Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. The town was first founded by the Dutch as Boswijck during the Dutch colonization of the Americas in the 17th century. In the 19th century, the neighborhood became a community of German immigrants and their descendants. The 20th century saw an influx of Italian immigrants and Italian-Americans up to the 1980s.

  2. In 1638, the Dutch West India Company secured a deed from the local Lenape people for the Bushwick area, and Peter Stuyvesant chartered the area in 1661, naming it Boswijck, meaning "neighborhood in the woods" in 17th-century Dutch.

  3. Boswijck (Bushwick) In 1660, a group of French immigrants applied to Petrus Stuyvesant, director-general of New Netherland, for a patent to start a community. Stuyvesant granted them land between the villages of Breuckelen and Middleburgh.

  4. Jun 1, 2008 · Dutch, Swedish, and Norwegian settlers first decamped in the vicinity in about 1640, and by 1660 had formed Boswijck (Town of Woods). By the 1830s, Bushwick had begun to lose its rural character.

  5. May 24, 2016 · This centralized location was named Boswijck (meaning "heavy woods") the following year by Stuyvesant himself. It was the last of Kings County's original six towns to receive a charter. Within a...

  6. Bushwick has a strong Dutch influence. It was chartered by Peter Stuyvesant in 1661 and became a prominent neighborhood. Bushwick, which was once called “Boswijck”– derived from Dutch for a little town in the woods –was in fact one of the original six towns established in New Netherlands.

  7. Aug 22, 2016 · Bushwick Streets-Before any of that, this place was called Boswijck, Settled by the Dutch And Franciscus the Negro, a former slave who bought his freedom. And all of New York was called New...

  1. People also search for