MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION
Title:
Dates:
1650-1655 (1820)
Abstract:
The New Sweden Company was founded as a joint stock enterprise in 1637 including Swedish, Dutch, and German investors seeking to trade in American furs and tobacco. Centered at Fort Christina, near present day Wilmington, Delaware, the colony expanded up both sides of Delaware Bay and the Delaware Reiver to present day Philadelphia, but capitulated to the Dutch in 1655.
This volume contains selected transcripts in Swedish and German of documents in Swedish archives relating to the settling and governance of the colony of New Sweden in Delaware and Pennsylvania, made at the expense of Jonathan Russel, United States minister to Sweden, 1820. The documents have all been translated into French, and were printed in Hazard's Register of Pennsylvania, vol. 4 (1829), 177-8,200, 314-315, 373-374, 398-400; vol. 5, 14-15, 219-221. No. 27 was not printed. Bound in at the end of the volume is Ch. 5 of Per Lindeström, "Description de la nouvelle Suède et des Indes Occidentales, 1691."
Call #:
Mss.974.8.Sw2
Extent:
1 volume(s)
Subjects:
View Subjects
Colonial Politics | General Correspondence | Mease, James, 1771-1846 | New Sweden -- History | Official Government Documents and Records | Pennsylvania History | Philadelphia History | Printz, Johan, 1592-1663 | Russell, Jonathan, 1771-1832 | Sweden -- Colonies | Swedes -- United States | Vaughan, John, 1756-1841