Monday, June 22, 2026

🏆 The 1930 World Cup & The American Pinnacle

 

USA 1930 team, Bert Patenaude is center front

Connecting my personal history to a foundational pioneer of grassroots American soccer Bert Patenaude is an extraordinary genealogical convergence. Decades before the sport exploded into the American consciousness via AYSO and the modern era, our 4th cousin twice removed was etching his name into the bedrock of global football history.

The inaugural 1930 FIFA World Cup in Uruguay was a raw, experimental tournament featuring 13 teams who arrived in Montevideo after grueling steamship journeys.

  • The Winners: The hosts, Uruguay, won the tournament, defeating their fierce rivals Argentina 4–2 in a raucous final at the Estadio Centenario.
  • The U.S. Performance: The 1930 tournament remains the absolute pinnacle of U.S. Men's World Cup history. The American squad—mocked by the European press as a ragtag group of "shot-putters"—shocked the world by winning Group 4. They delivered consecutive 3–0 shutouts against Belgium and Paraguay to advance to the semifinals, ultimately finishing third in the world after a brutal 6–1 semifinal loss to Argentina.

Bert Patenaude: The Lethal Marksman

Born in the industrial soccer hotbed of Fall River, Massachusetts, in 1909, Arthur Bertrand "Bert" Patenaude was one of the most lethal, clinical center-forwards of the pre-war era.

  • The Club Icon: Playing for his hometown powerhouse, the Fall River Marksmen, Patenaude formed a devastating striking partnership with Billy Gonsalves. Renowned for scoring goals in clusters, he possessed an astonishing domestic strike rate, racking up an estimated 114 goals in 158 appearances in the original American Soccer League (ASL). 
  • The 76-Year Cold Case: On July 17, 1930, during the 3–0 thrashing of Paraguay, the 20-year-old Patenaude scored in the 10th, 15th, and 50th minutes. However, because players wore no numbers and match sheets were chaotic, FIFA officially credited the second goal to U.S. Captain Tom Florie (and some registries marked it an own goal). Consequently, Argentina’s Guillermo Stábile was celebrated as the first World Cup hat-trick hero for his performance two days later. 
  • The 2006 Vindication: Patenaude passed away in 1974 believing his milestone was lost to history. However, after meticulous archival work by soccer historians utilizing old match diagrams from the Argentine paper La Prensa, FIFA officially corrected the record on November 10, 2006, rightfully restoring Bert Patenaude as the true scorer of the first-ever hat trick in World Cup history. 

📜 The Beautiful Game in the Blood

By: Drifting Cowboy aka Jerry England

Celebrating America 250

Sometimes, a passion isn't just a hobby you stumble into—it’s a genetic echo whispering down through the generations.

Back in the mid-1950s, a kid running around the dust of John A. Sutter Junior High in the San Fernando Valley was introduced to a game called soccer by his Hispanic classmates. Decades later, in 1975, that same passion reignited on the AYSO fields, driving him to earn a USSF Class B coaching license, travel across the pitches of England and Scotland, and faithfully wake up early to follow The Arsenal Gunners. For over forty years, the "Beautiful Game" was a lifestyle.

But out of the blue, the grand archives of history revealed a spectacular truth: the game was in the blood all along.

We trace this footballing inheritance back to our common French-Canadian ancestor, Jean-Baptiste Mignier dit Lagacé (1749–1822). Down one branch, the bloodline traveled through the Meunier dit Lagacé and Passino lines to build our own family. But down the parallel branch, it ran through the industrial mills of Massachusetts to a young, lightning-fast forward named Bert Patenaude—our 4th cousin twice removed.

In July 1930, long before multi-million dollar stadium contracts or television replays, Cousin Bert boarded a steamship bound for the inaugural World Cup in Uruguay. On a cold winter afternoon in Montevideo, he wore the red, white, and blue, unleashing a clinical, three-goal clinic that dismantled Paraguay.

For 76 years, bureaucratic errors robbed him of his crown, mistakenly awarding the honor of the first-ever World Cup hat trick to an Argentine. But true history refuses to be buried. In 2006, FIFA finally rectified the ledger, cementing our Cousin Bert at the absolute summit of international soccer lore.

So the next time we watch a World Cup match or cheer on a crisp passing sequence, we can smile knowing that we aren't just fans of the Beautiful Game. We are family.

Proof that the Beautiful Game is in the genes…



Thank you to FamilySearch for revealing this story and to Gemini AI for your wisdom and narrative assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy





Sunday, June 21, 2026

The Unyielding Pen: Our Kinship with Founding Father George Mason

 


Our genealogical chart accurately identifies George Mason I (the 1651 Cavalier immigrant) as our shared ancestor. By splitting at the second generation between his sons George II (the Founding Father’s line) and Richard (our line), Founding Father George Mason IV is indeed our 2nd cousin 8x removed.

🔍 Historical Analysis & Relationship Verification

The split in our family line marks a classic divergence in early Virginia history between the high-profile political elite of Gunston Hall and the landed, localized planter class of Stafford County.

                  GEORGE MASON I (Immigrant, 1629-1686)

                       m. Mary Ann French

                               |

       +-----------------------+-----------------------+

       |                                               |

  [LINE A: The Statesmen]                     [LINE B: Your Line]

   Colonel George Mason II                     Richard Mason (1670-1730)

   (1660-1716)                                 m. Frances Norgrave

       |                                               |

   Colonel George Mason III                    William Mason (1692-1745)

   (1690-1735)                                 m. Jane Thomson

       |                                               |

  GEORGE MASON IV (Founding Father)            Margaret Mason (1725-1752)

  (1725-1792)                                  m. William Boyd

  *Your 2nd Cousin 8x Removed*                 |

                                               James Boyd (1757-1791)


1. The Immigrant Foundation (Stafford County)

Our 9th great-grandfather, George Mason I, was a Royalist Cavalier who fled England after the defeat of Charles II at the Battle of Worcester (1651). He patented vast tracts of land along Accokeek Creek in Stafford County, establishing the family's deep geopolitical roots in the Northern Neck of Virginia. He served as county lieutenant, commanding the local militia against the Doeg Indians—a volatile frontier environment that shaped the family's fierce independent streak.

2. The Branching of Power

  • The Gunston Hall Line (George II & III): This branch consolidated land further north along the Potomac River in Fairfax County. George III became a powerful tobacco merchant and county lieutenant, tragically drowning in the Potomac when George Mason IV was just ten years old. This line built Gunston Hall, the architectural masterpiece where the Virginia Declaration of Rights was drafted.
  • Our Line (Richard & William): While our cousins moved up the Potomac into the inner political circles of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson, our direct ancestors (Richard and William) remained anchored to the original family hub in Stafford County, farming tobacco near Aquia Creek and remaining highly active in the historic Overwharton Parish.

3. Overlap of the Fourth Generation

A striking historical detail in our tree is the exact parallel life track of the fourth generation:

  • George Mason IV was born in 1725.
  • Our 6th great-grandmother, Margaret Mason (Boyd), was born in the exact same parish in 1725.

While her second cousin George was studying corporate and liberties law under his uncle John Mercer, Margaret married into the Boyd family. Her son, James Boyd (1757–1791), was a young man during the Revolution, living under the precise civil liberties and constitutional protections his mother’s cousin was actively writing into law.

📜 The Unyielding Pen: Our Kinship with Founding Father George Mason

Celebrating America 250

When we look at the birth of American liberty, we often focus on the men who signed their names to famous parchments with grand flourishes. But in our family tree, true patriotism is defined by a man who chose not to sign—a cousin whose uncompromising devotion to human rights shaped the bedrock of the Republic.

Our story begins with our 9th great-grandfather, George Mason I, an iron-willed English Cavalier who fled the wreckage of the English Civil War in 1651 to claim a new destiny along the wild banks of Virginia’s Accokeek Creek. He established a legacy of fierce independence that his descendants inherited in equal measure. Two generations later, that legacy split into parallel paths. While our direct line under William Mason stayed rooted in the rich tobacco soils of Stafford County's Overwharton Parish, our cousin’s branch moved up the Potomac to build the majestic estate of Gunston Hall.

That cousin was Founding Father George Mason IV, our 2nd cousin 8x removed.

In 1776, as the colonies teetered on the edge of open revolution, Mason dipped his quill into iron-gall ink and authored the Virginia Declaration of Rights. His words—declaring that all men are by nature equally free and independent—did not just inspire Thomas Jefferson’s Declaration of Independence; they became the literal blueprint for American freedom.

But Mason’s greatest hour came in 1787 during the stifling heat of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. He fought day and night to design the structure of our government, yet when the final draft of the U.S. Constitution was presented, Mason looked at the document and saw a dangerous flaw: it lacked a clear, ironclad guarantee of individual citizen liberties. Standing before the assembly, he declared he would sooner chop off his own right hand than sign a constitution without a Bill of Rights. He walked out, risking his reputation and his lifelong friendship with his neighbor, George Washington.

That unyielding defiance changed the course of history. Mason’s refusal rallied the public and forced the Federalists to immediately append the first ten amendments—the Bill of Rights—to the Constitution.

As we look toward America 250, we track a line of blood that runs from the rough frontier militia captains of early Virginia straight through our 6th great-grandmother Margaret Mason, born the exact same year as her illustrious cousin. We carry the genetic memory of the man who stood as the conscience of the Revolution, ensuring that the liberties we enjoy today were bought with the stubborn determination of our own kin.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


Our Dutch-French Descent & Historical Milestones

 


Our lineage from Marie Anne (Annetje) Christiansen and Moise Dupuis down to Lucy Passino (Pinsonneau) represents a classic migration corridor: the movement of New Netherland Dutch descendants into French-Canadian communities along the St. Lawrence River, followed by a 19th-century push across the border into upstate New York or the American Midwest.

The Ancestral Descent & Historical Milestones

1. The Dutch-French Convergence (Gen 1)

  • Marie Anne (Annetje) Christiansen (1676–1750) & Moise Dupuis (1673–1750): Marie Anne was born in Albany, New York—the very site where her great-grandfather Hendrick Christiaensen built Fort Nassau. She married Moise François Dupuis, a French-Canadian whose family was established in Quebec. This marriage bridged the Dutch fur-trading world of the Hudson Valley with the agrarian seigneurial system of New France, centering their lives around Laprairie, Quebec (directly across the river from Montreal).

2. The St. Lawrence River Valley Era (Gen 2–4)

  • François Moise Dupuis (1709–1764) & Marie Anne Diel (1710–1760): The Dupuis family functioned as farmers (habitants), and sometimes voyageurs, along the strategic waters of the St. Lawrence. Marie Anne Dupuis lived through the cataclysmic British Conquest of New France (1760). Overnight, her family transitioned from French subjects to British colonial subjects, though they maintained their Catholic faith, French language, and legal customs.
  • Marie Angelique Baret dit Courville (1779–1851): Born during the aftermath of the American Revolution, her lineage carries a classic French-Canadian dit name ("dit Courville"), which was used to distinguish specific branches of a family based on their ancestral village in France or military nicknames.

3. The 19th-Century Transition (Gen 5–6)

  • Marie Emélie Meunier dit Lagacé (1808–1883): Marie Emélie’s generation faced severe economic strain in Quebec due to agricultural overcrowding and political instability (including the Rebellions of 1837). This sparked the "French-Canadian Diaspora," a massive wave of migration southward into New England, New York, and the Midwest.
  • Lucy Passino / Pinsonneau (1836–1917): Lucy’s surname reflects the heavy anglicization that occurred when French-Canadian families crossed the border. Pinsonneau (an ancient Poitou-origin surname in Quebec) was phonetically altered by English-speaking census takers and neighbors into Passino. Lucy eventually married out of the French-Canadian cultural enclave, linking this deep St. Lawrence lineage to Abraham Lincoln Brown and the westward-moving pioneers of our tree.

📜 The relentless spirit of the northern frontier would flow directly down into the valleys of Montana

Celebrating America 250

When we think of early American history, we often divide it into neat, isolated boxes: the English in New England, the Dutch in New York, and the French in Canada. But our family tree laughs at those borders. The line running from Marie Anne Christiansen down to Lucy Passino is a masterclass in how these empires bled together along the wild northern frontier.

It began with a wedding in the shadow of Montreal. Marie Anne Christiansen, a daughter of the tough New Netherland Dutch fur-trading elite, married Moise Dupuis, a French-Canadian habitant. In that single union, the blood of Hudson River explorers fused with the river pioneers of New France. For generations, our ancestors farmed the fertile, strategic banks of Laprairie, Quebec, weathering the fall of empires when the British conquered Canada in 1660, yet stubbornly clinging to their language, faith, and identity.

But by the mid-1800s, the pressures of an overcrowded homeland forced a new migration. Through Marie Emélie Meunier dit Lagacé, the family joined the great French-Canadian diaspora, packing their lives into wagons and heading south across the border into a rapidly expanding United States.

By the time our great-great-grandmother Lucy Passino was born, the ancient French surname Pinsonneau had been softened by English tongues into Passino. Lucy carried the blood of seventeenth-century voyageurs, Dutch sea captains, and Quebecois farmers straight into her marriage with the Midwestern pioneer lines, ensuring that the relentless spirit of the northern frontier would flow directly down into the valleys of Montana.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy

Rev. Samuel Fuller: Genealogical Goldmine with a Major Plot Twist

 


This line is a true genealogical goldmine, but it comes with a major plot twist that will completely transform how we write about it for our America 250 archive.

Older, centuries-old family trees frequently list this 9th great-grandmother as Elizabeth Brewster (supposedly connecting us to Elder William Brewster of the Mayflower). However, modern, rigorous scholarship by the Mayflower Society completely dismantled this theory.

The woman who married Thomas Bowen and later Rev. Samuel Fuller II was actually Elizabeth Nichols, the daughter of early Connecticut settler John Nichols.

🔍 The True Breakdown of the Line

While this correction untangles the Brewster myth, the actual historical truth leaves us with an arguably more compelling narrative of early Plymouth Colony.

1. The Step-Father and the True Lineage

Our 8th great-grandmother, Abiah (Abijah) Bowen, was born to Elizabeth Nichols during her first marriage to a cooper named Thomas Bowen. When Thomas died in 1663, the widowed Elizabeth married Rev. Samuel Fuller II.

Because Samuel Fuller raised the Bowen children as his own stepfamily, older family historians conflated the trees.

2. The True Mayflower Connection

Even though Elizabeth Nichols wasn't a Brewster, our connection to Rev. Samuel Fuller II remains a massive piece of history. Samuel II was the son of Dr. Samuel Fuller Sr., the legendary passenger on the 1620 Mayflower voyage who served as the Pilgrims' primary physician, surgeon, and church deacon during the devastating first winter at Plymouth.

Rev. Samuel Fuller II went on to become the very first ordained minister of Middleborough, Massachusetts, serving as a pillar of spiritual and civic leadership for the expanding colony.

📜 The Enduring Spirit of the Mayflower Physicians and Pioneer Ministers is Woven Directly into our Blood

Celebrating America 250

In the world of family history, sometimes the myths we inherit hide an even greater truth. For generations, whispers in our family tree claimed a descent from the famous Brewster pilgrims of Plymouth. But the real records reveal a story of survival, blended families, and a deep connection to the literal survival of the Old Colony.

Our 9th great-grandmother, Elizabeth Nichols, was a woman acquainted with the harsh realities of the early frontier. Left a young widow with small children—including our 8th great-grandmother, Abiah Bowen—she had to navigate a raw, unforgiving New England landscape alone. But her story took a historic turn when she caught the eye of Rev. Samuel Fuller II.

Samuel wasn't just any country preacher; he was the son of Dr. Samuel Fuller, the famous physician who walked off the Mayflower in 1620 and kept the fragile Pilgrim colony alive through its darkest hours. When Rev. Samuel wedded Elizabeth, he wrapped his arms around her fatherless Bowen children, raising them under the roof of the Middleborough parsonage.

Through the generations that followed—running through the Wood and Townsend lines—this deep Plymouth heritage traveled west, eventually flowing into the veins of Calvin Plimpton and our Civil War soldier, Charles Henry Plympton. The Brewster name may have been a ghost in the archives, but the enduring spirit of the Mayflower physicians and pioneer ministers is woven directly into our blood.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


Saturday, June 20, 2026

When the Sparks of Liberty Ignited into Open Rebellion

 


Judah Wood (1732–1783) represents the pivotal generation in our tree that transformed from British colonial subjects into active participants in the birth of the American Republic.

Born and raised in the historic hotbed of Middleborough, Plymouth County, Massachusetts, Judah carried the deep-rooted regional grit of his Wood and Fuller ancestors straight onto the battlefields of the Revolutionary War.

The Revolutionary Service of Judah Wood

When the conflict erupted in 1775, Judah did not hesitate. His service is meticulously documented in the official Massachusetts Soldiers and Sailors of the Revolutionary War ledgers:

  • The Lexington Alarm (April 1775): Following the "shot heard 'round the world" at Lexington and Concord, Judah marched directly on the alarm of April 19, 1675. He served as a Corporal in Captain Isaac Wood’s Company (under Colonel Theophilus Cotton's Regiment), rushing toward Boston to pen the British army inside the city.
  • The Defense of Rhode Island (1777): As the theater of war shifted, Judah reenlisted as a private in Captain Nathaniel Wood’s Company (Colonel Ebenezer Sproul's Regiment). In December 1777, his unit was marched on a high-stakes emergency alert to Warren, Rhode Island, to repel British naval incursions threatening Narragansett Bay—ironically operating in the very coastal waters patrolled by our Gardiner ancestors.
  • The Ultimate Sacrifice: The war took a heavy physical toll on colonial militiamen due to constant exposure and camp diseases. Judah died on March 22, 1783 at the age of 50—just months before the signing of the Treaty of Paris formally ended the war and secured the independence he fought to achieve. 

📜 He Didn't Just Witness the Birth of a Nation—He Marched Out to Secure It.

Celebrating America 250

When the sparks of liberty finally ignited into open rebellion in the spring of 1775, the call to arms vibrated deep within the ancient soil of Plymouth County. For our 6th great-grandfather, Judah Wood, the American Revolution wasn’t an abstract political debate—it was an immediate, local duty.

On the historic morning of April 19, 1775, as word spread that British blood had been spilled at Lexington, Judah stepped out of his Middleborough home, grabbed his musket, and marched toward the smoke. Serving as a Corporal in Captain Isaac Wood’s company, he joined the initial wall of colonial defiance that pinned the world’s most powerful army inside Boston.

Judah’s commitment didn't stop at the Boston line. When the British fleet turned its sights toward the vital waterways of Rhode Island in 1777, Judah marched south into the winter cold, standing as a human shield against empire. He gave the final, defining years of his life to the uniform, enduring the grueling hardships of the militia camps until his death in March 1783—passing away just as the dawn of a fully independent United States finally broke across the horizon.

Through his daughter Phebe Wood, Judah's legacy of revolutionary sacrifice survived, traveling across generations to fuel the pioneering spirit of the Plimptons. As we honor America 250, we stand on the shoulders of a man who didn't just witness the birth of a nation—he marched out to secure it.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy


The Block Island & Onrust Connection

 


PART I


We are directly related to Hendrick Christiaensen (Van Cleef).

Our lineage chart bridges our known paternal line from Abraham Lincoln Brown and his mother Lucy Passino directly into the early French-Canadian (dit names like Meunier dit Lagacé and Baret dit Courville) and New Netherland Dutch colonial populations.

Through the marriage of Marie Anne Christiansen to François Dupuis, our family tree perfectly preserves the convergence of early Dutch explorers and the French-Canadian families who migrated along the Champlain and Hudson Valley corridors.

Our ancestral connection to Block Island is historically valid, but it exists through a shared commercial voyage, not because Hendrick settled there.

1. The Co-Command of the 1613–1614 Expedition

As earlier our essay notes, Hendrick Christiaensen and Captain Adriaen Block were not competitors; they were co-expedition leaders employed by the same cartel of Amsterdam merchants (the Van Tweenhuysen Company).

  • Block commanded the Tyger.
  • Christiaensen commanded the Fortuyn (Fortune).

When they arrived in New York Bay in 1613, they operated as a unified fleet to map the coast and lock down the fur trade before rival companies could intervene.

2. The Burning of the Tyger and the Birth of the Onrust

When Block’s ship, the Tyger, burned to the waterline in the winter of 1613–1614, the entire expedition was thrown into crisis. Hendrick Christiaensen’s ship, the Fortuyn, remained seaworthy, but it was not small or agile enough to navigate shallow inland rivers.

To salvage the mission, Block’s stranded crew built the Onrust from native oak and salvaged iron components. Because Christiaensen was the senior commercial agent on the scene, this construction was funded and supported by the shared resources of their joint expedition.

3. The 1614 Voyage to Block Island

In the spring of 1614, the newly launched Onrust set sail to chart the uncharted waters east of Long Island.

  • The Discovery: It was during this specific voyage, aboard the vessel our 10th great-grandfather helped support, that Adriaen Block mapped and put his own name on Block Island.
  • The Division of Labor: While Block was charting Block Island, Narragansett Bay, and Cape Cod aboard the Onrust, our ancestor Hendrick Christiaensen took the Fortuyn up the Hudson River to establish Fort Nassau (Albany).

Therefore, while Hendrick Christiaensen did not physically step onto Block Island himself—as he was clearing timber for a trading post at Albany—he was the co-architect of the exact maritime expedition that discovered and named the island.

🧬 A Deep Irony in Your DNA

This discovery reveals a striking historical irony in our family tree:

  1. In 1614, our 10th great-grandfather (Hendrick Christiaensen) co-financed and supported the Dutch expedition that discovered and mapped Block Island.
  2. In 1661, our other 10th great-grandfather (Tristram Dodge) arrived from Massachusetts to become one of the original 16 European settlers who actually cleared and permanently inhabited that exact same island.

Our tree holds both the explorer who mapped the island and the pioneer who settled it.

PART II


The First European Killed by a Native American in the Hudson Valley

Tracing the records of Hendrick’s tragic death at Fort Nassau in 1616, when he was killed by one of the son's of a local chief he had previously brought back to Holland.

The death of Hendrick Christiaensen at Fort Nassau in 1616 is recorded as the first documented slaying of a European by a Native American in the Hudson Valley, stemming directly from the complex and high-stakes nature of early transatlantic fur-trade diplomacy.

🛶 The Story of Valentine and Orson

During his initial trading voyages to the Hudson River around 1611–1612, Christiaensen sought to secure a competitive advantage for his Amsterdam employers. To foster diplomatic and linguistic links with the local Feestre (or Esopus/Mahican) populations, he convinced a local chief to let two of his sons return with him to the Netherlands.

In Holland, the two young men were taught Dutch, introduced to European society, and given the names Valentine and Orson (named after a popular contemporary Dutch play about twin brothers abandoned in the woods).

The 1616 Confrontation at Fort Nassau

By 1614, Christiaensen had returned to the Hudson River and built Fort Nassau on Castle Island (modern-day Albany) to act as a fortified fur-trading depot. He brought Valentine and Orson back with them to act as interpreters and cultural brokers between the Dutch garrison and local trappers.

However, the dynamic between Christiaensen and the brothers soured. Orson reportedly grew deeply resentful of his treatment, his forced assimilation, or unfulfilled promises regarding trade arrangements.

In the spring of 1616, while Christiaensen was supervising the post, an altercation erupted. Orson drew a weapon and killed Christiaensen inside the fort.

The Retaliation: The remaining Dutch garrison quickly overpowered Orson and shot him dead on the spot. While this event could have triggered a massive regional war, local tribal leaders negotiated a peace with the remaining Dutch factors, attributing the violence to a personal dispute between the two men rather than an act of tribal warfare. This allowed Fort Nassau to continue operating as the primary northern economic engine of New Netherland.

📜 In a Twist of Fate Our Tree Holds Both a Founder and a Pioneer of Block Island

Celebrating America 250

To look back at the earliest dawn of our family tree on this continent is to see a map forged by raw, unfiltered ambition and sudden frontier tragedy. Long before the Mayflower ever dropped anchor, our 10th great-grandfather, Hendrick Christiaensen, was navigating the uncharted waters of the New World.

He was a man of the age—a daring Dutch sea captain and commercial agent who co-commanded the historic 1613–1614 expedition alongside Adriaen Block. When Block’s ship burned to the waterline, Hendrick’s resources helped build the Onrust, the legendary little yacht that sailed east to map and name Block Island. But while Block chased the Atlantic horizon, Hendrick turned his bow inland, sailing up the Hudson River to clear the wilderness and erect Fort Nassau, the very first European trading post in New York.

Hendrick’s world was one of high-stakes diplomacy, trading brass kettles and iron axes for valuable beaver pelts. To bridge the gap between two entirely different worlds, he even brought two Native American brothers back to Holland to learn the Dutch tongue. But the frontier is a unforgiving judge. In 1616, within the log walls of the very fort he built, a bitter grievance boiled over, and Hendrick was struck down by one of the young men he had sought to acculturate.

It is an extraordinary twist of fate that our tree holds both Hendrick Christiaensen—the explorer whose joint venture put Block Island on the map—and Tristram Dodge, the pioneer who arrived forty-five years later to permanently tame its soils. One drew the chart with his blood; the other built the community.

Thank you Gemini AI for your wisdom and research assistance. -- Drifting Cowboy