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Shipwreck and Salvation – The Wreck of The Prince Maurice 1657

The New Amsterdam History Center presents

Shipwreck and Salvation – The Wreck of The Prince Maurice 1657

Ships in Distress off a Rocky Coast by Ludolf Backhuysen, 1667.

On the night of March 8th, 1657, as a Nor’easter raged, a Dutch ship, The Prince Maurice, slammed into the coast of Fire Island. Aboard were 129 souls – passengers, crew and Dutch West India Company soldiers.  Ashore were Indigenous people on their coastal night watch, listening to the ship crash against the shoal. 

Until now the story of this dramatic Long Island shipwreck and rescue has been known only to a handful of historians. But the rescue on an ice laden beach has been part of Indigenous history for 400 years. 

 

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Now, thanks to a generous grant from the Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation, the New Amsterdam History Center’s groundbreaking Mapping Early New York has merged these written and oral histories of Long Island. Combining old fashioned research and technology including AI, a new window on history has opened wide for children, their parents, historians, map nerds, and computer gamers. 

Kathryn Curran, Executive Director of the Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation noted: “We are delighted to support projects that push the boundaries of history, culture, and the digital world.   The New Amsterdam History Center’s integration of 3D models, original documents, Encyclopedia, and maps is an entirely new way to experience the past.” 

“This project follows in the footsteps of our recent 3D Model created for the New-York Historical Society’s installation New York Before New York: The Castello Plan, on view March 15 – July 14, 2024″, explained Esme E. Berg, Executive Director.  “We are delighted to bring it to Long Island on May 16, 17 and 18, when members of NAHC’s research team will be in Southampton, Port Washington and Shelter Island to offer lively, richly illustrated presentations including interactive maps and 3-D models.”

Presenters

Toya Dubin, Mapping Early NY Project Director

Drew Shuptar-Rayvis, Algonkian Historical Consultant

This event was presented at:

Shelter Island Historical Society: Thursday, May 16, 1:00 – 2:30PM
Port Washington Public Library: Friday May 17, 7:00 – 8:30PM
Southampton History Museum: Saturday May 18, 11:00AM – 12:30PM

Major Funding for this project provided by:

Robert David Lion Gardiner Foundation, the Society of Daughters of Holland Dames, the First Families of New York, Ken Chase, The Consul General of the Kingdom of the Netherlands-Dutch Culture Future400, along with donors like you!

 

 

Press Contacts:

Ina Lee Selden
[email protected]

Toya Dubin
[email protected] 

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New Amsterdam History Center