King Philip's War in New England
(America's
First Major Indian War)
By
Michael Tougias
The bloodiest war in America's history, on a
per capita basis, took place in New England in 1675.
At the center of this cataclysm was one man,
Metacom, leader of the Pokanokets, a tribe within the Wampanoag Indian
Federation. At an early age, when relations between the natives and settlers
were less stressed, Metacom was given the nickname of King Philip by the
English, because of his haughty mannerisms. One of the many ironies of this
conflict is that Philip was the son of Massasoit -- the same Massasoit who had
helped the Plymouth Pilgrims survive their first winter in the New World. A
father's kindness would became a son's curse.
In the 55-year span between the arrival of the
Mayflower and the outbreak of King Philip's War, the English had prospered,
multiplied and expanded their settlements while the natives were in a slow
state of decline from diseases introduced by the Europeans and loss of tribal
lands to the whites.
By 1675, with the stage now fully set for
conflict, Philip stepped forward to make a stand. In a prophetic moment he
warned the whites of his intentions, saying "I am determined not to live
until I have no country."
The war actually began after Wampanoag braves
killed some English owned cattle near their tribal headquarters in what is now
Bristol, Rhode Island. English livestock was always a source of friction as
cattle repeatedly trampled Indian corn.
A farmer then retaliated by killing an Indian,
setting in motion a native uprising that would eventually threaten to wipe
Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth Bay Colonies out of existence.
The Nipmuck Indians, who lived in what is now
central Massachusetts, joined forces with Philip's Wampanoags. Together they
presented a very formidable force. One of the first towns they attacked was
Brookfield, a frontier settlement deep in the land of the Nipmucks. The siege
of Brookfield would turn out to be one of the most dramatic incidents of the
entire war. The natives first laid an ambush for soldiers led by Captains
Hutchinson and Wheeler. Eight soldiers were killed in the trap. The rest of the
company barely made it back to the garrison at Brookfield.
The native warriors pursued them and burned
every building in the town. They surrounded the wooden garrison where surviving
soldiers and settlers huddled, then pushed a flaming cart to the side of the
building and watched as the flames began licking their way up the wall. Using
the last of their drinking water the settlers succeeded in slowing the blaze.
The settlers now faced an awful choice -- to
stay inside meant death by fire, to flee meant being scalped and killed by
enraged Nipmucks. But luck was with the settlers. The clouds opened and a
seemingly miraculous heavy rain shower fell and doused the flames. Soldiers
soon arrived from eastern settlements and the survivors were rescued. The town
of Brookfield, however, was abandoned and lay in ashes for eleven years, until
1686.
Next the Nipmuck and Wampanoag warriors turned
their attention to the settlements along the Connecticut River Valley. The
fertile valley along the Connecticut River produced thousands of bushels of
grain each year and was known as the breadbasket of New England. English farms
were scattered throughout the region. The natives knew the population was
sparse there compared to the Boston area.
In autumn of 1675, the Nipmucks and Wampanoags
were joined on the warpath by tribes that lived along the Connecticut River
including the Pocumtucks (residing in along the northern part of the river),
Squakheags (residing in present day Northfield) and the Norwottocks (greater
Hadley).
They concentrated their attacks on the area
known as Pioneer Valley and attacked town of Deerfield (known to natives as Pemawachuatuck
"at the twisted mountain") causing the town to be abandoned by the
English.
After the attack on Deerfield, Captain Lothrop
was ordered to march his soldiers back there to retrieve any remaining grain
and bring it to the garrisons at Hadley, Northampton and Hatfield. The trek to
Deerfield went without incident. The soldiers and farmers were able to load
several wagons with grain and crops for the return trip. But on this
particularly warm day, the soldiers let their guard down while marching back to
the south, placing muskets in the wagons and stopping to pick wild grapes to
quench their thirst.
At the point where their path crossed a brook,
large trees felled by the Indians, blocked their way. As the English bunched
together on the trail, the Indians sprang their trap. Within minutes 71
soldiers were killed. The brook ran red with blood, earning it the name 'Bloody
Brook.' Period writer William Hubbard called the loss "the saddest day
that ever befell New England."
Troops led by Captain Moseley heard the muskets
firing at Bloody Brook and raced to the scene but arrived too late to save
Lothrop and his men. They attacked the Indians but could not surround them. The
natives recognized Moseley and were said to have taunted him: "Come, Moseley,
come! You seek Indians, you want Indians? Here is Indians enough for you!"
By nightfall, after several hours of exchanging fire, Moseley's men were forced
to abandon the field of battle. They returned the next day to bury the dead,
many of whom were still lying in the stream.
After this disaster, the English were in
disarray, even concluding the war was the result of God punishing the Puritans
for not abiding by strict religious codes. The Puritans then lashed out at easy
scapegoats, persecuting Quakers and imprisoning or hanging neutral and
Christian Indians.
In October, hostile Indians struck again with
raids on the towns of Hatfield, Northampton and Springfield where 30 houses
were burned. Attacking warriors now included members of the Agawam tribe. This
tribe had been peaceful but became hostile after settlers took some of their
children as hostages as a precautionary move against an attack. That only
served only to enrage the Agawams and they extracted their revenge at the
burning of Springfield.
As winter set in, the attacks diminished. The
natives moved some of their warriors, women and children from the camp at
present day Turner Falls to another camp at the foot of Mount Wachusett. From
there they could easily strike towns to the east and hopefully tighten the
noose around their ultimate prize, Boston.
But it would be a difficult winter for the
Indians. The Algonquins usually grew most of their food in garden plots. But
with the constant movement during the first few months of the war the crops had
gone untended. Now hunger, as much as skirmishes with the English, took its
toll. The English meanwhile, were also becoming desperate, with the central
part of Massachusetts now firmly in the hands of the natives.
One of the biggest fears of the English was
that the powerful Narragansett tribe might soon enter the war. The
Narragansetts resided in what is now Rhode Island and had lived peacefully with
the followers of Roger Williams. But neutrality meant little in Colonial New
England.
December of 1675 found the colonists so
desperate they decided to make a preemptive strike against the neutral
Narragansett tribe. The result would become known as the Great Swamp Massacre.
Led by General Winslow and celebrated Indian
fighter Benjamin Church, a thousand soldiers from Massachusetts Bay Colony,
Plymouth Colony and Connecticut Colony marched into Narragansett territory in
southern Rhode Island.
An Indian traitor betrayed his people and told
the English the location of a large Narragansett winter camp. The fortress-camp
was surrounded by a palisade deep within a swamp. The soldiers descended on the
camp during a blizzard. A single felled tree across a moat provided entry and
the English swarmed over the log. Many soldiers were shot, falling into the
moat. But repeated waves of English finally breached the fort. The horrors and
confusion of the raid are best told in Benjamin Church's own words when he came
upon a fallen comrade, Captain Gardner:
"...blood ran down his cheek, (and I)
lifted up his cap, and called him by name. He looked up in (my) face, but spoke
not a word, being mortally shot through the head. And, observing his wound,
found the ball entered his head on the side that was next the upland where the
English entered the swamp. Upon which, having ordered some care to be taken of
the Captain, (I) dispatched information to the General that the best and
forwardest of his army that hazarded their lives to enter the fort, upon the
muzzle of the enemy's guns, were shot in their backs and killed by them that
lay behind."
The Narragansetts, however, fared worse as over
500 (mostly women and children) were killed in the Great Swamp Massacre with
many wigwams put to the torch.
The surviving Narragansett warriors entered the
war on the side of Philip and their rage knew no bounds. Medfield, Groton,
Sudbury, Plymouth, Rehoboth, Providence and Marlboro, were just some of the
towns that were raided and burned. The Indians descended on the town of
Lancaster in February of 1676 and succeeded in storming the garrison where settlers
had taken refuge. Among those inside was Mary Rowlandson, who gave this
account: "At length they came and beset our own house (which served as
the garrison) and quickly it was the dolefullest day that ever mine eyes saw.
The house stood upon the edge of a hill. Some of the Indians got behind the
hill, others into the barn, and others behind anything that would shelter them,
from all which places they shot against the house, so that the bullets seemed
to fly like hail."
And inside the house: "Some in our
house were fighting for their lives, others wallowing in their blood, the house
on fire over our heads, and the bloody heathen ready to knock us on the head if
we stirred out. Now might we hear mothers and children crying out for
themselves and one another, 'Lord what shall we do?'"
Rowlandson was taken captive and spent the next
six weeks of the winter being taken back and forth across Massachusetts, barely
clinging to life. She was eventually ransomed, an indication of the declining
power of the Indians, who were now without food, short on muskets and powder,
and facing superior numbers of colonists.
And now they were about to suffer another
massacre, this time at their main camp on the Connecticut River.
Captain Turner (for whom Turners Falls is
named) and Captain Holyoke (for whom the city of Holyoke is named) launched a
surprise raid in May on the Indian camp at the northern end of the Connecticut
River. An English boy who had escaped captivity from the Indians told the
captains the exact location of the camp (at the great falls where the natives
could spear fish) and the soldiers immediately marched.
Surprising the Indians at dawn, they
slaughtered scores of natives as they fled their wigwams. Others tried to swim
across the Connecticut River to escape the soldiers' muskets but drowned as the
swift spring current swept them over the falls.
Warriors from surrounding areas launched a
counterattack, killing Turner as his men fled back to the safety of Hadley. But
the damage had been done. This major war camp of the Wampanoags and Nipmucks
had been wiped out. As a result the Indian alliance soon collapsed. The few
Native Americans who survived either fled north or went on fighting in a lost
cause.
Philip, with only a few warriors left, made his
way back to his tribal headquarters near Swansea at Mount Hope, where the war
had started. Benjamin Church, using friendly Indians as scouts, tracked him
throughout the summer while Philip made hit and run attacks on isolated farms
in the region. But Church eventually caught up with him. An Indian who was
guiding Church fired his musket and sent a musketball through Philip's heart.
The death of Philip effectively ended Native
American resistance in New England. But true to his word Philip had gone down
fighting "determined not to live until I have no country."
King Philip's War : The
History and Legacy of America's Forgotten Conflict by:
Eric B. Schultz, Michael Tougias