As early as 1620, the Dutch East India Company had contacted the English architect Inigo Jones asking him to design a fortification for the harbor. Jones responded in a letter with a plan for a star-shaped fortification made of stone and lime and surrounded by a moat and defended with cannons. Jones advised the company against constructing a timber fort out of haste.
The building of the fort commenced in 1625, under the direction of Wilhem Verhulst, the director of the New Netherland colony and his chief engineer Cryn Fredericks. By the end of the year, Frederick had surveyed the site. At the time, Manhattan was only lightly settled, as most of the Dutch West India Company operations were upriver along the Hudson in order to conduct trading operation for beaver pelts.
Despite Jones' plea in his letter, the plan for the masonry fortification was abandoned, however, out of the need for a hasty completion. This was due primarily to:
the looming threat from England and France, which were also conducting beaver trade operations in North America. England, in particular, had laid claim to region as well.
the growing threat of the Mohawk-Mahican War in the upper Hudson Valley,which itself was partially the result of the fur trade operations there.
the fact that the company was not turning a good profit, and thus the cost of a masonry fort was deemed too high
the lack of labor and natural resources to construct a proper masonry fort.
FortAmsterdam consists of the Fort, constructed from 1635 and the buildings inside it, i.e., the Governor's Palace, the Fort Church from 1766 - 1769 and the former General Secretariat from 1857 - 1858, currently the Council of Ministers.
FortAmsterdam is of general interest for the history of the island on the strength of its value for architectural and cultural history.
FortAmsterdam is one of the oldest buildings on the island and is the oldest fort built by the West Indian Company (W I C) on CuraƧao.