| NOTE: Reseach
into the orgin of these artifacts has just begun. According to
family history, these artifacts were collected by my grandfather, a brick
mason. Sometime during the 70's, my father mounted the artifacts on
this back board. Currently, I am assuming these artifacts came from
the Duxbury, MA area. This area is where he built new family homes.
I expect this information to change. |
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Wampanoag ('eastern people'). One of the
principal tribes of New England. Their proper territory appears to have
been the peninsula on the east shore of Narragansett Bay now included in
Bristol county, R. I., and the adjacent parts in Bristol county, Mass.
The Wampanoag chiefs ruled all the country extending east from
Narragansett Bay and Pawtucket river to the Atlantic coast, including the
islands of Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard. Rhode Island in the bay was
also at one time the property of this tribe, but was conquered from them
by the Narraganset, who occupied the west shore of the bay. On the north
their territory bordered that of the tribes of the Massachuset confederacy.
The Nauset of Cape Cod and the Saconnet near Compton, R. I., although
belonging to the group, seem to have been in a measure independent. Gosnold
visited Martha's Vineyard in 1602 and "trafficked amicably with the
natives." Other explorers, before the landing of the Pilgrims,
visited the region and provoked the natives by ill treatment. Champlain
found those of Cape Cod unfriendly, probably on account of previous
ill treatment, and had an encounter with them. When the English settled
at Plymouth in 1620 the Wampanoag were said to have about 30 villages,
and must have been much stronger before the great pestilence of 1617
nearly depopulated the southern New England coast. Their chief was Massasoit,
who made a treaty of friendship with the colonists, which he faithfully
observed until his death, when he was succeeded by his son, known to the
English as King Philip. The bad treatment of the whites and their encroachment
upon the lands of the Indians led this chief, then at the head of 500
warriors of his own tribe, to form a combination of all the Indians from
Merrimac river to the Thames for the purpose of driving out or
exterminating the whites. The war, which began in 1675 and lasted 2 years,
was the most destructive in the history of New England and was most
disastrous to the Indians. Philip and the leading chiefs were killed, the
Wampanoag and Narraganset were practically exterminated, and the survivors
fled to the interior tribes. Many of those who surrendered were sold into
slavery, and others joined the various Praying villages in south Massachusetts.
The greater part of the Wampanoag who remained in the country joined the Saconnet.
The Indians of Cape Cod and Martha's Vineyard generally remained faithful to the
whites, the latter persistently refusing to comply with Philip's solicitations to
join him in the contest.
The principal village of the Wampanoag, where the head chief resided, was
Pokanoket. Other villages probably belonging to the tribe were:
Acushnet
Agawam
Assameekg
Assawompset
Assonet
Betty's Neck
Chaubaqueduck
Coaxet
Cohannet
Cooxissett
Cowsumpsit
Gayhead
Herring Pond |
Jones River
Kitteaumut
Loquasquscit
Mattakeset
Mattapoiset
Miacomit
Munponset
Namasket
Nashamoiess
Nashanekammuck
Nukkehkummees
Nunnepoag
Ohkonkemme |
Pachade
Pocasset
Quittaub
Saconnet
Saltwater Pond
Sanchecantacket
Seconchqut
Shawomet
Shimmoah
Talhanio
Toikiming
Wauchimoqut
Wawayontat |
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