- Jurriaen Aernoutsz
Jurriaen Aernoutsz (or Aernouts) was a Dutch colonial navy captain, who briefly captured part of the French colony of
Acadia in 1674.The commander of the
frigate Flying Horse, based atCuraçao during theThird Anglo-Dutch War , Aernoutsz was dispatched by the governor of Curaçao to fight French and English ships in the North Atlantic after the Netherlands recapturedNew York City . By the time he reached New York, however, the English and the Dutch had made peace in the Treaty of Westminster — but with theFranco-Dutch War still underway, Aernoutsz met withJohn Rhoades and decided to attack Acadia. [ George Francis Dow, John Henry The Pirates of the New England Coast, 1630-1730 pg. 44 ]On
August 10 ,1674 , Aernoutsz and the crew of the Flying Horse capturedFort Pentagouet in two hours. He then sailed up theBay of Fundy , pillaging several French posts along the coast and ending at Fort Jemseg, which he also captured. Aernoutsz claimed Acadia as the Dutch territory of New Holland, burying bottles at both Pentagouet and Jemseg to assert his claim, and remained in Acadia for about a month. He subsequently returned to Boston in mid-September, disposing of his pillage and selling the cannon from Pentagouet to the government ofMassachusetts . [George Francis Dow, John Henry The Pirates of the New England Coast, 1630-1730 pg. 45]Aernoutsz then returned to Curaçao in October, leaving Rhoades and company in Boston with orders to return to Acadia to maintain possession of the territory. Once in Acadia, Rhoades began seizing New England vessels coming to trade with the
Wabanaki Confederacy . As a result, the government of Massachusetts apprehended the party and tried them aspirate s, during which time the French regained control of the territory without any military opposition.The Dutch continued to consider New Holland part of their colonial empire in North America, appointing
Cornelius Van Steenwyk as Dutch governor of the territory in 1676, but this was largely a paper designation — in actual practice, the region remained under French control and sovereignty. Shortly after his appointment, Van Steenwyk sent a Dutch expedition to reoccupy Pentagouet, but they were turned back by three British war ships from Boston. The Dutch continued to claim sovereignty over Acadia on paper until 1678, when they surrendered the claim at the end of the war.References
External links
* [http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=2 Dictionary of Canadian Biography]
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