Thursday, November 22, 2018

The Aftermath of New England’s Thanksgiving

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The Pequot tribe inhabited the coastline of southeastern Connecticut before the arrival of the Dutch in 1614, and shortly afterward, the English. The Pequots did not welcome strangers who settled on their land, took their wild game, and infected the tribe with smallpox — warring between the tribe and the strangers soon commenced. Early on the morning of June 5, 1637, the English “murmured their prayers,” descended upon a sleeping village, set fire to the wigwams and killed some 400 Pequots. “The brutality of burning people alive did not faze the English” and one commander wrote “Sometimes the scripture declareth women and children must perish with their parents. We had sufficient light from the word of God for our proceedings.” After finally extinguishing the Pequots in 1638, the English turned upon their Indian allies to continue their efforts to make New England safe for European settlement, selling many into slavery in the West Indies.
Bernhard Thuersam, www.circa1865.org   The Great American Political Divide

The Aftermath of New England’s Thanksgiving

“The English were now determined to eradicate the remnants of the Pequots . . . The first band . . . were captured without resistance, and 40 of them were murdered by the English in cold blood. Some 80 of the women were handed over to the Narragansetts to become part of their tribe. The remainder were bound up and sent to Massachusetts Bay Colony to be sold as slaves, destined for the cane fields of the Caribbean.

Ultimately, according to [Commander John] Mason, some 700 additional Pequots were killed or captured in various groups. Those that had escaped became marked men. Hardly a week passed . . . that [English ally] Narragansetts or Mohegans didn’t appear with yet another grisly trophy. It brought joy to colonial leaders, who proclaimed gratefulness “that on this day we have sent 600 heathen to heaven.”

On October 1, 1638, in a document styled the “Treaty of Hartford,” the colonial government of Connecticut, along with its Indian allies, passed final judgement on the Pequots. Under the terms of the treaty, the remaining living Pequots were divided among the Narragansetts and Mohegans . . . [and] the Pequots could never again live in their homeland and could never again use the name Pequot.

The French traveler and historian Alexis de Toqueville recorded their extermination for the world after travelling New England in 1833. “All the Indian tribes who once inhabited the territory of New England – the Narragansetts, the Mohicans, the Pequots – now live only in men’s memories,” he wrote in Democracy in America after returning home.

Much of the 500 square miles of land that had once been under the domain of the Pequots was awarded to the winning commanders in the Pequot War. John Mason and Lion Gardiner were given huge plantations in what is now southeastern Connecticut. Thousands of settlers from the Massachusetts and Plymouth Colonies streamed into what today is the metropolitan area of Hartford.

Before the war, the body of water that flowed to Norwich was known as the Pequot River. The nostalgic English, after the war, renamed the waterway the Thames River.”

(The Revenge of the Pequots: How a Small Native American Tribe Created the World’s Most Profitable Casino, Kim Isaac Eisler, Simon & Schuster, 2001, excerpts 33-39)

7 comments:

  1. That is a brutal, sad, period of history.
    I wonder about the lives of the Peqouts sent to the Carribean.

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    1. Thanks and here's a good article.

      https://www.futurity.org/native-americans-slavery-1361262-2/

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  2. Today the Narragansett Indians, inspire of their alliance with the English, remain an "unrecognized" tribe. They have no Reservation, and no tax exempt status. When some Narragansetts tried to create a store selling untaxed cigarettes for tribal income it was quickly decended upon and closed by ATF.

    Never a large tribe, and eventually betrayed by the English, they retreated into "The Great Swamp" of southwestern Rhode Island. Much of it is still impenetrable except with heavy equipment. There over the decades and generations they mixed with both run-away slaves and criminals fleeing justice. Many of their decendents still live there today. All tribal organization was lost and only reappeared in the last half century.

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    1. Many of their decendents still live there today.

      In the Great Swamp?

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    2. Yes. Most people have no idea how much of southern RI is very rural and but a few feet above sea level.

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    3. Yes. Most people have no idea how much of southern RI is very rural and but a few feet above sea level.

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