patroonmining
Patroonmining refers to mining activity conducted under the patroon system of the Dutch colonial empire in North America. A patroon was a landholder granted a large estate—often along the Hudson River—with rights to govern, develop, and derive revenue from resources on the land. Mineral rights, when granted to a patroon, could be exercised directly or through authorized agents, subject to colonial charters and local law. Patroonmining encompassed small- to medium-scale extraction of metals such as iron or lead, and could include non‑metallic resources like peat or stone, depending on geology and market demand. Labor for such operations often relied on enslaved or indentured workers, as well as contracted settlers on the estate.
The legal and economic framework: to exploit minerals, patroons needed authorization from the Dutch West India