Seven Beaver Skins: A Story of the Dutch in New Amsterdam
Author:
Erick Berry
Illustrator:
Erick Berry
Cover Artist:
Elinore Blaisdell
Publication:
1948 by The John C. Winston Company
Simultaneously published by:
The Junior Literary Guild
Genre:
Fiction, Historical Fiction, World Cultures
Series:
Land of the Free Members Only
Pages:
275
Current state:
This book has been evaluated and information added. It has been read but content considerations may not be complete.
Book Guide
Search for this book used on:
This is a story packed with strange adventures of the Hollanders who established themselves along the silver stream of the untamed Hudson, where the little colony of New Netherlands was founded.
The story revolves around Kaspar de Selle, a falconer of old Netherlands. Kaspar pledged his services for seven beaver skins to pay for his voyage to the new land, and took along a falcon as a gift for the patroon, Jeremias van Rensselaer. Thus, the sport of falconry was brought to America, plus a valuable knowledge of beaver skins and other pelts.
Kaspar and his cohorts described in this story are fictional, but Peter Stuyvesant, the doughty old warrior of the wooden leg, the van Rensselaers, and others, are straight from history.
This, the first story in THE LAND OF THE FREE series, is a tale of beginnings in a new world; the beginning of America.
From the dust jacket
To view an example page please sign in.
To view awards and booklists please sign in.
Please sign in to access the type of illustrations and view more books with this type.
Content Guide
Please sign in to access all of the topics associated with this book and view other books with the same topics.
Please sign in to access the locations this book takes place in and view other books in the same location.
Please sign in to access the time periods this book takes place in and view other books in the same time period.
For information about the lead characters please sign in.
Reviews
Seven Beaver Skins
Reviewed by Sherry Early
To anyone interested in the diverse and multi-ethnic story of the building of the United States of America into a country of immigrants from all over the world, the Land of the Free books are well-written, well-researched, and full of insight as well as factual information. I learned more about patroons and the beaver trade and the economics of the West India Company and its colonization of New Amsterdam from reading this story of a boy named Kaspar de Selle and his adventures in “the Manhatens” than I ever did by reading a textbook.
Find This Book
Search for this book used on: