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JAMAICA , formerly a See also: village of Queens county, Long See also: Island, New See also: York, U.S.A., but after the 1st of See also: January 1898 a See also: part of the See also: borough of Queens, New York City
.
Pop
.
(1890) 5361
.
It is served by the Long Island railroad, the lines of which from See also: Brooklyn and Manhattan meet here and then See also: separate to serve the different regions of the island.' See also: King's
See also: Park (about ro acres) comprises the estate of See also: John
See also: Alsop King (1788—1867), governor of New York in 1857—1859, from whose heirs in 1897 the See also: land was See also: purchased by the village trustees
.
In See also: South Jamaica there is a See also: race track, at which meetings are held in the spring and autumn
.
The headquarters of the Queens Borough Department of Public See also: Works and Police are in the Jamaica See also: town-See also: hall, and Jamaica is the seat of a city training school for teachers (until 1905 one of the New York
See also: State normal See also: schools)
.
For two guns, a coat, and a quantity of powder and See also: lead, several New Englanders obtained from the See also: Indians a deed for a See also: tract of land here in See also: September 1655
.
In See also: March 1657 they received permission from Governor
See also: Stuyvesant to found a town, which was chartered in 166o and was named Rustdorp by Stuyvesant, but the See also: English called it Jamaica; it was rechartered in 1666, 1686 and 1788
.
The village was incorporated in 1814 and reincorporated in 1855
.
In 1665 it was made the seat of See also: justice of the See also: north See also: riding; in 1683—1788 it was the See also: shire town of Queens county
.
With Hempstead, See also: Gravesend, Newtown and See also: Flushing, also towns of New See also: England origin and type, Jamaica was early disaffected towards the provincial See also: government of New York
.
In 1669 these towns complained that they had no See also: representation in a popular See also: assembly, and in 167o they See also: pro-tested against See also: taxation without representation
.
The founders of Jamaica were mostly Presbyterians, and they organized one of the first Presbyterian churches in See also: America
.
At the beginning of the War of Independence Jamaica was under the control of See also: Loyalists; after the defeat of the Americans in the See also: battle of Long Island (27th See also: August 1776) it was occupied by the See also: British; and until the end of the war it was the headquarters of General Oliver Delancey, who had command of all Long Island
.
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