Indigenous People: A Beginning of Wealth

“Without the river, there would be no story.”
--Margaret Schram,  Hudson’s Merchants & Whalers: The Rise and Fall of a River Port

Colonists Learned from Indigenous Groups

Contrary to what some people think when they learn that Hudson was a whaling town, there were no whales that swam up the Hudson River. And, no, the whales were not dragged up the river by the whaling ships. Whales were hunted in the deep waters of the oceans before they were processed on board the ships. 

However, once upon a time, whales were abundant near shore areas, including in New York Harbor. And many indigenous tribes near the seashore took advantage of this. In 1659 when a group of mostly Quakers moved to the island of Nantucket, they were taught the practice of drift whaling (“harvesting” whales as they were beached or came close to shore) by the indigenous tribe, the Wampanoag. Similar cultural exchange occurred on Long Island and throughout settlements along the shores of New England. When the Nantucketers began going out to sea the majority of the crews were Wampanoag. Their expertise and labor helped to build the wealth of these colonists.

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Additional Resource (links to PDF): 

Field Guide: The Sturgeon

Indigenous People: A Beginning of Wealth