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Joyce Mathisen published Paulus Hook: Past, Present, and Future in Paulus Hook History 2024-04-30 12:36:49 -0400
Paulus Hook: Past, Present, and Future
Take a journey through time with us in the following audio-visual presentation on the history of the Paulus Hook neighborhood.
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Joyce Mathisen published April 2017 General Meeting Minutes in HPHA Minutes 2017-08-08 11:42:06 -0400
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Joyce Mathisen published March 2017 General Meeting Minutes in HPHA Minutes 2017-08-08 11:41:52 -0400
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Joyce Mathisen published February 2017 General Meeting Minutes in HPHA Minutes 2017-08-08 11:41:36 -0400
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Joyce Mathisen published January 2017 General Meeting Minutes in HPHA Minutes 2017-08-08 11:37:22 -0400
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Joyce Mathisen published June 2017 General Meeting Minutes in HPHA Minutes 2017-08-08 11:42:29 -0400
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HPHA Minutes
2024 August
Posted by Stephanie Daniels · August 14, 2024 7:20 PM · 1 reactionJune 2024
Posted by Stephanie Daniels · August 14, 2024 7:16 PM · 1 reactionApril 2024 Meeting Minutes
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Posted by Stephanie Daniels · May 03, 2024 11:18 AM · 1 reaction
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Joyce Mathisen published The Name "Paulus Hook" in Paulus Hook: Past, Present, and Future 2017-05-31 10:12:57 -0400
The Name "Paulus Hook"
How Did The Name "Paulus Hook" Originate?
The neighborhood now known as Paulus Hook was originally called Arisheck Island. Though the origins of "Arisheck" is unknown, it may come from the word Kaniskeck. Kaniskeck means a long, grassy marsh or meadow. This area was originally an island surrounded by marsh land. Through land-filling efforts it became a part of the mainland.
The land was originally settled by the Dutch West India Company from 1621 to 1624, and then purchased by Michael Pauw, an Amsterdam Burgomaster and Lord of Achttienhoven, in 1630 as part of a Pavonia settlement. The first settlement in this area was founded in 1633.
In 1638, the land was granted by Michael Pauw to Michael Paulez, an agent of the Pavonia settlement. Paulez's name was Anglicized to Paulus, and he became one half of the area's namesake. The "Hook" comes from Hoeck, the Dutch word for hook or point. And that's how our neighborhood became "Paulus Hook."