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LES district leader: Strip Stuyvesant’s name off…everything!

BY LINCOLN ANDERSON | Updated Tues., June 30, 2:30 p.m.: With consciousness about racism now at the fore in America, statues of Columbus, Confederates, colonizers and conquistadores have been toppled, vandalized or slated for removal.

In New York, Speaker Corey Johnson recently called for the Thomas Jefferson statue to be removed from the Council Chambers in City Hall. The Founding Father, who penned the Declaration of Independence, during his lifetime owned more than 600 slaves.

Meanwhile, Paul Newell, a Lower East Side Democratic district leader, says a historic New York icon whose name is particularly prominent in Downtown Manhattan, also should be “canceled” in a big way.

“Peter Stuyvesant is my candidate for most over-named New Yorker in terms of both his moral worth and historical significance,” Newell recently wrote, in a Facebook post.

“He was New Amsterdam’s largest slave owner,” Newell noted, “a vicious anti-Semite, a virulent opponent of religious freedom (going so far as to arrest a farmer for harboring Quakers and ban Lutherans from praying in their homes), and an incompetent, corrupt governor widely hated by his own constituents.”

Stuyvesant (1592-1672) did, in fact, own 40 slaves, making him the colony’s largest slaveholder. The director general of New Netherland also reportedly supervised what was likely Manhattan’s first public slave auction.

“Like the Confederates, the two most historically important things about him are both about losing,” Newell continued. “First, his arrest of the Quaker-harboring farmer was rebuked by the Dutch West India Company, resulting in the first declaration of religious freedom in the ‘New World.’ And, of course, losing New Holland to the English.

Paul Newell is taking on ol’ “Peg Leg Pete” Stuyvesant — at least on social media, so far. (Courtesy Paul Newell)

“When the English fleet arrived, Stuyvesant was so hated by New Amsterdamers that no one would fight them,” the district leader added. “When Stuyvesant went out alone to load the cannons, he was literally tackled by a group of citizens that included his own son. The English took the town without a shot while Stuyvesant sat in custody.

On top of everything, Newell said, “He was also, by all accounts, just a nasty, arrogant jerk.”

And yet, the politico noted, Stuyvesant’s name proliferates around the city, including two Brooklyn districts — Bedford-Stuyvesant and Stuyvesant Heights — the Stuyvesant Town residential complex, Stuyvesant High School, Stuyvesant Square Park, Stuyvesant St. in the East Village and Stuyvesant Ave. in Brooklyn, the Peter Stuyvesant Post Office on E. 14th St., the Peter Stuyvesant Little League, several statues (including the one in Stuyvesant Square), The New School’s Stuyvesant Park dorm on E. 15th St. and more.

There are also two towns Upstate named Stuyvesant, he noted.

“I say they should all be renamed,” Newell declared.

Ironically, the district leader attended Stuyvesant High School — but school loyalty isn’t keeping him from calling out the elite institution’s namesake. Plus, he actually graduated from City-As-School.

The statue of “Peg Leg Pete” in Stuyvesant Square was created by sculptor Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, who also founded the Whitney Museum of American Art, in Greenwich Village.

Asked by The Village Sun if the statue should be removed, Newell said, “Yes, in my opinion.”

Though his Facebook post got a lot of comments and positive feedback, he said he’s not currently actively spearheading an effort to strip Stuyvesant’s name from city landmarks, or taking any steps beyond his statements on social media.

“I don’t think I’m the leader of a movement,” he said. “I just did a tweet and a Facebook post.”

Nevertheless, he stands by his opinion that Stuyvesant’s name should be expunged from Big Apple landmarks, properties, institutions and maps.

And he recently started using the hashtag #CancelStuyvesant.

Stuyvesant’s final resting place is in a burial vault at St. Mark’s Church in the Bowery, at E. 10th St. and Second Ave. The church’s eastern courtyard features a bust of him.

The current St. Mark’s church rests atop the original site of Stuyvesant’s chapel, which sat amid his 62-acre farm, or “bouwerie,” which stretched from the present-day East Village to, yes…Stuyvesant Town.

Meanwhile, Matt Davis reported in a post on Facebook, “There is a very active discussion in the Stuyvesant High School alumni group about renaming the school.”

7 Comments

  1. Carol from East 5th Street Carol from East 5th Street June 30, 2020

    When will this all end? Washington, Jefferson, Jackson and now Stuyvesant. Good, bad or ugly they are all American history and have laid the foundation for the great country we have. They were not perfect but they were the standard of the times. Do you have any flaws? Move on and get over it. Stand on what YOU are doing to lift yourself up.

  2. Cheryl McDonald Cheryl McDonald June 30, 2020

    As a descendant of Cornelis Melyn and Capt Jacob Loper, I totally agree with your overdue assessment of Peter Stuyvesant. But I don’t think the total removal of him is appropriate. But we should start tell the full story rather than the aggrandized bits.

  3. Gojira Gojira June 29, 2020

    Oh for God’s sake, when will this end? We will be left with nothing if these 21st-century Brann the Iconoclasts have their way.

  4. Pamela Pier Pamela Pier June 29, 2020

    People will not gain new knowledge from a blank space.
    We gain enormous opportunity to show people what we have learned by leaving statues, plaques, etc. where they are, and placing new and updated information telling the terrible truths about historic figures.

    • Paul Newell Paul Newell June 29, 2020

      This is an interesting concept, but not how statues and place names are generally used. We put historical heroes in public squares and villains in museums. Keeping statues of Stuyvesant up raises him to a level of honor which he does not merit.

    • Jean Standish Jean Standish June 29, 2020

      I agree. We started with the removal of confederate statues, which was justifiable. These statues were erected to celebrate the confederacy and white supremacy. However, to remove all statues is an erasure of history. What is the problem with stating that a statue stands with dishonor and the reasons for that dishonor?

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