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Pequot
(Mashantucket, Paucatuck
Warlike
North American tribe of the Algonquian
language family and of the Eastern
Woodlands culture area. They formerly occupied
the coast region of northeastern Connecticut from
the Rhode Island border westward.
Once
identified with the Mohegan
people, they were virtually wiped out by the English
in the Pequot War (1637).
In 1990, 536 people in the United States, mainly living
on the Pequot Reservation in Connecticut, claimed
Pequot ancestry.
"Pequot,"
Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Endecott,
John (1588?-1665)
Puritan
colonial leader known for his intolerance of religious
dissenters. Endecott was born in Devon, England. After
obtaining a patent for land in New England with five
other people, Endecott led a company of about 60 settlers
to Massachusetts, where they joined an already existing
community at Naumkeag (now Salem)
in 1628. He placed the colony under strict Puritan
control and governed it until replaced by John Winthrop,
who arrived in Salem as the governor in 1630. Between
1630 and 1664, Endecott was at various times assistant
governor, deputy governor, or governor of the colony.
In
1636 he led an expedition against the Pequot which
caused the already difficult relationship between
the native peoples and the colonists to deteriorate
into a state of war. The Pequot
War of 1637 eventually resulted in the death or
capture of most of the Pequot. During the 1650s, Endecott
was responsible for the persecution of many Quakers,
whom he either imprisoned, banished, or executed.
The United Colonies of New England, a confederation
formed for mutual defense and to safeguard religious
orthodoxy, elected him president in 1658.
"Endecott,
John," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia 2001
http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Mashantucket
Pequot Museum and Research Center
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Black
Ash Covered Sewing Basket by Irene McDonald
Curlique
embellishment on a covered ash splint sewing
basket with braided sweetgrass weavers.
|
please
visit the
site for more pictures & information
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Connecticut,
Early Inhabitants
At the beginning of the 17th century, Connecticut
was the home of a number of different Native American
groups, all of whom spoke related Algonquian
languages. Archaeological sites indicate these people
lived largely by hunting deer, catching fish and shellfish,
and growing corn, beans, and squash. They migrated
from forest to coastal areas to take advantage of
seasonal resources. The total native population is
estimated at about 7,000 people in the early 1600s,
after an epidemic that decimated Native Americans
throughout New England.
Most
powerful among the Connecticut people were the Pequot,
who lived in the east and along the shore of Long
Island Sound, an area they had conquered from other
native groups at the end of the 1500s. Early in the
1600s, a number of Pequots split off from the main
group. Led by a chief named Uncas,
they called themselves Mohegan,
and controlled an area near the Thames River.
Other
native groups were the Nipmuc
in the northeastern sections of Connecticut; the Niantic
along the eastern coast; and the Hammonasset,
Quinnipiac, Paugussett, Siwanoy, Podunk, Poquonock,
Massacoe, and Tunxi in the central and western sections.
***
Most
of the Native Americans were generally friendly to
the colonists. Some native groups invited the English
to settle nearby, hoping for trade and for allies
against the aggressive Pequots, who dominated the
area. Settlers purchased land from the native people,
and though whites often encroached on native territory,
disputes were usually settled without violence.
The
exception to these friendly relations was friction
between the Pequots and settlers, which soon escalated
into New England's first major war, the Pequot War
of 1637. The causes of the war are unclear, but it
involved a series of killings, raids and reprisals
on both sides. In May 1637 Connecticut declared war
on the Pequots. With the help of both the Mohegan
and the Narragansett
to the east, the colonists launched a surprise attack
on a Pequot village at Mystic River. They set the
village on fire and killed Pequot inhabitants as they
fled the flames. Hundreds of native villagers died,
including many women and children, and most of the
remaining Pequots were killed or captured. The few
who survived were scattered throughout New England
or sold into slavery, and the Pequot all but disappeared.
from:
"Connecticut," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
|
Rhode
Island, History, Native Americans
Five
Algonquian-speaking groups of Native Americans inhabited
what is now Rhode Island when the first white explorers
arrived in the 16th century and early 17th century.
The Narragansett occupied
most of the region and were the largest and most powerful
group, numbering about 5,000. The Wampanoag
lived in the area east of Narragansett Bay. The Nipmuc
lived in northern Rhode Island and adjacent areas
of Massachusetts and Connecticut. The Niantic
inhabited southwestern Rhode Island and coastal areas
of Connecticut. The Pequot held land along Rhode Island's
western border but lived mostly in what is now Connecticut.
Archaeological
sites indicate the native inhabitants lived largely
by hunting deer, catching fish and shellfish, and
growing corn, beans, and squash. They migrated between
inland and coastal areas during the year to take advantage
of seasonal resources. The principal social unit was
the village, led by a village chief called a sachem.
Some sachems apparently held power over larger confederacies
made up of several villages, and over some of the
smaller, weaker native groups.
from:
"Rhode Island," Microsoft® Encarta® Online Encyclopedia
2001 http://encarta.msn.com
© 1997-2001 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
|
Pequot
Most
older histories of Native Americans begin with vague
descriptions of where tribes came from before Europeans
"discovered" them. This leaves the false impression
that Native Americans were always on the move. Actually,
migration was rare until settlement displaced the
eastern tribes and began a chain reaction of movement
to the west. New England Algonquin occupied their
homelands for hundreds, perhaps thousands, of years
before the Europeans arrived in North America. The
Pequot-Mohegan, however,
were an exception to this. From their own traditions
(confirmed by linguistic links and other tribal histories),
they originally came from the upper Hudson Valley
- probably the shores of Lake Champlain. When they
lived there, they may well have been the mysterious
Adirondack who dominated the separate tribes of the
Iroquois for many years before the formation of the
Iroquois League.
Pequot
Location
At
the time of their first contact with Europeans, southeastern
Connecticut from the Nehantic River eastward to the
border of Rhode Island. Both the Pequot and the Mohegan
were originally a single tribe which migrated to eastern
Connecticut from the upper Hudson River Valley in
New York, probably the vicinity of Lake Champlain,
sometime around 1500.
Population
If the Mohegan are included, the Pequot probably numbered
around 6,000 in 1620. After a major smallpox epidemic
during the winter of 1633-34 and the separation of
the Mohegan, there were still about 3,000 Pequot in
1637. Less than half
are believed to have survived the Pequot War of that
year. The terms of peace treaty afterwards systematically
dismembered them in a manner designed to insure that
the Pequot would no longer exist as a tribe. A few
Pequot eluded capture and were given refuge by other
New England Algonquin, but this was the exception.
Most of the captured Pequot warriors were executed,
and the English sold the remainder as slaves to the
West Indies.Some of the women and children were distributed
as "servants" to colonial households in New England.
The Narragansett and
Eastern Niantic accepted
some Pequot, and one band of Pequot was exiled to
Long Island and became subject to the Metoac.
For the most part, these Pequot were absorbed by their
"hosts" within a few years and disappeared.
The
remainder were placed under the Mohegan, and it is
from this group that the two current Pequot tribes
have evolved. The Mohegan treated their Pequot so
badly that by 1655 the English were forced to remove
them. Two reservations were established for the Pequot
in 1666 and 1683. By 1762 there were only 140 Pequot,
and the decline continued until reaching a low-point
of 66 in the 1910 census.
At
present, the State of Connecticut recognizes two Pequot
tribes: Mashantucket and Paucatuck. The 600 Paucatuck
(Eastern Pequot) have retained the Lantern Hill Reservation
(226 acres) at North Stonington but are not federally
recognized. The Mashantucket (Western Pequot) received
federal recognition in 1983. Created from lands purchased
from the profits of a bingo operation and successful
land claim settlement, their Ledyard reservation has
expanded to 1,800 acres. Dramatic changes occurred
after a gambling casino began to generate enormous
profits in 1992, and with 320 members, the Mashantucket
have suddenly discovered that they have many "long-lost
relatives."
Culture
Highly-organized,
aggressive and warlike, the Pequot dominated Connecticut
before 1637, a pattern continued later by the closely
related Mohegan. As were their neighbors, the Pequot
were an agricultural people who raised corn, beans,
squash, and tobacco. Hunting, with an emphasis on
fish and seafood because of their coastal location,
provided the remainder of their diet. Clothing and
housing were also similar - buckskin and semi-permanent
villages of medium-sized longhouses and wigwams. For
this reason, it is difficult today to distinguish
between the site of a Pequot village and that of another
tribe. The main difference being that Pequot villages
were almost always heavily fortified.
The
Pequot were not that much larger than the tribes surrounding
them, but they differed from other Algonquin in their
political structure. Highly organized, the strong
central authority exercised by their tribal council
and grand sachem gave the Pequot a considerable military
advantage over their neighbors. In this way, the Pequot
were more like the Narragansett of Rhode Island and
the Mahican of New York's
Hudson Valley (with whom they are frequently confused).
From
First Nations, for complete history and much more
information, please visit the First
Nations site
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