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Van der Donck's observations about the Wampum or bead money of the Indians, mentioned by Hudson.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 August 2011

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Summary

That there should be no miserly desire for the costly metals among the natives, few will believe: still it is true, the use of gold and silver, or any metallic coin, is unknown among them. The currency which they use in their places to which they resort, is called wampum, the making and preparing of which is free to all persons. The species are black and white; but the black is worth more by one half than the white. The black wampum is made from conch shells, which are to be taken from the sea, or which are cast ashore from the sea twice a year. They strike off the thin parts of those shells, and preserve the pillars or standards, which they grind smooth and even, and reduce the same according to their thickness, and drill a hole through every piece, and string the same on strings, and afterwards sell their strings of wampum in that manner. This is the only article of moneyed medium among the natives with which any traffic can be driven; and it is also common with us in purchasing necessaries, and carrying on our trade. Many thousand strings are exchanged every year for peltries, near the sea-shores, where the wampum is only made, and where the peltries are brought for sale.

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Henry Hudson the Navigator
The Original Documents in which his Career is Recorded
, pp. 235
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010
First published in: 1860

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