Maryland New Jersey Delaware Pennsylvania

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Maryland New Jersey Delaware Pennsylvania New Sweden Farmstead C. A. Nothnagle Cabin Hendrickson House Christ Church Morton Homestead St. James of Kingsessing Morton-Morton Homestead NEW SWEDEN CENTRE located at the Kalmar Nyckel Shipyard 1124 East 7th Street, Wilmington, DE 19801 302.429.0464 - www.colonialnewsweden.org Swedish Plank Cabin E-mail: [email protected] To help promote Swedish heritage in the Delaware Valley, please fill out and return 15 88 16 this form to: New Sweden Centre, P.O. Box Douglassville Pennsylvania 4 12001, Wilmington, DE 19850 Philadelphia St George’s Church St George’s Elk Landing Name ____________________________ 20 6 22 American Swedish Phone(s) ____________________________ 29 30 Historical Museum 5 7 Cell ____________________________ New Sweden Centre Model of Fort Wilmington 14 11 Address ____________________________ 1124 E. 7th Street, Christina Kalmar Nyckel 2 City/St/ZIP ____________________________ Wilmington, DE 19802 3 Crane Hook 1 21 Swedesboro E-mail ____________________________ 302.429.0464 - www.colonialnewsweden.org 12 24 13 Gloria Dei Church E-mail: [email protected] 9 Delaware Memorial 23 Bridge [] Send NSC bi-monthly e-newsletter (addresses Geocache coordinates: Maryland 8 10 Pennsville will not appear in mailing) N 39.44.263 17 New 25 W 075.32.198 Elkton Castle 19 26 Salem Contact me about: At New Sweden Centre, you can explore and experience Delaware 28 [] Becoming a colonial reenactor 27 Bridgeton Model of the history of the first NS Heritage Monument [] Joining the NSC speaker’s bureau Old Swedes Trinity settlers in the Delaware 18 Fort Elfsborg [] Other volunteer service Valley. You can also learn New Jersey [] To schedule a speaker, tour or program about many other places where Swedish history can [] To schedule “Settlers’ Trunks” at my school be discovered. Model of Fort Trinity/ New Sweden colony, founded in 1638, was the first Fort Casimir [] Schedule “Little Key” or colonial reenactors permanent European settlement in the Delaware No Remaining 1638-1654 New Sweden Colony in my community Valley. The sailing vessels Kalmar Nyckel and Structures at Johan Printz Park Forts and Printz’s Lower Swedish Cabin 1655-1664 Under Dutch Rule Fogel Grip arrived at a natural rock landing. This site is still visible today on the Christina River, in Mill site 29 (not Enroll me as a NSC Member or Sponsor pictured) 1665-1776 Under English Rule Wilmington, Delaware. Among the first pioneers in [] $20 Individual [] $30 Family [] $100 Sponsor 1776- Delegates from the 13 colonies, including New Sweden were Swedes, Finns, Dutch, and one New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, and African. They lived peaceably with the neighboring Purchase: Life in New Sweden Video(s) Maryland sign the declaration of Independence Lenape Indians. $20 per video (guide included) Holy Trinity Church Trinity Holy Check type: [] VHS [] DVD [] PAL DVD Total number ( ) Total $_______ enclosed Total amount enclosed $ _______ Make checks payable to “New Sweden Centre” Johan Printz Cabin Swedish Granary St Mary Anne’s Church Mouns Jones House St. Gabriel’s Church Finnish Settlers Monument Milles Monument PENNSYLVANIA MARYLAND Visit “New Sweden Centre” N 30 American Swedish Historical Museum 17 St. Mary Anne’s Episcopal Church Schedule a visit to the “Experience New Sweden” exhibits “Experience 1900 Pattison Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19145 315 S. Main St., North East, MD 21901 E for an introduction to the colonial life of Delaware Valley W New 215.389.1776 - www.americanswedish.org 410.287.5522 - www.stmaryanne.org settlers. Join in the fun with “hands on” activities and try 6 St. James of Kingsessing 8 Historic Elk Landing on 17th century clothing! S Sweden” 6800 Woodland Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19142 590 Landing Lane, Elkton, MD 21921 W 215.727.5265 410.620.6400 - www.elklanding.org E A Place D 22 Gloria Dei (Old Swedes’) Church NEW JERSEY E to begin 916 S. Swanson St., Philadelphia, PA 19147 N a journey 215.389.1513 - www.old-swedes.org 21 Trinity Episcopal “Old Swedes” Church 1208 Kings Hwy Swedesboro, NJ 08085 C of history, 20 Lower Swedish Cabin 856.467.1227 - www.trinityswedesboro.org 9 Creek Rd., Drexel Hill, PA 19026 E where 610.237.8064 - www.swedishcabin.org 2 C. A. Nothnagle Log House N Delaware 406 Swedesboro Rd, Gibbstown, NJ 08027 T 5 Morton Homestead 856.423.0916 - e-mail: [email protected] R Valley 100 Lincoln Ave., Prospect Park, PA 19076 E history 610.583.7221 - www.norwoodpahistorical.org 27 New Sweden Colonial Farmstead PO Box 191, Bridgeton, NJ 08402 began. 7 Morton-Morton Homestead Tours by appointment only: 609.217.4867 Tours arranged by Norwood Borough Office 856.221.3276 - www.newswedenfarmstead.org 610.586.5800 18 Swedish Granary - c 1650 PLACES TO SEE! 11 Governor Printz Park 960 Ye Greate St, Greenwich, NJ 08323 101 Taylor Ave., Essington, PA 19029 856.455.4055 - www.cchistsoc.org DELAWARE 610.521.3530 13 Fort Christina Park/Milles Monument 28 Swedish Plank Cabin - c 1700 www.hmdb.org/marker.asp?marker=14760 1122 E. 7th St., Wilmington, DE 19801 Locust Island Rd and New Street Visits by appointment only: 302.429.0464 16 Mouns Jones House 1716 Hancocks Bridge, NJ 08038 - 856.935.4373 A History 31 Old Philadelphia Pike, Douglassville, PA 19518 19 Johan Printz Log Cabin 24 The Kalmar Nyckel Shipyard Resource 610.385.4762 Next to 15 Market St., Salem, NJ 08070 The Tall Ship Kalmar Nyckel e-mail: [email protected] 856.935.9242 - www.visitsalemcountynj.com 302.429.7447 - www.kalmarnyckel.org Located in the and 15 St. Gabriel’s Episcopal Church 26 Model of former Fort Elfsborg (1643 - 1652) 1 New Sweden Centre - Model of Ft. Christina Kalmar Nyckel 1188 Ben Franklin Hwy. E., Douglassville, PA 19518 At Elsinboro School 1124 East 7th St., Wilmington, DE 19801 Shipyard 610.385.3144 - www.stgabriels.us 631 Salem-Fort Elfsborg Road, Salem, NJ 08079 302.429.0464 - www.colonialnewsweden.org 1124 East 7th St. 14 Finnish Settlers Monument 856.935.3817 - www.elsinboroschool.com Wilmington, 12 Holy Trinity (Old Swedes Church) 3 1145 Concord Ave., Chester, PA 19013 10 New Sweden Heritage Monument Delaware The Hendrickson House www.fasdv.org Riverview Beach Park on the Delaware 9 Crane Hook Church Monument At the foot of Pittsfield St., Pennsville, NJ 08070 4 Christ Church (Old Swedes) 606 Church St., Wilmington, DE 19801 www.swedishheritage.us 740 River Rd., Bridgeport, PA 19405 302.652.5629 - www.oldswedes.org 610.272.6036 23 St. George’s Episcopal Church 29 Site of Printz’s “Old Swedes” Mill - c 1645 3 Church Landing Rd, Pennsville, NJ 08070 25 Fort Trinity - 1654 / Fort Casimir - 1651 Next to the Blue Bell Inn on Cobbs Creek 856.678.7979 Model at New Castle Court House Museum 7303 Woodlawn Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19142 www.colonialswedes.org/Historic_Sights/NJSite.html 211 Delaware St., New Castle, DE 19720 610.583.0788 (no image included on map) Celebrate Colonists’ Day at Ft. Christina Park 302.323.4453 - www.history.delaware.gov www.darbyhistory.com/SwedesMill.html April 13, 2013 11:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. 1122 E. 7th St. Wilmington, DE.
Recommended publications
  • Kalmar Nyckel: Using a 17Th Century Dutch Pinnace to Teach Physics and More DTI 2016-2017 Ancient Inventions
    Kalmar Nyckel: Using a 17th century Dutch Pinnace to Teach Physics and More DTI 2016-2017 Ancient Inventions Terri Eros Challenges H.B. duPont Middle School, while located in a very suburban setting, serves a very diverse population. There are approximately 900 students in grades 6-8, with students almost evenly split between urban and suburban backgrounds. The academic readiness also varies greatly with relation to reading and math skills. It is not unusual to have a range of students reading all the way from a pre-primer level to those comfortable with high school text. In some cases the disparity is due to limited English proficiency. The math skills are similarly distributed with some students needing calculators for 2-digit addition while others are comfortable solving algebraic equations. To better meet student needs, our school piloted having honors classes in Science and Social Studies last year. Groupings were based on reading level for Social Studies and Math level for Science. The outcome was less than ideal for Science. At the middle school level, language skills are more important so that is now the basis of grouping for the 2016-2017 school year. In addition, our school is aiming for full inclusion. Students include those that have severe physical and/or emotional needs that interfere with their ability to interact linguistically, through either speech or writing. Despite these limitations, there is still an interest and an expectation to succeed in the Science classroom. The challenge is to incorporate the rigor of the Next Generation Science Standards, with its emphasis on student driven learning, while finding multiple access points for the students based on readiness.
    [Show full text]
  • Kalmar Nyckel – a Guide to the Ship and Her History
    Kalmar Nyckel – A Guide to the Ship and Her History Kalmar Nyckel – A Guide to the Ship and Her History 2 Guide to the Re‐creation of the Tall Ship KALMAR NYCKEL “Become Something Great” America’s original promise and enduring challenge. Excerpt from a letter by Peter Minuit to Swedish Chancellor Axel Oxenstierna As navigation makes kingdoms and countries thrive and in the West­Indies [North America] many places gradually come to be occupied by the English, Dutch, and French, I think the Swedish Crown ought not to stand back and refrain from having her name spread widely, also in foreign countries; and to that end I the undersigned, wish to offer my services to the Swedish The Kalmar Nyckel Foundation Crown to set out modestly on what might, by God’s Written & Compiled By grace, become something great within a short Samuel Heed, Esq. time [emphasis added]. With Captain Lauren Morgens & Alistair Gillanders, Esq. Firstly, I have suggested to Mr. Pieter Spiering [Spiring, Swedish Ambassador to the Hague] to make a journey to the Virginias, New Netherland and other places, in which regions certain places are well known to me, with a very good climate, which could be named Nova Sweediae [New Sweden]…. Your Excellency’s faithful servant, Cover photograph: The present day Kalmar Nyckel cruising on the Pieter Minuit Patuxent river on the Chesapeake during a visit to Solomon’s Island, MD in 2008. Photographer – Alistair Gillanders. Amsterdam, 15 June 1636 Copyright ©2009 Kalmar Nyckel Foundation. All rights reserved. Ship and History Guide – Version 1.01 Kalmar Nyckel – A Guide to the Ship and Her History 3 Table of Contents 7.1.3 The Main Deck and Its Features: ..............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Delaware Tercentenary Program
    Vela ware Official Program., of the Celebration June 27, I9J8 ·Wilmington, 'Delaware Price 25 Cents FORT CHRISTINA H.M. CHRISTINA, Queen of Sweden (r6J'l-l 654) during H.M. GusTAvus A oo LPH U s , King of Sweden (161 '· whose reign New Sweden was founded. I 632) through whose support New Sweden becan1e a possibility. l DEcEMBER 1637, the Swedish Expedi­ tion, under Peter Minuit, sailed from Sweden in the ship, "Kalmar Nyckel" and the yacht,"Fogel Grip," and finally reached the "Rocks" in March r6J8. Here Minui t made a treaty with the Indians and, with a salute of two cannons, claimed for Sweden all that land from the Christina River down to Bombay Hook. Wt�forl(g� ?t�dfantt� �fnur }llttttbetaCONTRACTET gnga(n�cat�ct S�bre �mpagnict �tbf J(onuugart;rctj ewcrfg�c. 6rdlc iam·om �it�dm &\jffdin�. £)�uu 4/ft6tt 9?tl)trfdnb(rc �prdfct �fau p.S6�Mnfl.al 2ft' ~ £ BEGINNINGS of the establishment of New }:RICO SCHRODERO. L S~eden rnay be traced back to the efforts of one William Usselinx, a native of Antwerp, who interested King Gustavus Adolphus in the enter­ prise. At the right is reproduced the cover of the contract and prospectus which was used to interest The Cover investors in the venture. Here is reproduced the famous painting by Stanley M. Arthurs, Esq., ofthe landing ofthe .firstSwedish expedi­ tion at the "Roclcs." The painting is owned by Joseph S. Wilson, Esq. GusTAF V ' K.lng • of S weden , d u r .1 n g . w h ose reign, In I9J8 , t h e ter- centenary of · the found·lng of N ew Sweden IS celebrated.
    [Show full text]
  • Chronology of Colonial Swedes on the Delaware 1638-1713 by Dr
    Chronology of Colonial Swedes on the Delaware 1638-1713 by Dr. Peter Stebbins Craig Fellow, American Society of Genealogists Fellow, Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania Historian, Swedish Colonial Society originally published in Swedish Colonial News, Volume 2, Number 5 (Fall 2001) Although it is commonly known that the Swedes were the first white settlers to successfully colonize the Delaware Valley in 1638, many historians overlook the continuing presence of the Delaware Swedes throughout the colonial period. Some highlights covering the first 75 years (1638-1713) are shown below: New Sweden Era, 1638-1655 1638 - After a 4-month voyage from Gothenburg, Kalmar Nyckel arrives in the Delaware in March. Captain Peter Minuit purchases land on west bank from the Schuylkill River to Bombay Hook, builds Fort Christina at present Wilmington and leaves 24 men, under the command of Lt. Måns Kling, to man the fort and trade with Indians. Kalmar Nyckel returns safely to Sweden, but Minuit dies on return trip in a hurricane in the Caribbean. 1639 - Fogel Grip, which accompanied Kalmal Nyckel, brings a 25th man from St. Kitts, a slave from Angola known as Anthony Swartz. 1640 - Kalmar Nyckel, on its second voyage, brings the first families to New Sweden, including those of Sven Gunnarsson and Lars Svensson. Other new settlers include Peter Rambo, Anders Bonde, Måns Andersson, Johan Schaggen, Anders Dalbo and Dr. Timen Stiddem. Lt. Peter Hollander Ridder, who succeeds Kling as new commanding officer, purchases more land from Indians between Schuylkill and the Falls of the Delaware. 1641 - Kalmar Nyckel, joined by the Charitas, brings 64 men to New Sweden, including the families of Måns Lom, Olof Stille, Christopher Rettel, Hans Månsson, Olof Thorsson and Eskil Larsson.
    [Show full text]
  • New Sweden Featured at AHSM Talk Dennis L
    Swedish American Genealogist Volume 27 | Number 2 Article 7 6-1-2007 New Sweden featured at AHSM talk Dennis L. Johnson Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/swensonsag Part of the Genealogy Commons, and the Scandinavian Studies Commons Recommended Citation Johnson, Dennis L. (2007) "New Sweden featured at AHSM talk," Swedish American Genealogist: Vol. 27 : No. 2 , Article 7. Available at: https://digitalcommons.augustana.edu/swensonsag/vol27/iss2/7 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Swenson Swedish Immigration Research Center at Augustana Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Swedish American Genealogist by an authorized editor of Augustana Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. New Sweden Featured at ASHM Talk in Philadelphia BY DENNIS L. JOHNSON Nearly 370 years ago, two small sites exist in the area which can trace sailing ships, the Kalmar Nyckel and their origins to the colony in some the Fogel Grip, were chartered by a way. Dutch and Swedish trading company to carry a small group of Swedes to The Early Years North America to settle on the banks At the time of the New Sweden set- of the Delaware River, on lands that tlement, the Dutch and the English are now part of Delaware, Pennsyl- were competing for ascendancy on vania, and New Jersey. This colony, the northeast coast of North America. established in 1638, followed closely By 1638, Sweden had embarked after English and Dutch settlements upon her “age of greatness” be- in Massachusetts, Virginia, New ginning with King Gustav II Adolf in York, and a few other locations in the 1611.
    [Show full text]
  • THE NEW SWEDEN COLONY AI,F Fi(
    THE NEW SWEDEN COLONY AI,F_fi( NEW JERSEY STATE MUSEUM THE NEW SWEDEN COLONY Map of the New Swedencolons/in the DelawareValley drawn by Per Lindestrom, ca. 1655 Courtesyof t• Rilcsarkiuet,Stocld•lm THE NEW SWEDEN COLONY February6-May 15, 1988 .J]'GERS DEC5 1988 NJ. DEPOSITORY NEW JERSEYSTATE MUSEUM TRENTON, NEW JERSEY 1988 NEW JERSEY DEPARTMENT OF STATE Partiallyfunded by theNew Sweden Commemorative Commission of NewJersey, the governmentof Sweden, the Swedish National Committeefor New Sweden'88, the New JerseyCommittee for the Humanitiesand the PennsylvaniaHumanities Council with cosponsorshipfrom the Pennsylvania State Museum and the New JerseyHistorical Commission Copyright,¸ 1988,New Jersey State Museum, Trenton, New Jersey Libraryof CongressCatalogue Card Number 88-620581 ISBN 0-938766-07-4 Edited by Lorraine E. Williams Designedby JohnCrank & Associates,Inc. Photographsby Tony Masso,Courtesy of LendingInstitutions Typesetand producedby the New JerseyState Museum Printedby White EaglePrinting Co., Inc. Cover: Detail of New Sweden colonists tradingwith the Indiansfrom Thomas CampaniusHolm Descriptionolc New Sweden,1702, published in Stockholm. CONTENTS 7 FOREWORD Leah P. Sloshberg 9 AC KN O WLED GE MENTS Lorraine E. Williams 11 INTRODUCTION 15 CHRONOLOGY 19 THE NEW SWEDEN COLONY Catalogueof Exhibition 69 BIBLIOGRAPHY FOREWORD Leah P. Sloshberg The New JerseyState Museumis pleasedto participatein the Director commemorativecelebration of the 350th anniversaryof the founding of the New SwedenColony in the DelawareValley. The presentation of this exhibition documentsand visualizesthis brief but very influentialpart of our regionaland statehistory; brief, in that the actual life of the colony was only seventeenyears, but influential in its many culturalcontributions such as placenames, music and religioustraditions, architectural influences, and foodwaysthat are still strongand vibrant.
    [Show full text]
  • Fort Christina National Historic
    A brief history of Fort Christina In 1638, Swedish and Finnish colonists from the ships Kalmar Nyckel and Fogel Grip established a timber and earth fort along the Christina River on what is today’s Seventh Street Peninsula in Wilmington, Del. Named Fort Christina after the then 12-year-old queen of Sweden, it was the first Swedish settlement in America and the first permanent non-native settlement in Delaware. What is believed to be the location where the Swedes and Finns first stepped ashore is a natural wharf of stone known as “The Rocks.” The site, located within the boundaries of the Fort Christina National Historic Landmark, is marked today by a bulkhead and rock outcropping extending along the northern bank of the Christina River near its confluence with Brandywine Creek, over a mile upstream from where the Christina empties into the Delaware River. Between 1638 and 1655, the profitable fur trade helped increase the settlement’s population to 300. In 1655, however, the Dutch, looking to strengthen their control of the fur trade from the Delaware River to the Susquehanna Valley in Pennsylvania, attacked and quickly captured Fort Christina. Despite the Dutch invasion, the population of the settlement remained predominantly Swedish. When Delaware fell to the English in 1664, the king’s soldiers garrisoned the fort, but it was the Swedish settlement which remained the heart of the village that spread along the banks of the Christina and became, in the next Detail from a map of Fort Christina by Per century, Wilmington. Lindeström, 1654. The settlement’s location was not only advantageous for the fur trade, it was also strategic militarily.
    [Show full text]
  • A Historic Saga of Settlement and Nation Building
    National Park Service <Running Headers> <E> U.S. Department of the Interior Northeast Region History Program A HISTORIC SAGA OF SETTLEMENT AND NATION BUILDING FIRST STATE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY PREPARED BY: PAULA S. REED, PH.D. EDITH B. WALLACE, M.A. PAULA S. REED & ASSOCIATES, INC. 1 A HISTORIC SAGA OF SETTLEMENT AND NATION BUILDING FIRST STATE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY PREPARED BY PAULA S. REED, PH.D. EDITH B. WALLACE, M.A. PAULA S. REED & ASSOCIATES, INC. IN PARTNERSHIP WITH THE ORGANIZATION OF AMERICAN HISTORIANS/NATIONAL PARK SERVICE NATIONAL PARK SERVICE U.S. DEpaRTMENT OF THE INTERIOR SEPTEMBER 2019 FIRST STATE NATIONAL HISTORICAL PARK New Castle, Delaware HISTORIC RESOURCE STUDY Paula S. Reed, Ph.D. Edith B. Wallace, M.A. Paula S. Reed & Associates, Inc. U.S. Department of the Interior National Park Service/In Partnership with the Organization of American Historians Northeast Region History Program September 2019 Cover image: Detail from 1749 Lewis Evans “Map of Pensilvania, New-Jersey, New-York, and the three Delaware counties,” showing the 1701 boundary arc. Library of Congress. Disclaimer: The views and conclusions contained in this document are those of this author and should not be interpreted as representing the opinions or policies of the U.S. Government. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not constitute their endorsement by the U.S. Government. TABLE OF CONTENTS List of Figures � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � � �
    [Show full text]
  • New Sweden, 1638-1655
    New Sweden, 1638-1655 PORTENTS OF INDUSTRIALIZATION By Peter C. Welsh October, 1955 New Sweden, 1638-1655: PORTENTS OF INDUSTRIAL!ZATION1 In this said kill...there are water-falls; and at the most important one, called the great fall... could be placed...a flour mill, a saw-mill, and a chamois-dressing mill....Besides this...if we could here establish powder-mills it would bring us great profit.—Governor Johan Classon Rising, Fort Christina in New Sweden, July 13, 165U. The first half of the seventeenth century was a period characterized by territorial and commercial expansion. The great powers of Europe during these years turned to the task of colonizing and exploiting, each for its own advantage, the discoveries of the pre­ ceding century. Following the dictates of a mercantile philosophy, the Dutch, French and English, by the 1630's, had established permanent colonies in North America. The first colonizing efforts, in every in­ stance, had been prompted by the hope of great profit. Particularly in the case of the Dutch and English did the profit motive assume large proportion, since their colonizing ventures were enterprises of trading companies, organized by promoters, and financed by stock holders. In these early years of the seventeenth century the Kingdom of Sweden was a power in European affairs. The Swedes, ruled by their great king, Gustavus Adolphus,' received their "first impetus toward 3 ...transatlantic trade and colonization...from Holland." William •ft Usselinx, a Dutch promoter of grand vision, convinced the Swedish monarch that a trading company backed by the King, the nobility and the subjects at large would reap a large reward both for the Kingdom collectively and the Investors individually.
    [Show full text]
  • Swedish Colonial News Volume 2, Number 5 Fall 2001 Preserving the Legacy of the New Sweden Colony in America
    Swedish Colonial News Volume 2, Number 5 Fall 2001 Preserving the legacy of the New Sweden Colony in America N EW SWEDEN: New Sweden Conference THE STATE OF at the Museum On Saturday November 17, Society: From New Sweden to ‘Old Swedes’ - The What 2001 the Society will present a Colonial Experience of the Swedes on the conference entitled, New Sweden: Delaware; Lorraine E. Williams, New Jersey We The State of What We Know. The State Museum: New Sweden and its Native- conference will be held at the American Neighbors; Charles T. Gehring, New American Swedish Historical Netherland Project: Swedish and Dutch Know Museum in Philadelphia beginning Competition for Control of the Delaware; Evan at 9:00 a.m. and concluding in the Haefeli, Princeton University: New Sweden, the late afternoon. It is co-sponsored English and the ‘Dark Time’ of Swedish by the ASHM and the McNeil Colonialism; Michael Mackintosh, Temple Center for Early American Studies at University: New Sweden, Native Americans and the University of Pennsylvania. the Natural World; John Fea, Valparaiso This conference will summarize University: Swedish Lutheranism and Protestant our present state of knowledge about Diversity in the 18th Century Delaware Valley; the New Sweden Colony, its and Kim-Eric Williams, Editor and Translator, European background, and the lives Swedish Colonial Society: Toward a New of New Sweden’s settlers and their Sweden Project - Needs and Resources for Further descendants under Dutch and English Studies. rule. Also to be considered will be the Ample time for discussion will be provided relationship between the colonists and at both morning and afternoon sessions.
    [Show full text]
  • Here Is the Beginning of Pennsylvania
    Peer Reviewed Title: “Here Is the Beginning of Pennsylvania”: A Settler Commemoration and Entangled Histories of Foundational Sites Journal Issue: Journal of Transnational American Studies, 7(1) Author: Hjorthén, Adam, Stockholm University Publication Date: 2016 Permalink: http://escholarship.org/uc/item/6zz68517 Author Bio: ADAM HJORTHÉN is Research Fellow in History at Stockholm University. His research focuses on the history of Swedish–American relations, transnational studies, and public history. He is currently completing a book on cross-border commemorations celebrating Swedish settling in America. He has been a visiting scholar at the University of Minnesota and George Washington University and received his PhD from Stockholm University in 2015. His previous publications include “The Past Is a Present: On the Rhetoric of Monuments and United States Universalism” in Making Cultural History: New Perspectives on Western Heritage, edited by Anna Källén (Nordic Academic Press, 2013), and “Displaying a Controversy: The Kensington Rune Stone as Transnational Historical Culture” in the Swedish-American Historical Quarterly (2011). Keywords: Transnational, American Studies, Sweden, Pennsylvania, Settler, Commemoration, Foundational Sites Local Identifier: acgcc_jtas_30645 Abstract: [abstract pending] Copyright Information: eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing services to the University of California and delivers a dynamic research platform to scholars worldwide. Copyright 2016 by the article author(s). This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution4.0 license, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ eScholarship provides open access, scholarly publishing services to the University of California and delivers a dynamic research platform to scholars worldwide. Hjorthén: “Here Is the Beginning of Pennsylvania”: A Settler Commemoration and Entangled ..
    [Show full text]
  • PUBLIC LAW 99-304—MAY 15, 1986 100 STAT. 439 Public Law 99-304
    PUBLIC LAW 99-304—MAY 15, 1986 100 STAT. 439 Public Law 99-304 99th Congress Joint Resolution To designate 1988 as the "Year of New Sweden" and to recognize the New Sweden May 15, 1986 1988 American Committee. [S.J. Res. 289] Whereas on or about March 29, 1638, the Kalmar Nyckel and Fogel Grip, ships sent by Sweden to establish a colony in the Delaware River Valley, anchored off the "Rocks" on the Christina River in what is now the State of Delaware; Whereas the colony which they established—New Sweden—was the first permanent settlement of Swedes in North America; Whereas Swedish settlers were instrumental in the founding of our Nation; John Morton of Pennsylvania, a signer of the Declaration of Independence, was of Swedish descent, as was John Hanson of Maryland, who presided over the Continental Congress from 1781 through 1782; Whereas Swedish immigration to the United States consisted of one million two hundred thousand people between the late 1840's and the late 1920's, who came here to seek a better life; these settlers dispersed to all regions of the United States; Whereas the contributions of Swedish-Americans to our way of life and our culture have been varied and many; their pioneering nature made them leaders in many fields including politics, busi­ ness, education and the arts; Whereas it is estimated that today there are four million two hundred thousand United States citizens of Swedish descent living in every State and involved in every walk of life; Whereas 1988 marks the three hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the arrival of the Kalmar Nyckel and Fogel Grip in North America; Whereas a United States committee—New Sweden 1988—is plan­ ning a series of events and celebrations throughout our Nation to commemorate this anniversary; and Whereas at the present time, the following American cities and States have New Sweden 1988 committees and chairs planning local activities: Washington, District of Columbia, Wilmington, Philadelphia, New York City, Detroit, Chicago, Minneapolis, Houston, Dallas, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, St.
    [Show full text]