"LISTEN! That is thunder, Uncle Sam. I'm afraid we are going to have a storm. I wish I had covers to my ears so I couldn't hear that dreadful rumbling."
"Nonsense, Lucy. There is no use in being afraid of anything. You should have lived long ago among the Dutchmen in New York. They would have told you it wasn't thunder, but was the sound made by Henry Hudson and his men as they played ninepins with the dwarfs in the caves of the Catskill mountains.
"But there! You don't know anything about Henry Hudson. Sit down, dear, in that little chair close to me and turn your back to the window. Then you will not see the lightning. I will tell you such a nice story you will not listen to the thunder, either."
"I ought not to be afraid with you, Uncle Sam. I wish Joe were here, though. He would like t) hear the story."
95
96 THE COMING OF
"I will tell it to him some other time, Lucy. Or you may tell him yourself. But here he comes now, just in time."
Uncle Sam leaned back in his armchair, pulled the beard on his chin, and began the story of
HENRY HUDSON AND THE DUTCHMEN
It is nearly three hundred years since John Smith went to Jamestown. He left a dear friend in Eng- land who was also a great sea captain. His name was Henry Hudson.
At that time England was jealous of Spain be- cause of her riches. The Spaniards had found many gold and silver mines in America.
England was also jealous of Portugal, a small country joining Spain. The Portuguese had found a way of reaching India by sailing southward around Africa and then eastward. They brought home shiploads of gums, spices, precious stones and rare woods. So the Englishmen thought:
"We must get rich, too. Why cannot we reach India by sailing to the northeast or the northwest?"
They looked about for a brave and able captain who should find out if this could be done. They chose Henry Hudson.
THE WHITE MEN
He sailed into the northern seas, lie met with icebergs that made the air very o>ld when they were still a long way off. He saw many whal<
Henry Hudson and his men killed some of the whales. They boiled the fat and made many bar- rels of oil. This was the best oil known at that time for burning in lamps. It was also useful in other ways.
The brave captain sailed far into the northern seas. It was now so cold that great masses of ice almost stopped the ship.
"We must turn back," Henry Hudson said to his men. "It is of no use to sail any farther north war- 1 in hopes of finding a passage to India."
When he got back to England, the people were pleased to learn about the whales. They sent more ships to capture the great monsters and bring home the oil.
Once more they sent Henry Hudson to look for a short way to India by a northern passage.
Again he failed because of the ice in the waters, and again he came home disappointed.
About this time the people of Holland heard of Henry Hudson and what he was trying to do. People who live in that country are called Dutch
98 THE COMING OF
or Dutchmen. It was a rich country for so few peo- ple. They said :
- < We had better send for this English captain.
We will get him to sail in our ships. We do not wish the Englishmen to find a shorter way to India than we know now. If they do, they will become richer than we are.'*
So they sent for Hudson. They offered him such good pay that he went to Holland and made ready to take one of their ships into the north. As he was about to sail he received a letter from his old friend John Smith.
The letter told him he should sail to the westward if he wished to find the best way of reaching India. Just north of Virginia there was a narrow strait. If a ship passed through that strait, it would enter the ocean that washes the shores of India.
We all know now that Captain John Smith was wrong about this. But Henry Hudson thought it must be true.
He turned his ship, the Half Moon, towards the west. He sailed in that direction till he reached the shores of Newfoundland. Then he went south- ward as far as Virginia, keeping near the coast. He now turned his ship about and slowly sailed
THE WHITE MEN
to the north. He entered many of the bays and coves that reached into the land. lie was always on the lookout for the strait of which Smith had written.
At last he sailed into a fine harbor which no white men had ever seen before. We call it to-day the harbor of New York and know it is one of the best in the world.
Indians came down to the shore in crowds. They were curious to see the strange-looking boat and the people with the white faces and hands. The Red Men wore feather cloaks and necklaces of cop- per. They wished to make friends with their visitors and offered them beans, oysters, and to- bacco.
'What a beautiful country this is!" the white men thought.
There were sweet smells in the air and the open places along the shore were covered with grass and flowers. The ship did not remain long in the harbor. Hudson found he was at the mouth of a river. He thought :
"Who knows but that if I follow this river I may reach the Pacific Ocean?"
So the ship sailed farther and farther up the
100 THE COMING OF
river. It stopped at several places where friendly Indians came out to meet the white men. Hudson landed at one of these places and visited an Indian chief.
In the village he saw great piles of corn and beans. He noticed the bark houses. The Red Men asked him to stay all night with them and placed a mat on the ground for him to sit on. They brought him food in a red wooden bowl.
They wished to show that they were truly his friends, so they took some arrows and threw them into the fire. This told him more than the Indian words he could not understand.
When he sailed again, Hudson noticed that the river was getting narrower. At last it was so shallow that his ship could go no farther. He sent some men in a small boat to see what they could find.
"This is no way to the Pacific," they said when they came back. "The river comes to an end just beyond us."
The ship was turned about, and Hudson sailed down the river and out into the harbor again. He gave his own name to the river he had dis-
THE WHITE MFA m i
covered, and it is still called the Hudson River. He never saw it again.
Now came the long voyage across the ocean. The Dutch people were sorry that Hudson had not found what he was looking for. They were pka-cd. how r ever, to learn of the lovely country and the wild animals covered with fur that were to he found in its forests.
"The Indians are pleasant and willing to be friends. They kill great numbers of the wild ani- mals with their bows and arrows and they tan the skins." So the sailors said.
"Why not send some of our people to live on the shores of the Hudson River?" thought the thrifty Dutch. "They can carry with them ship- loads of knives, axes, beads, and other things the Red Men like. They can trade those things for the furs that bring high prices here in FAirope."
This is how it happened that the Dutch people came to settle in America.
Thev brought chests full of linen, as well as the
> o
shining pewter dishes they used in housekeeping.
In fact, they packed in their ships everything they
needed to make themselves comfortable and happy.
When they built their houses in America they
102 THE COMING OF
made them look as much as possible like the homes they left behind them. They made their fireplaces large enough to hold logs of great size. In the cold winter evenings these logs crackled and burned brightly while the Dutchmen with their wives and children sat before the fire and told stories.
Every house had a porch. As the sun set and the moon came out in the summer time, the men sat in the porches telling stories and smoking their pipes while their wives sat knitting beside them and the children romped and played around the dooryards.
They still dressed in the fashions of their coun- try. The men had hats with broad brims and coats with wide skirts. The women wore so many short skirts they looked like opened umbrellas.
These Dutch people were honest and they had kind hearts, so they got along pretty well with their Indian neighbors. They hated idleness and they were very neat.
All of them worked during the day, but when evening came it was a time for rest and pleasure. Then were told the stories of the old days in Hol- land, of fairies, and of the gnomes who lived un- derground digging copper and gold.
- ' . y---*
\
' 4 '
'4v
' ' ....... I
^ >, - -3
THE DUTCH CHILDREN AT PLAY
THE Nr,- vi.K
PUBLIC L.;r,?ARY
ASTCK, . r..'OX AND TILDEN f,ui. : l>..ri
c
THE WHITE MEN
When the thunder rolled in the sky, they would nod to each other and say : "It is only Henry I lud- son and his men playing ninepins with the dwarfs in the caves of the Catskill mountains."
You shall now hear how this queer fancy came into their heads.
After the brave captain had discovered the Hud- son River and gone back to Europe, he tried once more to find a short way to India. He thought it best to cross the ocean again, but to sail farther north than he had done on his first voyage to this country.
After he had reached the shores of America, he came into a large bay. The land around him was bare and dreary. The ship was kept all winter in this bay on account of the ice. The sailors suf- fered very much from the bitter cold. Many of them became sick and died before the spring opened and the ice broke up enough to let the ship move on.
By this time the food was almost gone. The day came when Hudson took the last of the bread and divided it among his crew. He was so sad and hopeless that tears filled his eye-
The sailors blamed him for bringing them there
104 THE COMING OF
and were very angry with him. They thought, "We shall all lose our lives through him."
They were not even moved by his tears. When they had eaten the bread, they seized him and put him and some sick sailors into a small boat. Then they sent them adrift in the cold, dreary waters of the great bay.
They w r ere never heard of again. This is all we know of the last days of that very brave Eng- lishman, Captain Henry Hudson.
As for the wicked sailors, some of them met with better fortune than they deserved. Soon after they had treated their captain so badly, birds came flying by. The men shot some of these and saved them- selves from starving. After that they had a fight with Indians on the shore and several of the sailors were killed. The others managed to gather a small supply of food with which they started for home.
Even then they suffered a great deal from hun- ger. They were so w r eak they had to sit down to sail the vessel. All of them would have died if they had not met another ship, which took them aboard and carried them home.
Long before Uncle Sam had finished the story, the thunder-storm had passed by.
THE WHITE MEN [05
"I hardly noticed it. I was thinking all the time about Henry Hudson," declared Lucy.
"I suppose Hudson never met his old friend John Smith after he got the letter," said Uncle Sam, thoughtfully. Then he went on, 'The}- were both Englishmen, yet those who settled in Virginia with John Smith made a very different home fur themselves from those made by the Dutch \vlio followed Henry Hudson.
'The Dutch had their own ways; the English had theirs. The Dutch planted gardens. They raised flocks of sheep, which furnished wool for the women to card and spin. They gave beads and blankets of red \vool to their Indian neigh- bors. They took in return game and beautiful furs. They sent the furs to Holland.
'They got up in the morning at sunrise, and went to bed at sunset. They ate dinner at eleven o'clock in the morning, and tea parties were often given at three in the afternoon.
"They had grand times at Christmas and Xew Year's, when feasts were spread and everyone dressed in his best clothes.
- c lt was the Dutchmen who gave Santa Hans
to American children. They brought the dear old
106 THE COMING OF
fellow from Holland along with their chests of linen and pewter dishes."
"Hurrah for the Dutchmen! I say," exclaimed Joe. "Christmas wouldn't be half the fun it is without Santa Claus. Do you know, Uncle Sam, last year was the first time Lucy and I knew he was not a real man. Why, we used to think he came down our chimney every Christmas Eve with his pack of presents. We talked up the chimney to him when we went to bed and told him what we wanted. I know now that you and father and mother are the only Santa Claus."
"Now I think of it, the pictures of Santa Claus make him look like a fat and jolly old Dutchman," said Lucy.
"After their people were well settled, the chil- dren of Virginia enjoyed Christmas," Uncle Sam went on. "They lived on big plantations where their fathers raised tobacco. The houses were large and pleasant. Beautiful trees grew near and gave plenty of shade in the hot summer time.
"At Christmas, wild turkeys were roasted in the big fireplaces. The rooms were trimmed with holly and evergreens. There were dinner parties, and dances that lasted all night. The ladies wore flow-
THE WHITE MEN
107
ered silk dresses with long trains. Their hair \\ powdered and 'done up' on the head so it looked like a tower. The men wore knee-breeches and shoes with bright buckles. Their coats were of silk or velvet and trimmed with much gold and silver lace.
"The w^hite people in Virginia did not work hard. They made their black slaves care for the great fields of tobacco.
" 'Where did the black men come from ?' I see the question in Lucy's eyes."
Uncle Sam stopped for a moment to stroke his chin and slyly pull Joe's hair, for the boy had turned his head to look at his sister.
"Ouch! That isn't fair, Uncle Sam," cried Joe. "I will try to forgive you, though, if you dcn't do it again and go on with your story."
"The Dutch were the first ones to bring slaves to Virginia. They sailed to Africa and caught the poor savages in their homes. Then they car- ried them on board ship and afterwards sold them to the white planters in America. That is one- way the Dutch became rich.
"You may praise the Dutch for giving you Santa Claus, Joe. You may Maine them, however, for
io8 THE COMING OF
being the first to bring the dreadful curse of slav- ery to this beautiful land."
Uncle Sam was getting excited.
'We may thank the Lord for sending us a good helper. It is because of that helper that the people of America are now free."
The old man got up and made a deep bow before a picture hanging above the organ.
There is the face of one who loved his fellow men," he said, pointing to the picture.
"When you children know a little more about your country, you shall hear the story of Abraham Lincoln.'