Did You Know?

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According to Garrison Keillor’s A Writer’s Almanac:

On this day in 1626, Peter Minuit bought the island of Manhattan from the Lenape Indians.

He paid them in useful goods like cloth, kettles, axe heads, and drilling awls — not trinkets, as the legend goes — worth 60 silver Dutch guilders.

Was it the deal of a lifetime? It depends on how you calculate the value of a guilder by today’s standards.

In the 19th century, a historian reckoned the purchase price to be about $24, and that’s the story that school kids still receive. If you calculate according to the actual weight of the silver, it worked out to around $72 in 1992 dollars.

According to the Institute for Social History of Amsterdam, 60 guilders in 1626 was equivalent to about $1,000 today. Given the price of New York real estate nowadays, that’s about a 17-billion-percent increase.

It’s not the best bargain in U.S. history though; the Louisiana Purchase just beats it out. At a purchase price of five cents an acre, the Louisiana territory has appreciated at 5.5 percent per year, compared to Manhattan’s 5.3 percent.

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