands. Thirty families were sent to New
Netherland with perhaps half of them finding their way to the vicinity of
Fort Orange. Colonial Albany's De Foreest (Defreest) family was part of
that group.
Drawing showing location of Fort Orange on a modern sketch of
Albany's riverfront arterial. Printed in Tantillo, Visions of New York
State, 46.
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