Greenwich Village by Anna Alice Chapin
page 10 of 220 (04%)
page 10 of 220 (04%)
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Hill) Trail lay a certain waste tract of land. It was flanked by the
sand mounds,--part of the Zantberg, or long range of sand hills,--haunted by wild fowl, and utterly aloof from even that primitive civilisation. The brook flowed from the upper part of the Zantberg Hills to the Hudson River, and emptied itself into that great channel at a point somewhere near Charlton Street. The name Minetta came from the Dutch root,--_min_,--minute, diminutive. With the popular suffix _tje_ (the Dutch could no more resist that than the French can resist _ette_!) it became _Mintje_,--the little one,--to distinguish it from the _Groote Kill_ or large creek a mile away. It was also sometimes called _Bestavaar's Killetje_, or Grandfather's Little Creek, but _Mintje_ persisted, and soon became Minetta. Minetta was a fine fishing brook, and the adjacent region was full of wild duck; so, take it all in all, it was a game preserve such as sportsmen love. It seems that the old Dutch settlers were fond of hunting and fishing, for they came here to shoot and angle, as we would go into--let us say--the Adirondacks or the Maine woods! "A high range of sand hills traversed a part of the island, from Varick and Charlton to Eighth and Green streets," says Mary L. Booth, in her history. "To the north of these lay a valley through which ran a brook, which formed the outlet of the springy marshes of Washington Square...." And here, on the self-same ground of those "springy marshes," is Washington Square today. The lonely Zantberg,--the wind-blown range of sand hills; the cries of the wild birds breaking the stillness; the quietly rippling stream |
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