Metacomet: Difference between revisions
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At first he sought to live in harmony with the colonists. As a sachem, he took the lead in much of his tribes' trade with the colonies. He adopted the European name of Philip, and bought his clothes in [[Boston, Massachusetts]]. |
At first he sought to live in harmony with the colonists. As a sachem, he took the lead in much of his tribes' trade with the colonies. He adopted the European name of Philip, and bought his clothes in [[Boston, Massachusetts]]. |
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Metacomet was a very imortant indian. |
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But the colonies continued to expand. To the west, the [[Iroquois|Iroquois Confederation]] continued expanding, pushing hostile tribes east, thereby encroaching on his territory. |
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Finally, in 1671 the colonial leaders of the [[Plymouth Colony]] forced major concessions from him. He surrendered much of his tribe's armament and ammunition, and agreed that they were subject to English law. The encroachment continued until actual hostilities broke out in 1675. Metacom wound up leading the opponents of the English. His goal was to stop Puritan expansion. |
Finally, in 1671 the colonial leaders of the [[Plymouth Colony]] forced major concessions from him. He surrendered much of his tribe's armament and ammunition, and agreed that they were subject to English law. The encroachment continued until actual hostilities broke out in 1675. Metacom wound up leading the opponents of the English. His goal was to stop Puritan expansion. |
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Revision as of 22:58, 31 August 2011
This article needs additional citations for verification. (August 2011) |
Metacomet (ca. 1639 – August 12, 1676), also known as King Philip or Metacom, or occasionally Pometacom, was a war chief or sachem of the Wampanoag Indians and their leader in King Philip's War.
Biography
Metacomet was the 2nd son of Massasoit. He became a chief in 1662 when his brother Wamsutta (or King Alexander) died. Wamsutta's widow Weetamoo (d. 1676), sachem of the Pocassets, was his ally and friend for the rest of her life. Metacom married Weetamoo's younger sister Wootonekanuske.
At first he sought to live in harmony with the colonists. As a sachem, he took the lead in much of his tribes' trade with the colonies. He adopted the European name of Philip, and bought his clothes in Boston, Massachusetts.
Metacomet was a very imortant indian. Finally, in 1671 the colonial leaders of the Plymouth Colony forced major concessions from him. He surrendered much of his tribe's armament and ammunition, and agreed that they were subject to English law. The encroachment continued until actual hostilities broke out in 1675. Metacom wound up leading the opponents of the English. His goal was to stop Puritan expansion.
King Philip's War
Metacomet hurried to catch up with his warriors, to lead them in the uprising that would later bear his name. Mary Rowlandson, who was taken captive during a raid on Lancaster, Massachusetts, wrote about a meeting with Metacomet during her captivity.
When the war had eventually turned against him, he took refuge in the great Assowamset Swamp in southern Massachusetts. Here he held out for a time, with his family and remaining followers.
Hunted by a group of rangers led by Captain Benjamin Church, he was fatally shot by a praying Indian named John Alderman, on August 12, 1676, in the Miery Swamp near Mount Hope in Bristol, Rhode Island. After his death, his wife and eight-year-old son were captured and sold as slaves in Bermuda while his head was mounted on a pike at the entrance to Fort Plymouth, where it remained for more than two decades. His body was cut into quarters and hung in trees. Alderman was given one of the hands as a reward.
In fiction
In the short story "The Devil and Daniel Webster", Metacom is fictionally shown to have been killed by a blow to the head (he was actually shot in the heart) and is portrayed as a villain to the United States. Metacomet appears in the 1995 film The Scarlet Letter as the Algonquian tribe's new chief after his father's death. In his 1820 literary collection, The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Washington Irving relates a romanticized but sympathetic version of Metacomet's life in the sketch "Philip of Pokanoket".
John Augustus Stone wrote the play, Metamora; or, The Last of the Wampanoags for Edwin Forrest, in 1829.
"Metacomet's War" is an historical novel about King Philip's War by David Kerr Chivers in 2008.
Legacy
- Metacomet Mill in Fall River, Massachusetts, built in 1847 is currently the oldest remaining textile mill in the city.
- King Philip Stockade, a large park named after the chief, where the Pocumtuc Indians planned and began the Sack of Springfield, is now a part of Forest Park in Springfield, Massachusetts
- King Philip Mills in Fall River, Massachusetts, built 1871.
- The USS Metacomet, an 1863 United States Navy ship.
- The Metacomet Ridge, a 100-mile long mountain range in southern New England.
- The 51 mile Metacomet Trail in central Connecticut.
- The 110 mile Metacomet-Monadnock Trail in the Connecticut River Valley of Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire.
- Metacomet Country Club, a golf course designed by Donald Ross.
- King Philip Regional High School, which serves as the high school for Plainville, Massachusetts, Wrentham, Massachusetts, and Norfolk, Massachusetts and is located in Wrentham, Massachusetts.
- King Philip Regional Middle School in Norfolk, Massachusetts, which serves as the middle school for the above three towns.
- Metacom Avenue, a major road running through Bristol and Warren, Rhode Island.
- Metacomet Street in Walpole, Massachusetts.
- King Philip Avenue, a street in Bristol, Rhode Island.
- King Philip Mountain, a peak on Talcott Mountain, 3 miles west of Hartford, Connecticut
- King Phillip's Cave in Norton, Massachusetts, a cave said to have been used by the chief as a hiding place towards the end of his reign.[2]
- King Phillip's Nose - a rock island in the Connecticut River, South of Northfield, Massachusetts
- Phillips Pond and Phillipswood Road in Sandown, New Hampshire.
- Metacomet Park in Medfield, Massachusetts.
- King Philip. From Metacomet. The clipper ship built in 1856 that is periodically seen on Ocean Beach in San Francisco, California. Upon semi-retirement, it was sold as a lumber carrier. Its anchor gave way and the ship drifted into a sand bar on Ocean Beach. As the tide went out, the King Philip settled into the sand where it was left. It is considered the best preserved wooden shipwreck on the West Coast of North America.
- King Philip Middle School in West Hartford, Connecticut.
- Multiple Metacomet street names surrounding the Metacomet Trail in Connecticut.
- A subdivision named Metacomet Road in Scituate, MA
- A street in Longmeadow, MA named "Metacomet Road"
- A street in Worcester, MA named "King Philip Road"
- A street in Raynham named "King Philip's Road"
- A street in South Deerfield, MA named "King Philip Avenue"
- A street in Marshfield, MA named 'King Philips Pathe'. Additionally, there is a separate road in North Marshfield called 'Metacomet Way'.
- Lake Metacomet, a point of interest in Belchertown, Massachusetts
See also
List of early settlers of Rhode Island
Footnotes
- ^ Bourne, p. 4
- ^ History: MGA Links at Mamantapett, MGA Links (archived 2006)
References
- Bourne, Russel, The Red King's Rebellion, 1990, ISBN 0689120001
External links
- The Royal Gazette article: The struggle to honour Bermuda’s Native American heritage.
- Rootsweb: New England Indians. Bermuda Reconnection Festival 2002 Photo Album.
- Rootsweb: Edward Randolph on the Causes of the King Philip's War (1685).
- Rootsweb: St. David's (Bermuda) Indian Committee.
- Pokanoket/Wampanoag Constitution. With History.
- US History.com: King Philip's War, 1675-76.
- Wilson, J. G.; Fiske, J., eds. (1900). Appletons' Cyclopædia of American Biography. New York: D. Appleton.
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