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SAMUEL
ORCUTT
Golden Hill Indians
The Housatonic
The Wepawaug
Cupheags and Pequannock
Weantinock
Goodyear's Island
Indian Slaves
Indian Remnants
Indian Troubles
New Indian Papers
Wm. Howard
Wilcoxson
Stratford
Indians
Trouble
with the Indians
Establishing
Title to the Land
Indian
Deeds and Relics
White Hills Purchase
FORREST MORGAN
Lifestyles, Government, Religion and War Indian Titles and Mohegan Land Troubles Sowheag, Uncas, and Miantonomo Owenoco, the Son of Uncas
THE HOUSATONIC
CHARD
POWERS SMITH
The
Promised Land
Heathen in
the Land
The Lord's
Scouts
The Land
and The Lord
The Next Seven Tribes
ALEXANDER
JOHNSTON
Connecticut Indian History
The Pequot War
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Alexander Johnston
Pequot War
Click on map for larger view
The Connecticut General Court met at Hartford
May 1, 1637, the ninth meeting of that body which is on the records. It is not
likely that it represented, as yet, more than eight hundred souls, though the
proportion of fighting men in so young a colony must have been abnormally
large. Its action was through-going. It resolved that there should be
"an offensive warr against Pequoitt," and a draft of ninety men was
ordered from the three towns, - forty-two from Hartford,
thirty from Windsor, and eighteen from Wethersfield,
- the whole to be under the command of Captain John Mason, of Windsor.
The minute distribution of the assessment of the requisition for stores upon
the three towns, and the proviso that one half of the corn is to be baked
into biscuit "if by any meanes they cann," are evidence of the
poverty of the colony, and the resolution with which its rulers drove their
demands upon its patriotism up to the highest possible point. It is certain
that the people were nearly starving when they were thus called on for a full
third of their able bodied men. Nine days after the call, May 10, the ninety
men were ready, and, with seventy Mohegans under Uncas, who was thereafter
the ally of the colonists, embarked on the river in three small vessels.
Uncas and his men soon found the voyage uncomfortable, and begged to be
allowed to make the trip to Saybrook by land. When Mason reached Saybrook,
after five days of tedious sailing, he found Uncas there, exultant in the
success of a battle with Pequots, in which he had killed seven of his enemies
and captured another, who had been living among the colonists as a spy. The
spy could appeal to no law, civilized or savage, for safety; but it is
repulsive business to read the punishment which was allowed to be inflicted.
He was handed over to the mercy of Uncas and his Mohegans, who tortured and
roasted him, and finally ate him. Lying wind-bound in front of the fort at
Saybrook, Mason knew well at his motions were under the sharp eyes of Pequot
scouts, and that his entry into the Thames
river would find his enemies thoroughly prepared to meet him. Fortified by a
council of war, and by an all-night prayer of the chaplain, Mr. Stone, he
decided to disobey instructions, pass on to Narragansett
Bay,and attack the Pequots from the eastward. The change of
programme was no doubt watched carefully by the runners of Sassacus; and when
the three vessels had passed the only available landing place in the Pequot
country, the Thames or Pequot river, the doomed tribe abandoned itself to a
sense of triumphant security: The white men has not dared attack them after
all, but had chosen the less formidable Indians of Block Island or the Bay as
the objects of their revenge. The danger had passed them by. On Saturday, May
30, the little squadron came to anchor in Narragansett
Bay, too late in the afternoon to effect anything that day. It is
a witness of their conscientious exposition of the Puritan theory that the
urgent need for prompt action in order to gain the advantage of a surprise
could not induce them to devote Sunday to that purpose; and then an
unfavorable wind kept them from landing until Tuesday night. Marching at once
to the village
of Miantonomoh, the
Narragansett chief, Mason demanded his assistance against the common enemy.
The chief considered their enterprise a most laudable one, but thought the
English too few to deal with such "great captains" as the Pequots.
All that could be obtained was permission to pass through the Narragansett
country, but a number of individuals from the surrounding Indians joined the
troops on their march. A few days' waiting would have increased their force
by a Massachusetts reinforcement under
Captain Patrick, which had already reached Providence;
but Mason balanced the advantage of surprise against this increase of force
and pushed on. Thirteen men were sent back with the vessels to meet the main
body at the Pequot
River; and the army now
consisted of seventy-seven Englishmen, Uncas's Mohegans, and about two
hundred exceedingly doubtful Narragansett auxiliaries, who were present
rather as spectators and critics than as fighting men.
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THE HISTORY OF CONNECTICUT
BENJAMIN TRUMBULL
The Perfect Savages
Government
Language
Religion
Marriage
Wampum
Red Ochre
New Haven Colony
ALEXANDER JOHNSTON
Connecticut Indian History
The Pequot War
SOUTHPORT
SWAMP
Great Swamp Fight
Incident at Mill River
Colonial History of Pequot Swamp
GUIDE TO PUTNAM MEMORIAL CAMP
COLONIAL INDIAN ARCHIVES
Stratford Colonial Land Deeds
Fairfield Colonial Land Deeds
Derby
Colonial Land Deeds
THE HISTORY OF GUILFORD
Hon. Ralph D.
Smith
A HISTORY OF THE TOWNS
OF
HADDAM AND EAST HADDAM
David D. Fields
EARLY NEW HAVEN
Sarah Day Woodward
Winthrop’s Journal
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