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Nacotchtank

The Nacotchtank were an indigenous Algonquian people who lived in the area of what is now Washington, D.C., during the 17th century. The Nacotchtank village was within the modern borders of the District of Columbia along the intersection of the Potomac and the Anacostia river.[1]

Nacotchtank
Total population
Extinct as a tribe, merged with the Piscataway
Regions with significant populations
Washington, D.C.
Languages
Piscataway (historical)
Religion
Native American religion
Related ethnic groups
Piscataway

The name Nacotchtank, which exists in several historical variants including Nacostine, Anacostine, Anaquashtank, Nacothtant, Nachatanke, is derived from the word "anaquashatanik", which means "a town of traders."[2] The Nacotchtank were a trading people as they were established on fertile land with the nearby rivers.[3] In his 1608 expedition, English explorer John Smith noted the prosperous Nacotchtank and their great supply of various resources.[4]

The Nacotchtank spoke a language within the Algonquian subfamily, a language group whose variants are spoken among many tribes living along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean.[5] Specifically, the Nacotchtank spoke the Piscataway dialect as they were closely associated with the larger Piscataway Chiefdom of Southern Maryland, whose Tayac or grand chief ruled over a loose confederacy of area tribes.[6]

The Nacotchtank paid tribute to the Piscataway chief who resided to the south in the nearby village of Moyaone (present-day Accokeek).[7] Various pieces of art and other cultural artifacts such as hair combs, pendants, and pottery, and dog bones have been found in excavations throughout Washington, D.C., on Nacotchtank territory.[2]

After the neighboring Province of Maryland began encroaching on Nacotchtank territory in pursuit of land for tobacco plantations, the Nacotchtank were forcibly removed.[7] The Nacotchtank were last recorded in the late 1600s as taking refuge on nearby Theodore Roosevelt Island located in the Potomac River.[3] Over time, the small population that was left behind after battle and disease was absorbed by Maryland’s Piscataway tribe.[3] Current recognition of the tribe takes the form of the latinized version of the name Nacotchtank, Anacostine.[8]

Naming Edit

The name Nacotchtank is a derivation from the Algonquian term "anaquashtank," which literally translates to "a town of traders."[8] The process in which Nacotchtank was slowly changed to Anacostine was done by European colonists.[9] During their colonization, English settlers frequently got rid of unfamiliar and unaccustomed sounds in the words from the local languages and replaced them with sounds that were easier to pronounce and to which they were more familiar.[9] As a result, the English settlers that were interacting with the Nacotchtank would not pronounce the "-tchtank" and would replace it with the ending "-stine," which was easier to enunciate.[9] Through transmission of the mispronounced Nacotchtank name amongst English settlers, the Nacotchtank name was slowly faded out and replaced with Nacostine.[9] Later on, the Jesuits from the Province of Maryland further latinized the term by attaching a prefix "A" to "Nacostine," creating the name Anacostine.[8] Etymologically, keeping the "A" is indeed a closer derivation of the term "anaquashtank," but the Nacotchtank preferred to omit prefixes and suffixes from words.[8] Any present cultural honoring of the Nacotchtank bears the legacy of the latinized version, Anacostine, as seen in the naming of the river which borders eastern D.C., the Anacostia River, or the neighborhood in southeast D.C., Anacostia.[8]

Classification Edit

The Nacotchtank fell under the larger influence of the Piscataway Chiefdom.[6] The Nacotchtank were not necessarily under complete control of the Piscataway, but rather, the Nacotchtank closely allied with them as they were a much larger group of 7,000 members in comparison to the roughly 300 members of the Nacotchtank tribe.[10] The Piscataway affiliation was intended for protection against the rival Powhatan Chiefdom of eastern Virginia.[11]

The Piscataway Chief, or tayac, held a loose confederacy over the Nacotchtank in addition to the other surrounding tribes.[12] The rank of the tayac was supreme to that of the individual chiefs of the smaller tribes that belonged to the Piscataway Chiefdom.[12] These lower-ranked chiefs were known as werences (also known as werowances/weroances).[12] The Nacotchtank werence would collect and pay tribute to the Piscataway tayac who resided in a village named Mayone in present-day Prince Georges County of Maryland, 15 miles south of the Nacotchtank land base.[11]

History Edit

Origins (unknown-1608) Edit

The tribe's physical location, which had a mild, temperate climate in the mid-Atlantic, allowed for the Nacotchtank to become a flourishing, self-sustainable community with an abundance in myriad natural resources.[3] By being situated along the confluence of two major rivers, the Nacotchtank had a reliable supply of fish and the area soon became a notorious fishing ground.[3] Additionally, the rivers were surrounded by a vast area of woodlands, which housed wild game such as bison, turkey, deer, and geese.[3] The Nacotchtank were also accomplished in agricultural practices, as they would move inland from the rivers to occupy fertile and flat land and grow a variety of crop species, most of which belonged to the Three Sisters family—corn, beans, and squash.[13]

With the Nacotchtank having abundant natural resources, and by being situated where two rivers met, the Nacotchtank were able to become an epicenter for a bustling trade network with neighboring tribes.[3] One known intertribal network was with the Iroquois of New York, in which the Nacotchtank traded principally animal fur, which was readily available given their extensive supply of wild game.[2] The Nacotchtank eventually held a monopoly on the fur trade.[14]

Encounters with English settlers (1608-1650s) Edit

The Nacotchtank were first recorded by Captain John Smith, who visited their palisaded village during his First Voyage in 1608, in which he explored the land surrounding the Jamestown settlement of the Colony of Virginia.[15] Between the dates of June 16 and July 18 of 1608, Smith recorded in his journal, which has since been published as The Generall Historie of Virginia, New-England, and the Summer Isles, his impressions of the indigenous peoples of the Potomac River.[15] Specifically speaking of the Nacotchtank, Smith writes that they were a welcoming people who "did their best to content [him]."[16] Smith also noted the presence of a river which made the area appear to be very pleasant.[15] These initial encounters were peaceful and did not affect the Nacotchtank existence.[7]

In the year 1621, Captain Henry Fleet, age 20, took a party of approximately 26 settlers from Jamestown in an attempt to barter for corn from the Nacotchtank.[17] The Nacotchtank were suspicious of the colonists, and a confrontation erupted into fighting.[17] All of the colonists were killed except for Captain Fleet, who was captured.[17] Held captive for 5 years, Fleet acquired the language and culture of the Nacotchtank.[18] During his time, Fleet observed the trading village Tohoga in present-day Georgetown and noted it as being the center for the monopolized fur trade with the Iroquois.[2][18]

In November 1622, the Nacotchtank faced their first death at the hand of colonial forces.[7] This took place at the time of the Second Anglo-Powhatan War, a battle between English colonists and the Powhatan Confederacy.[7] One tribe that the colonists closely allied with during this time was the Patawomeke (or Patawomeck).[7] Though the Patawomeke were initially part of the Powhatan Confederacy, they were large enough so that they could lose such affiliation and side with the colonists.[19] The Patawomeke, an Algonquian-speaking people, were established across from the Nacotchtank along the Potomac River, within what are now Stafford and King George counties of Northern Virginia.[19][20] Such proximity to one another resulted in long-standing hostility, with the Chief of the Patawomeke referring to the Nacotchtank as their "mortal enemies."[21] As such, the Patawomeck chief not only allied with the colonists, but also helped them in avenging the death of Fleet's party and in attaining corn by providing roughly 40-50 warriors to take part in a raid against the Nacotchtank.[22] As a result of the raid, a mixed colonial and Patawomeke force killed 18 Nacotchtank people and drove the rest from their cabins before plundering and burning the village.[22] Captain Fleet remained a captive of the Nacotchtank, but would escape in 1626.[18]

In 1626, when Captain Fleet escaped, he left with a great sum of knowledge of the Nacotchtank way of life and would use that information in partnering in trade with other tribes.[23][24] Fleet began sailing up and down the East Coast, trading with various indigenous tribes and eventually taking over the monopoly on the fur trade that the Nacotchtank had for long enjoyed.[23] When the Jesuits arrived in Maryland in 1634, who wanted to adapt church teachings for the natives, Fleet helped by translating the Algonquian language used by the Nacotchtank to English, under the guidance of Governor Leonard Calvert.[24]

The rise of the Maryland tobacco industry & the resulting displacement (1650s-1697) Edit

Beginning in the 1650s, the Province of Maryland experienced an economic boom with the great popularity and demand of one of its cash cropstobacco.[7] This large expansion necessitated vast areas of land that could be turned into tobacco plantations as the demand was exceedingly high.[7] In 1663, Cecil Calvert, the second Lord of Baltimore, granted Thomas Dent an 850-acre tract of land named Gisborough on the Potomac River, which bordered the principal Nacotchtank village.[25]

The colony, in such close proximity to the Nacotchtank, now had the leverage to begin encroaching on Nacotchtank territory.[7] Additionally, with the two groups now close to one another and in constant contact, the Europeans from Maryland introduced to the area a number of Eurasian infectious diseases to which the Nacotchtank had no immunity, such as measles, cholera, and smallpox.[26] As a result, the Nacotchtank suffered a large population loss.[3]

In 1668, the Nacotchtank tribe, depopulated from Eurasian diseases, collectively relocated to Anacostine Island, which has since been renamed to Theodore Roosevelt Island.[3] Theodore Roosevelt Island is located directly across from Georgetown in the Potomac River, between what is now Washington, D.C., and Northern Virginia.[27]

Legacy today (1697-present) Edit

By 1697, the Nacotchtank population living on Theodore Roosevelt Island sought refuge in the larger Piscataway tribe of Southern Maryland, to which the Nacotchtank had previously allied with.[28] With the increased sense of tolerance of indigenous peoples in Pennsylvania, the Piscataway, which the Nacotchtank coalesced with, migrated north and settled on land bordering the lower Susquehanna River around the year 1700.[29] Though the Nacotchtank were absorbed by the Piscataway and relocated north, some aspects of Washington, D.C., are named after them. The river surrounding the eastern border of the city and the neighborhood in southeast, D.C., are named "Anacostia" after the latinized version of Nacotchtank.[8]

Geography Edit

 
Captain John Smith's "Map Of Virginia" indicates the locations of indigenous groups as he encountered them. This image is a zoomed-in version with a red circle to indicate where Smith plotted the Nacotchtank as living in 1608.

The entirety of the Nacotchtank tribe, prior to colonization, was situated within the modern borders of the District of Columbia.[1] The tribe was situated along the intersection of two major rivers—the Potomac and the Anacostia—and thus, the majority of Nacotchtank settlements were along the water.[7] The Nacotchtank's principal village, Nachatank, was situated along the eastern bank of the Potomac River on the land of what is now the Bolling Air Force Base.[30][2] It was here that the Nacotchtank chief was noted as residing, along with 80 others, in Smith's journal.[15] Smith summarized his findings in his "Map of Virginia," which plotted the principal village of the Nacotchtank in 1608.[15][31] In addition to the principal village, there were multiple smaller villages, as observed by Fleet in his time held captive.[32] Fleet mentioned four of these villages: Tohoga, Mosticum, Shaunetowa, and Usserahak.[32]

Various excavations have been performed throughout Washington D.C., which point to more specific areas of Nacotchtank villages.[7] For example, a 1997 excavation near the Whitehurst Freeway, a major freeway which runs parallel to the Potomac River in Georgetown, gathered findings of a "hair comb, hammer stone, and pendants."[2] This land, upon which modern-day Georgetown is established, was the site for the Tohoga village, which Fleet had observed in his time as captive.[32][33] Tohoga was a trading village, with it being located along the river bank of the Potomac and thus permitting easy access for traders.[34]

Although the proximity of rivers was integral for the Nacotchtank, there is evidence of the Nacotchtank existence further inland, which comes from the findings of archaeologist Samuel Proudfit, who worked for the United States Department of the Interior.[2] Proudfit studied the excavation that was performed when the swimming pool was being constructed in the White House, which is relatively inland from any of the Nacotchtank river settlements.[35] Analysis of the terrain that was dug up proved indigenous existence on the site, with findings such as quartzite points, a broken biface, and fragments of broken pottery.[36] According to Proudfit, blades of quartzite that taper off into points on each end are indicative of the Nacotchtank, as they are found commonly in areas of Nacotchtank settlement and rarely in settlements of the nearby tribes.[37] Additionally, Proudfit posits that fragmented pottery is "one of the unfailing evidences of permanent aboriginal occupation."[37]

This theory of pottery as a marker for permanent occupation was used in Proudfit's mapping of another Nacotchtank village north of Garfield Park on what is now Capitol Hill.[2] The Nacotchtank utilized this land, which now houses the Supreme Court and Library of Congress, for agriculture, growing corn, beans, and squash.[2][38] The Nacotchtank settled on this specific area as it was flat and much more suitable for agriculture than the uneven land bordering the rivers on which they were initially established.[38] The smooth terrain allowed the Nacotchtank to grow the large stores of corn that were appealing to European colonists.[4][38]

Culture Edit

Language Edit

With the Nacotchtank's under the loose confederacy of the Piscataway Chiefdom, the Nacotchtank spoke the Piscataway language.[39] The Piscataway language is a dialect of the Nanticoke language, which belongs to the Algonquian subfamily of languages.[39] The Algonquian subfamily belongs to an even larger grouping of languages, the Macro-Algonquian phylum.[40] All languages that fall under the Macro-Algonquian phylum are polysynthetic, meaning that an individual word is made up of many different morphemes, which are the smallest linguistic units of meaning.[40]

Structure Edit

The principal village, Nachatank, housed the werence (subordinate Chief to the tayac), close kin, priests, and councilors.[41] Here, the werence would store tribute, oftentimes corn and hides, from surrounding villagers.[41] The abode of the werence and all religious buildings within the main village were protected by a palisade, and there were approximately 80 warriors contained within the village.[42]

The structure of the Nacotchtank occupation outside of the principal village followed a particular pattern of settlement called dispersed settlement.[42] In this pattern, there would be rather-isolated dwellings with large open fields in between them.[42] The resultant community would have groupings of between 2 and 100 dwellings clustered together, with a shared, designated spot that would have fallen trees that were to be used for fire-burning.[43] In between these clusters were plots of land, ranging from between 20 and 100 acres, which would be used in cultivating various plants and crops.[44]

The Nacotchtank lived in wigwams—which were dome-shaped huts—and longhouses, as was typical of other tribes along the East Coast.[2] The villages also had menstrual huts, which women would visit when menstruating, and communal sweat houses, where those who were sick could visit and be healed.[41]

Art & other cultural artifacts Edit

Two types of rock were readily available in Nacotchtank territory for their use—quartzite and soapstone.[45] These two types of rock were available in various quarries throughout Nacotchtank territory.[45] At these quarries, the Nacotchtank would chip away large chunks of the rock, which would then be taken back to the individual villages, where they would complete formation of whatever artifact they were intending to create.[45] Quartzite, which was relatively-easily chipped and available in a quarry in the Piney Branch area of what is now Northwest Washington, D.C., was used in forming sharp-edged tools, particularly spears and arrow points.[2][45] Soapstone was accessed mainly through the Rose Hill quarry of what is now Northwest Washington, D.C., and was utilized in producing various vessels such as bowls and pipes.[2][45]

There is also evidence of the Nacotchtank producing pottery, which has been found in fragments in an excavation of the terrain under the White House.[7]

The Carolina Dog has been proven to be the only domesticated animal that lived among the Nacotchtank and is an important artifact in the Nacotchtank culture.[42] Rarely eaten, the Carolina Dog served mostly as a symbol for respect and honor.[42] It is likely that the dogs played an integral role for the Nacotchtank people, as Carolina Dog skeletons have been found lying on top of human skeletons in ossuary burials collected from gravesites on Nacotchtank territory.[42]

References Edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Hedgpeth, Dana. "A Native American tribe once called D.C. home. It's had no living members for centuries". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i Navarro, Meghan A. "Early Indian Life on Analostan Island | National Postal Museum". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  4. ^ a b Mooney, James (1889). "Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia". American Anthropologist. The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac - A Symposium, under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D. 2 (3): 259. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 658373. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  5. ^ Mithun, Marianne (2001-06-07). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-521-29875-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
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  27. ^ "Theodore Roosevelt's Island Memorial". Retrieved 2020-10-18.
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  29. ^ Mooney, James (1889). "Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia". American Anthropologist. The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac - A Symposium, under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D. 2 (3): 265. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 658373. Retrieved 2020-10-11.
  30. ^ Burr, Charles R. (1920). "A Brief History of Anacostia, Its Name, Origin and Progress". Records of the Columbia Historical Society, Washington, D.C. 23: 169. ISSN 0897-9049. JSTOR 40067143. Retrieved 2020-11-22 – via JSTOR.
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  38. ^ a b c Proudfit, Samuel Vincent (1889). "Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia". American Anthropologist. The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac - A Symposium, under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D. 2 (3): 242. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 658373. Retrieved 2020-10-11 – via JSTOR.
  39. ^ a b Mithun, Marianne (2001-06-07). The Languages of Native North America. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 332. ISBN 978-0-521-29875-9.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
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  43. ^ Proudfit, Samuel Vincent (1889). "Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia". American Anthropologist. The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac - A Symposium, under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D. 2 (3): 241–242. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 658373. Retrieved 2020-10-11 – via JSTOR.
  44. ^ Proudfit, Samuel Vincent (1889). "Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia". American Anthropologist. The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac - A Symposium, under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D. 2 (3): 241. ISSN 0002-7294. JSTOR 658373. Retrieved 2020-10-11 – via JSTOR.
  45. ^ a b c d e Carr, Martha (1950). The District of Columbia; its rocks and their geologic history. USGS Numbered Series. Bulletin. Vol. 967. U.S. G.P.O. pp. 10–11. doi:10.3133/b967. Retrieved 2020-10-17.

nacotchtank, were, indigenous, algonquian, people, lived, area, what, washington, during, 17th, century, village, within, modern, borders, district, columbia, along, intersection, potomac, anacostia, river, total, populationextinct, tribe, merged, with, piscat. The Nacotchtank were an indigenous Algonquian people who lived in the area of what is now Washington D C during the 17th century The Nacotchtank village was within the modern borders of the District of Columbia along the intersection of the Potomac and the Anacostia river 1 NacotchtankTotal populationExtinct as a tribe merged with the PiscatawayRegions with significant populationsWashington D C LanguagesPiscataway historical ReligionNative American religionRelated ethnic groupsPiscatawayThe name Nacotchtank which exists in several historical variants including Nacostine Anacostine Anaquashtank Nacothtant Nachatanke is derived from the word anaquashatanik which means a town of traders 2 The Nacotchtank were a trading people as they were established on fertile land with the nearby rivers 3 In his 1608 expedition English explorer John Smith noted the prosperous Nacotchtank and their great supply of various resources 4 The Nacotchtank spoke a language within the Algonquian subfamily a language group whose variants are spoken among many tribes living along the coast of the Atlantic Ocean 5 Specifically the Nacotchtank spoke the Piscataway dialect as they were closely associated with the larger Piscataway Chiefdom of Southern Maryland whose Tayac or grand chief ruled over a loose confederacy of area tribes 6 The Nacotchtank paid tribute to the Piscataway chief who resided to the south in the nearby village of Moyaone present day Accokeek 7 Various pieces of art and other cultural artifacts such as hair combs pendants and pottery and dog bones have been found in excavations throughout Washington D C on Nacotchtank territory 2 After the neighboring Province of Maryland began encroaching on Nacotchtank territory in pursuit of land for tobacco plantations the Nacotchtank were forcibly removed 7 The Nacotchtank were last recorded in the late 1600s as taking refuge on nearby Theodore Roosevelt Island located in the Potomac River 3 Over time the small population that was left behind after battle and disease was absorbed by Maryland s Piscataway tribe 3 Current recognition of the tribe takes the form of the latinized version of the name Nacotchtank Anacostine 8 Contents 1 Naming 2 Classification 3 History 3 1 Origins unknown 1608 3 2 Encounters with English settlers 1608 1650s 3 3 The rise of the Maryland tobacco industry amp the resulting displacement 1650s 1697 3 4 Legacy today 1697 present 4 Geography 5 Culture 5 1 Language 5 2 Structure 5 3 Art amp other cultural artifacts 6 ReferencesNaming EditThe name Nacotchtank is a derivation from the Algonquian term anaquashtank which literally translates to a town of traders 8 The process in which Nacotchtank was slowly changed to Anacostine was done by European colonists 9 During their colonization English settlers frequently got rid of unfamiliar and unaccustomed sounds in the words from the local languages and replaced them with sounds that were easier to pronounce and to which they were more familiar 9 As a result the English settlers that were interacting with the Nacotchtank would not pronounce the tchtank and would replace it with the ending stine which was easier to enunciate 9 Through transmission of the mispronounced Nacotchtank name amongst English settlers the Nacotchtank name was slowly faded out and replaced with Nacostine 9 Later on the Jesuits from the Province of Maryland further latinized the term by attaching a prefix A to Nacostine creating the name Anacostine 8 Etymologically keeping the A is indeed a closer derivation of the term anaquashtank but the Nacotchtank preferred to omit prefixes and suffixes from words 8 Any present cultural honoring of the Nacotchtank bears the legacy of the latinized version Anacostine as seen in the naming of the river which borders eastern D C the Anacostia River or the neighborhood in southeast D C Anacostia 8 Classification EditThe Nacotchtank fell under the larger influence of the Piscataway Chiefdom 6 The Nacotchtank were not necessarily under complete control of the Piscataway but rather the Nacotchtank closely allied with them as they were a much larger group of 7 000 members in comparison to the roughly 300 members of the Nacotchtank tribe 10 The Piscataway affiliation was intended for protection against the rival Powhatan Chiefdom of eastern Virginia 11 The Piscataway Chief or tayac held a loose confederacy over the Nacotchtank in addition to the other surrounding tribes 12 The rank of the tayac was supreme to that of the individual chiefs of the smaller tribes that belonged to the Piscataway Chiefdom 12 These lower ranked chiefs were known as werences also known as werowances weroances 12 The Nacotchtank werence would collect and pay tribute to the Piscataway tayac who resided in a village named Mayone in present day Prince Georges County of Maryland 15 miles south of the Nacotchtank land base 11 History EditSee also History of Native Americans in Washington D C Origins unknown 1608 Edit The tribe s physical location which had a mild temperate climate in the mid Atlantic allowed for the Nacotchtank to become a flourishing self sustainable community with an abundance in myriad natural resources 3 By being situated along the confluence of two major rivers the Nacotchtank had a reliable supply of fish and the area soon became a notorious fishing ground 3 Additionally the rivers were surrounded by a vast area of woodlands which housed wild game such as bison turkey deer and geese 3 The Nacotchtank were also accomplished in agricultural practices as they would move inland from the rivers to occupy fertile and flat land and grow a variety of crop species most of which belonged to the Three Sisters family corn beans and squash 13 With the Nacotchtank having abundant natural resources and by being situated where two rivers met the Nacotchtank were able to become an epicenter for a bustling trade network with neighboring tribes 3 One known intertribal network was with the Iroquois of New York in which the Nacotchtank traded principally animal fur which was readily available given their extensive supply of wild game 2 The Nacotchtank eventually held a monopoly on the fur trade 14 Encounters with English settlers 1608 1650s Edit The Nacotchtank were first recorded by Captain John Smith who visited their palisaded village during his First Voyage in 1608 in which he explored the land surrounding the Jamestown settlement of the Colony of Virginia 15 Between the dates of June 16 and July 18 of 1608 Smith recorded in his journal which has since been published as The Generall Historie of Virginia New England and the Summer Isles his impressions of the indigenous peoples of the Potomac River 15 Specifically speaking of the Nacotchtank Smith writes that they were a welcoming people who did their best to content him 16 Smith also noted the presence of a river which made the area appear to be very pleasant 15 These initial encounters were peaceful and did not affect the Nacotchtank existence 7 In the year 1621 Captain Henry Fleet age 20 took a party of approximately 26 settlers from Jamestown in an attempt to barter for corn from the Nacotchtank 17 The Nacotchtank were suspicious of the colonists and a confrontation erupted into fighting 17 All of the colonists were killed except for Captain Fleet who was captured 17 Held captive for 5 years Fleet acquired the language and culture of the Nacotchtank 18 During his time Fleet observed the trading village Tohoga in present day Georgetown and noted it as being the center for the monopolized fur trade with the Iroquois 2 18 In November 1622 the Nacotchtank faced their first death at the hand of colonial forces 7 This took place at the time of the Second Anglo Powhatan War a battle between English colonists and the Powhatan Confederacy 7 One tribe that the colonists closely allied with during this time was the Patawomeke or Patawomeck 7 Though the Patawomeke were initially part of the Powhatan Confederacy they were large enough so that they could lose such affiliation and side with the colonists 19 The Patawomeke an Algonquian speaking people were established across from the Nacotchtank along the Potomac River within what are now Stafford and King George counties of Northern Virginia 19 20 Such proximity to one another resulted in long standing hostility with the Chief of the Patawomeke referring to the Nacotchtank as their mortal enemies 21 As such the Patawomeck chief not only allied with the colonists but also helped them in avenging the death of Fleet s party and in attaining corn by providing roughly 40 50 warriors to take part in a raid against the Nacotchtank 22 As a result of the raid a mixed colonial and Patawomeke force killed 18 Nacotchtank people and drove the rest from their cabins before plundering and burning the village 22 Captain Fleet remained a captive of the Nacotchtank but would escape in 1626 18 In 1626 when Captain Fleet escaped he left with a great sum of knowledge of the Nacotchtank way of life and would use that information in partnering in trade with other tribes 23 24 Fleet began sailing up and down the East Coast trading with various indigenous tribes and eventually taking over the monopoly on the fur trade that the Nacotchtank had for long enjoyed 23 When the Jesuits arrived in Maryland in 1634 who wanted to adapt church teachings for the natives Fleet helped by translating the Algonquian language used by the Nacotchtank to English under the guidance of Governor Leonard Calvert 24 The rise of the Maryland tobacco industry amp the resulting displacement 1650s 1697 Edit Beginning in the 1650s the Province of Maryland experienced an economic boom with the great popularity and demand of one of its cash crops tobacco 7 This large expansion necessitated vast areas of land that could be turned into tobacco plantations as the demand was exceedingly high 7 In 1663 Cecil Calvert the second Lord of Baltimore granted Thomas Dent an 850 acre tract of land named Gisborough on the Potomac River which bordered the principal Nacotchtank village 25 The colony in such close proximity to the Nacotchtank now had the leverage to begin encroaching on Nacotchtank territory 7 Additionally with the two groups now close to one another and in constant contact the Europeans from Maryland introduced to the area a number of Eurasian infectious diseases to which the Nacotchtank had no immunity such as measles cholera and smallpox 26 As a result the Nacotchtank suffered a large population loss 3 In 1668 the Nacotchtank tribe depopulated from Eurasian diseases collectively relocated to Anacostine Island which has since been renamed to Theodore Roosevelt Island 3 Theodore Roosevelt Island is located directly across from Georgetown in the Potomac River between what is now Washington D C and Northern Virginia 27 Legacy today 1697 present Edit By 1697 the Nacotchtank population living on Theodore Roosevelt Island sought refuge in the larger Piscataway tribe of Southern Maryland to which the Nacotchtank had previously allied with 28 With the increased sense of tolerance of indigenous peoples in Pennsylvania the Piscataway which the Nacotchtank coalesced with migrated north and settled on land bordering the lower Susquehanna River around the year 1700 29 Though the Nacotchtank were absorbed by the Piscataway and relocated north some aspects of Washington D C are named after them The river surrounding the eastern border of the city and the neighborhood in southeast D C are named Anacostia after the latinized version of Nacotchtank 8 Geography Edit Captain John Smith s Map Of Virginia indicates the locations of indigenous groups as he encountered them This image is a zoomed in version with a red circle to indicate where Smith plotted the Nacotchtank as living in 1608 The entirety of the Nacotchtank tribe prior to colonization was situated within the modern borders of the District of Columbia 1 The tribe was situated along the intersection of two major rivers the Potomac and the Anacostia and thus the majority of Nacotchtank settlements were along the water 7 The Nacotchtank s principal village Nachatank was situated along the eastern bank of the Potomac River on the land of what is now the Bolling Air Force Base 30 2 It was here that the Nacotchtank chief was noted as residing along with 80 others in Smith s journal 15 Smith summarized his findings in his Map of Virginia which plotted the principal village of the Nacotchtank in 1608 15 31 In addition to the principal village there were multiple smaller villages as observed by Fleet in his time held captive 32 Fleet mentioned four of these villages Tohoga Mosticum Shaunetowa and Usserahak 32 Various excavations have been performed throughout Washington D C which point to more specific areas of Nacotchtank villages 7 For example a 1997 excavation near the Whitehurst Freeway a major freeway which runs parallel to the Potomac River in Georgetown gathered findings of a hair comb hammer stone and pendants 2 This land upon which modern day Georgetown is established was the site for the Tohoga village which Fleet had observed in his time as captive 32 33 Tohoga was a trading village with it being located along the river bank of the Potomac and thus permitting easy access for traders 34 Although the proximity of rivers was integral for the Nacotchtank there is evidence of the Nacotchtank existence further inland which comes from the findings of archaeologist Samuel Proudfit who worked for the United States Department of the Interior 2 Proudfit studied the excavation that was performed when the swimming pool was being constructed in the White House which is relatively inland from any of the Nacotchtank river settlements 35 Analysis of the terrain that was dug up proved indigenous existence on the site with findings such as quartzite points a broken biface and fragments of broken pottery 36 According to Proudfit blades of quartzite that taper off into points on each end are indicative of the Nacotchtank as they are found commonly in areas of Nacotchtank settlement and rarely in settlements of the nearby tribes 37 Additionally Proudfit posits that fragmented pottery is one of the unfailing evidences of permanent aboriginal occupation 37 This theory of pottery as a marker for permanent occupation was used in Proudfit s mapping of another Nacotchtank village north of Garfield Park on what is now Capitol Hill 2 The Nacotchtank utilized this land which now houses the Supreme Court and Library of Congress for agriculture growing corn beans and squash 2 38 The Nacotchtank settled on this specific area as it was flat and much more suitable for agriculture than the uneven land bordering the rivers on which they were initially established 38 The smooth terrain allowed the Nacotchtank to grow the large stores of corn that were appealing to European colonists 4 38 Culture EditLanguage Edit With the Nacotchtank s under the loose confederacy of the Piscataway Chiefdom the Nacotchtank spoke the Piscataway language 39 The Piscataway language is a dialect of the Nanticoke language which belongs to the Algonquian subfamily of languages 39 The Algonquian subfamily belongs to an even larger grouping of languages the Macro Algonquian phylum 40 All languages that fall under the Macro Algonquian phylum are polysynthetic meaning that an individual word is made up of many different morphemes which are the smallest linguistic units of meaning 40 Structure Edit The principal village Nachatank housed the werence subordinate Chief to the tayac close kin priests and councilors 41 Here the werence would store tribute oftentimes corn and hides from surrounding villagers 41 The abode of the werence and all religious buildings within the main village were protected by a palisade and there were approximately 80 warriors contained within the village 42 The structure of the Nacotchtank occupation outside of the principal village followed a particular pattern of settlement called dispersed settlement 42 In this pattern there would be rather isolated dwellings with large open fields in between them 42 The resultant community would have groupings of between 2 and 100 dwellings clustered together with a shared designated spot that would have fallen trees that were to be used for fire burning 43 In between these clusters were plots of land ranging from between 20 and 100 acres which would be used in cultivating various plants and crops 44 The Nacotchtank lived in wigwams which were dome shaped huts and longhouses as was typical of other tribes along the East Coast 2 The villages also had menstrual huts which women would visit when menstruating and communal sweat houses where those who were sick could visit and be healed 41 Art amp other cultural artifacts Edit Two types of rock were readily available in Nacotchtank territory for their use quartzite and soapstone 45 These two types of rock were available in various quarries throughout Nacotchtank territory 45 At these quarries the Nacotchtank would chip away large chunks of the rock which would then be taken back to the individual villages where they would complete formation of whatever artifact they were intending to create 45 Quartzite which was relatively easily chipped and available in a quarry in the Piney Branch area of what is now Northwest Washington D C was used in forming sharp edged tools particularly spears and arrow points 2 45 Soapstone was accessed mainly through the Rose Hill quarry of what is now Northwest Washington D C and was utilized in producing various vessels such as bowls and pipes 2 45 There is also evidence of the Nacotchtank producing pottery which has been found in fragments in an excavation of the terrain under the White House 7 The Carolina Dog has been proven to be the only domesticated animal that lived among the Nacotchtank and is an important artifact in the Nacotchtank culture 42 Rarely eaten the Carolina Dog served mostly as a symbol for respect and honor 42 It is likely that the dogs played an integral role for the Nacotchtank people as Carolina Dog skeletons have been found lying on top of human skeletons in ossuary burials collected from gravesites on Nacotchtank territory 42 References Edit a b Native Peoples of Washington DC U S National Park Service National Park Service Retrieved 2020 10 11 a b c d e f g h i j k l Hedgpeth Dana A Native American tribe once called D C home It s had no living members for centuries Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2020 10 11 a b c d e f g h i Navarro Meghan A Early Indian Life on Analostan Island National Postal Museum Smithsonian National Postal Museum Retrieved 2020 10 11 a b Mooney James 1889 Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 259 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 Mithun Marianne 2001 06 07 The Languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 1 ISBN 978 0 521 29875 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Herman Doug 2018 07 04 American Indians of Washington D C and the Chesapeake American Association of Geographers Retrieved 2020 10 19 a b c d e f g h i j k l Before the White House The White House Historical Association Retrieved 2020 02 22 a b c d e f Burr Charles R 1920 A Brief History of Anacostia Its Name Origin and Progress Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington D C 23 168 ISSN 0897 9049 JSTOR 40067143 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR a b c d Tooker William Wallace 1894 On the Meaning of the Name Anacostia American Anthropologist 7 4 391 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658565 Retrieved 2020 10 19 via JSTOR Asch Chris Myers Musgrove George Derek 2017 Chocolate City A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation s Capital Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press p 5 ISBN 978 1 4696 3587 3 Retrieved 2020 10 19 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Asch Chris Myers Musgrove George Derek 2017 Chocolate City A History of Race and Democracy in the Nation s Capital Chapel Hill The University of North Carolina Press p 6 ISBN 978 1 4696 3587 3 Retrieved 2020 10 18 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b c Baker Mick Native North American Tribes Conoy amp Piscataway The History Files Retrieved 2020 10 19 Bergen Charles River Terrace Medallions Telling the History of River Terrace Community from 10 000 to the Present Charles Bergen Studios Retrieved 2020 11 17 Williams Brett 2001 A River Runs Through Us American Anthropologist 103 2 412 doi 10 1525 aa 2001 103 2 409 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 683474 Retrieved 2020 11 17 via JSTOR a b c d e Smith John 1624 The Generall Historie of Virginia New England and the Summer Isles Vol 1 London I D and I H for Michael Sparkes p 24 Smith John 1624 The Generall Historie of Virginia New England and the Summer Isles Vol 1 London I D and I H for Michael Sparkes p 58 a b c Burr Charles R 1920 A Brief History of Anacostia Its Name Origin and Progress Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington D C 23 167 179 ISSN 0897 9049 JSTOR 40067143 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR a b c Neill Edward Duffield Fleet Henry 1871 The English colonization of America during the seventeenth century London Strahan p 226 Retrieved 2020 10 18 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Deyo Bill Patawomeck Indians of Virginia Virginia Department of Education Retrieved 2020 11 08 Muir Hugh 2009 06 30 HERITAGE DAY The Free Lance Star Retrieved 2020 11 08 Mooney James 1889 Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 264 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 a b Smith John 1624 The Generall Historie of Virginia New England and the Summer Isles Vol 1 London I D and I H for Michael Sparkes p 154 a b Rouse Parke 1990 03 21 HENRY FLEETE A VIRGINIA PIONEER WHO OPENED THE INDIAN FUR TRADE Daily Press Retrieved 2020 10 18 a b Henry Fleet Archives of Maryland 2003 03 07 Retrieved 2020 11 22 Castle Guy 1953 Gisborough as a Land Grant Manor and Residence of the Dents Addisons Shaaffs and Youngs Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington D C 53 282 292 ISSN 0897 9049 JSTOR 40067680 Retrieved 2020 10 18 via JSTOR Tayac Gabrielle Schupman Edwin We Have a Story to Tell Native Peoples of the Chesapeake Region PDF Retrieved 2020 10 18 Theodore Roosevelt s Island Memorial Retrieved 2020 10 18 Mooney James 1889 Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 264 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 Mooney James 1889 Indian Tribes of the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 265 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 Burr Charles R 1920 A Brief History of Anacostia Its Name Origin and Progress Records of the Columbia Historical Society Washington D C 23 169 ISSN 0897 9049 JSTOR 40067143 Retrieved 2020 11 22 via JSTOR Smith Maps National Park Service Retrieved 2020 11 08 a b c Neill Edward Duffield Fleet Henry 1871 The English colonization of America during the seventeenth century London Strahan p 227 Retrieved 2020 10 18 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Carr Martha 1950 The District of Columbia its rocks and their geologic history Bulletin p 10 Retrieved 2020 10 17 Washington D C Foggy Bottom Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 10 17 Chambers Mary Elizabeth Humphrey Robert L 1985 Ancient Washington American Indian Cultures of the Potomac Valley GW Washington Studies 6 30 Chambers Mary Elizabeth Humphrey Robert L 1985 Ancient Washington American Indian Cultures of the Potomac Valley GW Washington Studies 6 31 a b Proudfit Samuel Vincent 1889 Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 243 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR a b c Proudfit Samuel Vincent 1889 Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 242 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR a b Mithun Marianne 2001 06 07 The Languages of Native North America Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 332 ISBN 978 0 521 29875 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Macro Algonquian languages Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 2020 10 19 a b c Hyslop Stephen G 1995 06 14 LIFE IN AMERICA 400 YEARS AGO Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2020 10 19 a b c d e f Chambers Mary Elizabeth Humphrey Robert L 1985 Ancient Washington American Indian Cultures of the Potomac Valley GW Washington Studies 6 24 Proudfit Samuel Vincent 1889 Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 241 242 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR Proudfit Samuel Vincent 1889 Ancient Village Sites and Aboriginal Workshops in the District of Columbia American Anthropologist The Aborigines of the District of Columbia and the Lower Potomac A Symposium under the Direction of the Vice President of Section D 2 3 241 ISSN 0002 7294 JSTOR 658373 Retrieved 2020 10 11 via JSTOR a b c d e Carr Martha 1950 The District of Columbia its rocks and their geologic history USGS Numbered Series Bulletin Vol 967 U S G P O pp 10 11 doi 10 3133 b967 Retrieved 2020 10 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nacotchtank amp oldid 1158815051, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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