| King Philip's
War |
|
Date
|
June
1675-April
1678
|
|
Location |
Massachusetts,
Connecticut
,
Rhode
Island,
Maine
|
|
Result |
Colonial
Victory
|
|
| Belligerents |
Pokanoket
Nation
Nipmuck
Podunk
Narragansett
Nashaway |
English
colonists
Mohegan
Pequot |
| Commanders |
Massasoit Metacomet,
Metacom, or Pometacom
known as
"King Philip of
Pokanoket.", Canonche
t
chief of
Narragansett |
Gov.
Josiah Winslow
Gov. John
Leverett
Gov.
John Wintrop Jr.
Captain William Turner,
Captain Benjamin
Church |
| Strength |
|
approx.
3,400
|
approx.
3,500
|
| Casualties and
Losses |
|
3,000
|
600
|
King Philip's
War, sometimes called
Metacom's War or Metacom's Rebellion,
was an armed conflict between Native
American inhabitants of present-day
southern New England and
English colonists and their Native American allies from
1675–1676. It continued in northern New England (primarily on
the Maine frontier) even after King Philip was killed, until a
treaty was signed at Casco Bay (Treaty of Casco) in April
1678. According to a combined estimate of loss of life in
Schultz and Tougias' "King Philip's War, The History and
Legacy of America's Forgotten Conflict" (based on sources
from the Department of Defense, the Bureau of Census, and the
work of Colonial historian Francis
Jennings), 800 out of 52,000 English colonists
(1 out of every 65) and 3,000 out of 20,000 natives (3 out of
every 20) lost their lives due to the war, which makes it
proportionately one of the bloodiest and costliest in the
history of America. More than half of New England's ninety
towns were assaulted by Native American
warriors.
The war is
named after the main leader of the Native American side,
Massasoit Metacomet, Metacom, or Pometacom, known to the
English as "King Philip."
BACKGROUND
Plymouth,
Massachusetts, was established in 1620 with
significant early help from Native Americans,
particularly
Squanto and
Massasoit Ousamequin, Metacomet's
father and chief of
the Pokanoket Nation.
Salem, Massachusetts,
Boston, Massachusetts, and several
small towns were established around Massachusetts Bay between
1628 and 1640. The building of towns such as
Windsor, Connecticut (est.
1635), Hartford,
Connecticut (est. 1636),
Springfield, Massachusetts (est.
1636), and Northampton,
Massachusetts (est. 1654), on
the Connecticut River, and
towns like Providence, Rhode
Island, in Narragansett
Bay (est. 1638) progressively encroached
on Native American territories. Prior to King Philip's War
tensions fluctuated between different groups of native people
and the colonists, but relations were generally peaceful. As
the colonists' small population grew inexorably larger over
time and the number of towns increased, the Pokanoket
Confederacy,
Nipmuck,
Narragansett,
Mohegan,
Pequot tribes and other small
tribes were each treated individually (many were traditional
enemies of each other) by the English officials of
Rhode Island,
Plymouth,
Massachusetts Bay,
Connecticut, and New
Haven. The New Englanders continued to expand
their settlements along the coastal plain and up the
Connecticut River valley. By 1675 they had even established a
few small towns in the interior between Boston and the
Connecticut River. The Native Americans were running out of
trade goods and territory and felt progressively squeezed by
the colonists out of some of their traditional
territories.
The
English Civil War, followed
by Oliver Cromwell's
English Commonwealth, was fought and
won by New England's Puritan allies who remained in England.
After Cromwell's death in 1658 and the English
Restoration of 1660, King
Charles II of England was
reestablished as monarch, but with restrictions set by
the English Parliament. He
was the son of the beheaded King Charles I of
England and a bitter enemy of the
Puritans.
By 1664 King
Charles II had declared war on the Dutch and captured
New York, installing
Edmund Andros as governor there.
The French in Canada hated almost all things English and would
more likely support the Native Americans than the colonists. In
1675 the New England colonies were almost without allies in
North America and would fight the war almost exclusively with
their own money and militias.
DISEASE AND
WAR
The native
population throughout the Northeast had been significantly
reduced by
pandemics of
smallpox, spotted
fever and
measles brought in by fishermen
and slave traders, starting in about 1618 — two years before
the first colony at Plymouth,
Massachusetts, had been
settled.
Shifting
alliances between different
Algonquin peoples and
the Haudenosaunee
(Iroquois),
represented by leaders such as
Massasoit Ousamequin,
Sassacus,
Uncas, and
Ninigret, and the colonial polities
of Massachusetts Bay
Colony, Plymouth
Colony, Rhode
Island, and
Connecticut, negotiated a troubled
peace for several decades.
FAILURE OF DIPLOMACY
Massasoit
Metacom, known to the English as "King Philip",
became the Great Leader
of the Pokanoket
and Massasoit of
the Pokanoket Nation after the
suspicious death of his older brother,
the Massasoit Wamsutta
in 1662. Well known to the English before his ascension
to the Pokanoket headship, Massasoit Metacom's open
distrust of the colony came to a head when Massasoit Wamsutta
died. Massasoit
Wamsutta collapsed after being
forced at gunpoint to go to the
Marshfield home of
Josiah Winslow, at the order of then
Governor Thomas Pence (Governor from 1657 to 1672) of
Plymouth Colony, to engage in peaceful
negotiations. Massasoit Wamsutta mysteriously suddenly
collapsed and died just after leaving Marshfield. Massasoit
Metacom succeeded his brother as the Great Leader of the
Pokanoket Leader and suspected that his brother had been
poisoned by the English.
Massasoit
Metacom began negotiating with other Native American tribes
against the interests of Plymouth
Colony soon after the death of the
Plymouth colony's greatest ally, his father,
Massasoit Ousamequin in 1661 and
his brother Massasoit Wamsutta in 1662. For
almost half a century, MassasoitOusamequin had been able to
maintain an uneasy alliance with the English soon after their
arrival as a source of much desired trade goods and even a
counter-weight to his traditional enemies, the
Pequot,
Narragansett, and the
Mohegan. Massasoit Ousamequin's price
for having the English as allies and traders of Iron Age goods
was colonial incursion into Pokanoket territory as well as
English political interference. Maintaining good relations with
the English became increasingly difficult as Massasoit
Ousamequin, and then Massassoit Wamsutta, and then Massasoit
Metacom ran out of Native American trade goods and started
trading land for iron tools and weapons.
RELIGION
Many
Puritans regarded one of the aims of settling anywhere to
be the conversion of people around them to share their Puritan
beliefs. This political, diplomatic, philosophical, and moral
position sometimes increased tensions – as the Native Americans
had their own beliefs. Through conversion to Christianity, the
Puritans hoped to share their moral convictions with the
gradual religious, social and political integration of native
peoples into Puritan colonial society. However, only a handful
of colonial missionaries, such as John Eliot and Thomas
Mayhew, succeeded in gaining the trust of native peoples. Even
Massasoit Ousamequin, one of the colony's staunchest Native
allies, refused admittance to villages within the
greater Pokanoket territory to those intent on spreading
the Christian conversion and those Native Americans who had
converted to Christianity.
Initial
Anglo-Native American contacts were mutually beneficial without
any religious content. As relationships developed, some
Puritans eventually attempted to convert Native Americans
to Christianity. By the
1650s, many Native Americans had converted and moved to
"Praying Towns",
that Massasoit Ousamequin deliberately
allowed to be set up near the Cape
Cod area and away from the Pokanoket
Nation. These were towns where the inhabitants were all
Christian Native Americans and where English customs and trades
were taught in addition to religious
instruction.
Contact
between the English colonists and Native Americans was
carefully proscribed: those who violated regulations governing
the interaction between the two were censored. On December 18,
1676, the town of Hingham, Massachusetts, imposed a fine on
resident Nathaniel Baker for violating a town order forbidding
the employment or entertainment of a Native American by any
citizen. (Interestingly, the order for a fine of Baker was
immediately followed by petitions from Baker, John Jacobs and
other Hingham residents to the General Court asking that they
be allowed to retain their Native American
servants.)
By 1660, John
Eliot oversaw the establishment of seven "Praying Towns". By
1680, several more had been established in
Nipmuc territory, among which
were Chachaubunkkakowok (Chaubunagungamaug),
Okommakamesit (Ockoogameset),
Hassanamisco,
Magunkaquog (Makunkokoag, Magunkook),
Maanexit (also spelled Mayanexit, located on
the Quinebaug River near
the old Connecticut Path to and from
Massachusetts, Quinnatisset,
located roughly "6 miles south of Maanexit", and
Wabaquasset (Massomuck, Wabiquisset),
the largest of the three northeastern Connecticut praying
towns, located 6 miles (9.7 km) west of the Quinebaug River in
present-day Woodstock,
Connecticut, Manchaug, Nashobah,
Nashaway (Weshacum), Okommakamesit
Pakachoog (Packachaug),
Quabaug (Quaboag),
Quantisset (Quinetusset),
Wacuntug (Wacuntuc, Wacumtaug), and
Wamesit. Here, Native
American peoples were expected to learn
English customs and trades. In all there were several hundred
"Praying Native Americans" converts and they would be used
shabbily by both sides in the upcoming conflict. They may have
wanted English goods and military protection as well as
instruction in new trades, reading, writing and religion.
Praying towns developed quickly due to the efforts of native
peoples themselves who voluntarily moved
there.
THE WAR OPENLY
BEGINS
The spark that
ignited King Phillip's War was a report from a Native American
Christian convert ("Praying
Indian") early Harvard graduate, translator,
and adviser to Massasoit Metacom named John
Sassamon. Sassamon told Plymouth Colony
officials the news of Massasoit Metacom trying to
arrange Native American attacks on widely dispersed colonial
settlements. Before colonial officials could investigate the
charges, John Sassamon was murdered; his body was found beneath
an ice-covered pond, allegedly killed by a few of Massasoit
Metacom's Pokanoket, angry at his betrayal.
On the
testimony of a Native American witness, Plymouth Colony
arrested three Pokanokets, including one of Massasoit Metacom's
councilors. A jury having some Indian members convicted them of
Sassamon's murder; they were hanged on June 8, 1675 at
Plymouth. Some Pokanokets
believed that both the trial and the court's sentence
were an insult to Indian sovereignty and that Sassamon's
betrayal was a Native matter, with which they had the
right to deal with the matter through Native customs. In
response, on June 20, a band of
Pokanoket, possibly without King
Philip's approval, assaulted several isolated homesteads
in the small Plymouth colony settlement of
Swansea. Laying siege to the
town, they destroyed it five days later and killed
several settlers and others coming to help the
settlers.
Officials from
Plymouth and
Boston responded quickly; on
June 28 they sent a military
expedition that destroyed the Pokanoket town at
Mount Hope (modern Bristol, Rhode
Island).
THE
WAR
EARLY
ENGAGEMENTS
The war
quickly spread, and soon involved the
Podunk and
Nipmuck tribes. During the summer
of 1675 the Native Americans attacked at
Middleborough and
Dartmouth (July 8),
Mendon (July 14),
Brookfield (August 2), and
Lancaster (August 9). In early September they
attacked
Deerfield,
Hadley, and
Northfield (possibly giving
rise to the Angel of
Hadley legend). The
New England
Confederation declared war on the
Native Americans on September 9, 1675. The next
colonial expedition was to recover crops from abandoned
fields for the coming winter and included almost a
hundred farmers/militia. They got careless and
were ambushed and
soundly defeated in the Battle of Bloody Brook (near
Deerfield) on September 18, 1675. The
attacks on frontier settlements continued at
Springfield (October 5) and
Hatfield (October 16).
The next
expansion of the war came from the colonists. On
November 2,
Plymouth
Colony governor
Josiah Winslow led a
combined force of colonial militia against the
Narragansett tribe. The Narragansetts had not yet been
directly involved in the war, but they had sheltered many
of the Pokanoket's women and children and several of
their men had allegedly been seen in several Indian
raiding parties. The tribe was not trusted by the
colonists. As the colonial force assembled and marched
around Rhode Island they found and burned several Indian
towns that had been abandoned by the Narragansett, who
had retreated to a massive fort in a swamp. Led by an
Indian guide, on December 16, 1675 on a
bitterly cold storm-filled day the colonial force found
the main Narragansett fort near modern
South Kingstown, Rhode Island.
Crossing the frozen swamp, a combined force of Plymouth,
Massachusetts and Connecticut militia numbering about
1000 men, including about 150 Pequots and Mohegans,
attacked the fort. The bitter and hard-fought battle that
followed is known as the Great Swamp
Fight. It is believed that about 300
Native Americans were killed (exact figures are
unavailable). The massive fort (occupying over 5 acres
(20,000 m2) of land) was burned and most of
the tribe's winter stores were destroyed. Many of the
warriors and their families escaped into the frozen
swamp. Facing a winter with little food and shelter, the
entire surviving Narragansett tribe was forced out of
quasi-neutrality and joined the fight. The colonists lost
many of their officers in this assault: about 70 of their
men were killed and nearly 150 more
wounded.
NATIVE AMERICAN
VICTORIES
Throughout the
winter of 1675–1676 more frontier settlements were destroyed by
the Native Americans, as well as the burning of
Bull Garrison House. Attacks came
at Andover,
Bridgewater,
Chelmsford,
Groton,
Lancaster,
Marlborough,
Medfield,
Millis,
Medford,
Portland,
Providence,
Rehoboth,
Scituate,
Seekonk,
Simsbury,
Sudbury,
Suffield,
Warwick,
Weymouth, and
Wrentham. The famous captive story
of Mary Rowlandson, captured
in Lancaster Massachusetts, gives a Colonial captive's
perspective on the war.
Spring of 1676
marked the high point for the combined tribes when, on
March 12, they attacked
Plymouth Plantation itself.
Though the town withstood the assault, the natives had
demonstrated their ability to penetrate deep into
colonial terrority. Three more settlements – Longmeadow
(near Springfield), Marlborough, and Simsbury – were
attacked two weeks later, as Captain Pierce and a company
of Massachusetts soldiers were wiped out between
Pawtucket and the Blackstone's settlement and several
were allegedly tortured and buried at
Nine Men's Misery in
Cumberland. The abandoned capital of Rhode Island
(Providence) was burned
to the ground on March 29. At the same time, a small
band of Native Americans infiltrated and burned part
of Springfield,
Massachusetts while the militia was
away.
COLONIAL
COMEBACK
The tide of
war slowly began to turn in the colonists' favor later in the
spring of 1676 as it became a war of attrition, and both sides
were determined to eliminate the other. The Native Americans
had succeeded in driving the colonists back into their larger
towns, but the Indians' supplies, nearly always only sufficient
for a season or so, were running out. The colony of Rhode
Island became an island colony for a time as the few hundred
colonists there were driven back to
Newport and
Portsmouth RI on
Aquidneck Island and
Providence, Rhode Island was
burned to the ground. The Connecticut
River towns with their thousands of acres
of cultivated crop land – known as the bread basket of New
England, had to cut down on their crops as they had to work in
large armed groups for self protection. Towns such as
Springfield,
Hatfield,
Hadley and
Northampton,
Massachusetts fortified their towns,
reinforced their militias and held their ground, though
attacked several times. The small towns of
Northfield,
Massachusetts and
Deerfield, Massachusetts and
several others were abandoned as settlers retreated to the
larger towns. The towns of the Connecticut colony largely
escaped unharmed although over 100 Connecticut militia were
killed helping their fellow colonists. The colonists continued
to be re-supplied by sea from wherever they could buy supplies
(the English government essentially ignored them). The war
ultimately cost the colonists over £100,000--a significant
amount of money at a time when most families earned less than
£20/yr. The costs caused taxes to sky rocket. Over 600 colonial
men, women and children were killed and twelve towns totally
destroyed with many more damaged. Despite this they eventually
emerged victorious. The Native Americans lost many more and
were dispersed out of New England or put on reservations. They
never recovered their former power in New England. The hope of
many to integrate Indian and colonial societies was
abandoned.
The Indian
hopes for supplies from the French in Canada were not met,
except for some small amounts of ammunition obtained in Maine.
The colonists allied themselves with the
Mohegan and
Pequot tribes in Connecticut as
well as several Indian groups in Massachusetts and Rhode
Island. King Philip and his allies found their forces
continually harassed nearly everywhere they went. In January
1675/76 Massasoit Metacom traveled westward
to Mohawk territory,
seeking, but failing to secure, an alliance. The Mohawks,
traditional enemies of many of the warring tribes, instead of
aiding King Philip proceeded to raid isolated groups of Native
Americans, scattering and killing many. Traditional Indian crop
growing areas and fishing places in Massachusetts, Rhode Island
and Connecticut were continually attacked by roving patrols of
combined Colonials and their allied Native Americans.
The Native allies had poor luck finding any place to grow more
food for the coming winter. Many Native Americans drifted north
into Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and Canada. Some drifted
west into New York and points further west to avoid their
traditional enemies, the
Iroquois.
In April 1676
the Narragansett were defeated and their chief, Canonchet, was
killed. On May 18, 1676 Captain
William Turner of the Massachusetts Militia and a group
of about 150 militia volunteers from
Hadley, Northampton and
Hatfield,
Massachusetts managed to sneak up
and attack a large fishing camp of hungry Native
Americans at Peskeopscut at a falls on the Connecticut
River (now called Turners Falls,
Massachusetts). These Native Americans
had been raiding the Colonists' towns and fields along
the upper Connecticut River. The surprise was nearly
complete and it is claimed that one to two hundred Native
Americans were killed. Many jumped in the river to escape
and were swept over the falls. Turner and as many as 40
of the militia were killed during the retreat. With
the help of their long time allies the Mohegans, the
colonists won at Hadley,
Massachusetts on June 12, 1676, and scattered
most of the survivors into the wilds of
New Hampshire and points
further north. Later that month, a force of 250 Native
Americans was routed near Marlborough,
Massachusetts. Other forces, often a
combined force of colonial volunteers and Indian allies
from Massachusetts and Connecticut continued to attack,
kill, capture or disperse bands of Narragansetts as they
tried drifting back to their traditional locations in
Connecticut and Rhode Island. Amnesty was granted to
Native Americans who surrendered and showed they had not
participated in the conflict.
King Philip's
allies began to desert him. By early July, over 400 had
surrendered to the colonists, and Massasoit
Metacom himself had taken refuge in the Assowamset Swamp,
in southern Rhode Island,
close to where the war had started. The colonists began to form
raiding parties of friendly Native Americans and volunteer
militia. They were allowed to keep what warring Indian
possessions they found and received a bounty on all captives.
King Philip was ultimately killed by one of these teams when he
was tracked down by friendly Native Americans led by
Captain Benjamin Church and
Captain Josiah
Standish of the Plymouth
colony militia at Mt.
Hope Rhode Island. Massasoit Metacom was shot
and killed by "Praying Indian" named John
Alderman on August 12, 1676. He was
beheaded, drawn and quartered (a traditional treatment of
criminals in this era). His head was displayed in
Plymouth over twenty years. The war was nearly over
except for a few attacks in Maine that lasted until
1677.
AFTERMATH
The war in the
south largely ended with Massasoit Metacom's death. Over 600
colonists and 3,000 Native Americans had died, including
several hundred native captives that were tried and executed or
sold as slaves in Bermuda.
The majority of these Native Americans and many of the
colonials died as the result of disease, which was typical of
all armies in this era. Those sent to Bermuda included
Massasoit Metacom's son, Metom, and also his wife,
Wootonekanuske. A sizable number of Bermudians today claim
ancestry from these exiles. Members of Massassoit
Metacom's extended family were placed for safekeeping
among colonists in Rhode Island and eastern Connecticut. Other
survivors were forced to join more western tribes, mainly as
captives or lower caste tribal members. The Pokanoket Nation,
Narragansett, Podunk, Nipmuck, and several smaller bands were
virtually eliminated as organized bands, while even the
Mohegans were greatly weakened.
Sir
Edmund Andros negotiated the
Treaty of Casco with some of the remaining Native
American bands in Maine on April 12, 1678 as he tried to
establish his New York based, royal power structure
in Maine's fishing
industry. Andros was arrested and sent back to England at
the start of the Glorious
Revolution in 1689 when James II,
Charles II's younger brother, was forced to vacate the
British throne. Sporadic Native American and
French raids plagued Maine, New Hampshire and northern
Massachusetts for the next 50 years as France encouraged
and financed raids on New England settlers. Most of
Massachusetts, Connecticut and Rhode Island was now
nearly completely open to New England's continuing
settlement, free of interference from the Native
Americans. Frontier settlements in New England would face
sporadic Indian raids until the French
and Indian War (1754-1763) finally
drove the French authorities out of North America in
1763.
King Philip's
War, for a time, seriously damaged the recently arrived English
colonists' prospects in New England. But with their
extraordinary population growth rate of about 3% a year
(doubling every 25 years) they repaired all the damage,
replaced their losses, rebuilt the destroyed towns and
continued on with establishing new towns within a few
years.
The colonists'
defense of New England brought them to the attention of the
British royal government who soon tried to exploit them for
their own gain. This started with the revocation of the charter
of Massachusetts Bay in 1684 (enforced 1686). At the same time,
an Anglican church was established in Boston in 1686, ending
the Puritan monopoly on religion in Massachusetts. The legend
of Connecticut's Charter
Oak stems from the belief that a cavity
within the tree was used in late 1687 as a hiding place for the
colony's charter as Andros tried unsuccessfully to revoke their
charter and take over their militia. In 1690, Plymouth's
charter was not renewed and they were forced to join the
Massachusetts government. The equally small colony of Rhode
Island, with its largely Puritan dissident settlers, maintained
its charter – mainly as a counterweight and irritant to
Massachusetts. The Massachusetts General Court (their main
legislative and judicial body) was brought under nominal
British government control, but all members except the Royal
Governor and a few of his henchmen were elected from the
various towns as always.
Nearly all
layers of government and church life (except in Rhode Island)
remained Puritan and only a few of the so called "upper crust"
joined the Anglican church. Most New Englanders lived in self
governing towns and attended the Congregational or dissident
churches that they had already set up by 1690. New towns,
complete with their own militias, were nearly all established
by the sons and daughters of the original settlers and were in
nearly all cases modeled after these original settlements. The
many trials and tribulations between the British crown and
British Parliament for the next 100 years made self government
not only desirable but relatively easy to continue. The
squabbles with the British government would eventually lead
to Lexington,
Concord and the
Battle of Bunker Hill by 1775, a
century and four generations later. When the British were
forced to evacuate Boston in 1776, only a few thousand of the
over 700,000 New Englanders went with them.
King Philip's
War joined the Powhatan
war of 1622 in Virginia, the
Pequot War of 1637 in
Connecticut, the Dutch-Indian
war of 1643 along the Hudson River, the
Second Powhatan War of 1644, and the Iroquois
Beaver Wars of 1650 in a list of ongoing
uprisings and conflicts between various Native American tribes
and the French, Dutch, and English colonial settlements of
Canada, New York, and New England.
In response to
King Philip's War and King William's War, many colonists from
northeastern Maine relocated to Massachusetts and New Hampshire
to avoid Wabanaki Indian raids.
In her book,
The Name of War, Boston University Professor Jill Lepore
theorizes that King Philip's War was the beginning of the
development of an independant American identity, for the
trials and tribulations suffered by the colonists gave them a
national and group identity separate and distinct from subjects
of the English Crown.
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