Career
Tomys Swartwout was one of the earliest New Netherlanders to buy and sell American tobacco in the Netherlands. Tomys Swartwout and family left Amsterdam for New Netherland in March 1652. Upon landing at Manhattan Island, they were greeted by Director-General Peter Stuyvesant, who expressed a desire to assist them in such ways as would enable them to settle upon a farm that they might select under his direction and approval.
Tomys Swartwout, January Snedeker and January Stryker solicited from Stuyvesant the right to settle together on the level reach of wild land (de vlacke bosch) or flat bush, adjacent to the outlying farms at Breukelen and Amersfoort.
Through Swartwout"s suggestion, the settlement was given the name of the village of Midwout or Midwolde (Midwood). In April 1655, Stuyvesant and the Council of New Netherland appointed Swartwout a schepen (magistrate), to serve with Snedeker and Adriaen Hegeman as the Court of Midwout.
Being one of the original settlers of Midwood (Midwout) now Flatbush, on Long Island, Tomy"s Swartwout was granted letters-patent by the Council of New Netherland, Director-General Stuyvesant, and the Dutch West India Company of 116 acres on April 13, 1655. Swartwout was one of the nineteen signers of the sent to Director General Stuyvesant on December 11, 1653.
Scorned by its recipient, this document is singularly important in the campaign for democratic rights in America.
In the spirit of Adriaen Van Der Donck"s Remonstrance of 1650 about governance of the colony, this one boldly sets out discontents about Stuyvesant’s authoritarian method of personally selecting, rather than electing, the council. The petitioners wished to be consulted and be allowed to give consent to the officials representing their interests. Stuyvesant eventually had to admit to the justice of this petition, and further, the statement is an important precursor of Jacob Leisler"s campaign late in the 1680s for fuller representative democracy.