On 6 April 1634 Van Walbeeck was assigned with the task of taking St Anna Bay on
Curaçao from the Spanish, who had colonized the island since the 1520s. On 4 May 1634, he departed from Holland with four ships, carrying 180 sailors and 250 soldiers, led by the French Huguenot mercenary Pierre Le Grand who had previously served the Dutch in Brazil. The small fleet arrived at Curaçao on 6 July, but through adverse currents and winds could not enter the bay. On 29 July, after being joined by a fifth ship and approaching from the north west, the fleet could enter the bay and captured the island from Spain with little resistance and without loss of life on either side. Van Walbeeck wrote in his diary, as transcribed by
Johannes de Laet before it was lost, that the 32 Spanish and under 500 remaining (or reintroduced) local
Arawaks inhabitants just withdrew to the West end of the island after poisoning their wells and burning their villages. On 21 August the Spanish commander, Lope Lopez de Morla, signed the surrender. The Dutch deported the Spaniards and most West Indians to the Venezuelan port of
Coro, keeping about seventy-five of the latter as laborers. Thus, Van Walbeeck became the first director/governor of the
Netherlands Antilles. The first task was to build a fortification at the natural harbor, renamed "Schottegat" by the Dutch, which pentagonal structure
Fort Amsterdam was finished in 1635, following standard Dutch military engineering practice. During his three years as governor, the beginnings of the town of
Willemstad were built next to the fort. In 1638, he and Le Grand were sent to Brazil, while Jacob Pietersz Tolck took over his position as governor although Van Walbeeck remained political director of Curaçao for the next several years. He stayed in Brazil as a member of the Hoge Raad until 1642, after which he returned to Holland again to give advice on the forthcoming expedition under
Hendrick Brouwer to establish a trading base in
Chile. He went back to Brazil, being mentioned as elder of the Reformed Church there. In 1647 he left Brazil and maybe died in the Netherlands, as he lived in Amsterdam when his wife was buried there on 29 April 1649. Like
Peter Stuyvesant, Van Walbeeck was one of the limited number of WIC employees with a university education. The company appears to have valued him at least as highly as Stuyvesant and it has been suggested that he missed being appointed director-general of the
New Netherlands merely by not being in the Netherlands at the right time. ==Bibliography==