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Squanto

Tisquantum (/tɪsˈkwɒntəm/; c. 1585 (±10 years?) – November 30, 1622 O.S.), more commonly known as Squanto (/ˈskwɒnt/), was a member of the Wampanoag Patuxet tribe best known for being an early liaison between the Native American population in Southern New England and the Mayflower Pilgrims who made their settlement at the site of Tisquantum's former summer village, now Plymouth, Massachusetts. The Patuxet tribe had lived on the western coast of Cape Cod Bay, but an epidemic infection wiped them out, likely brought by previous European explorers.

Tisquantum ("Squanto")
1911 illustration of Tisquantum ("Squanto") teaching the Plymouth colonists to plant maize.
Bornc. 1580
DiedNovember 30, 1622 O.S.
Mamamoycke (or Monomoit)
(now Chatham, Massachusetts)
NationalityPatuxet
Known forGuidance, advice, and translation services to the Mayflower settlers

Tisquantum was kidnapped by English explorer and slaver Captain Thomas Hunt, who trafficked him to Spain, where he sold him in the city of Málaga. He was among several captives traditionally claimed to have been ransomed[1] by local Franciscan monks who focused on their education and evangelization. Tisquantum is said to have been baptized a Catholic, although no known primary sources support this claim. He eventually travelled to England and from there returned to his native village in America in 1619, only to find that an epidemic infection had wiped out his tribe; Tisquantum was the last of the Patuxet and went to live with the Wampanoags.

The Mayflower landed in Cape Cod Bay in 1620, and Tisquantum worked to broker peaceable relations between the Pilgrims and the local Pokanokets. He played a crucial role in the early meetings in March 1621, partly because he spoke English. He then lived with the Pilgrims for 20 months as an interpreter, guide, and advisor. He introduced the settlers to the fur trade and taught them how to sow and fertilize native crops; this proved vital because the seeds the Pilgrims had brought from England mostly failed. As food shortages worsened, Plymouth Colony Governor William Bradford relied on Tisquantum to pilot a ship of settlers on a trading expedition around Cape Cod and through dangerous shoals. During that voyage, Tisquantum contracted what Bradford called an "Indian fever". Bradford stayed with him for several days until he died, which Bradford described as a "great loss".

Name edit

Documents from the 17th century variously render the spelling of Tisquantum's name as Tisquantum, Tasquantum, and Tusquantum, and alternately call him Squanto, Squantum, Tantum, and Tantam.[2] Even the two Mayflower settlers who dealt with him closely spelled his name differently; Bradford nicknamed him "Squanto", while Edward Winslow invariably referred to him as Tisquantum, which historians believe was his proper name.[3] One suggestion of the meaning is that it is derived from the Algonquian expression for the rage of the Manitou, "the world-suffusing spiritual power at the heart of coastal Indians' religious beliefs".[4] Manitou was "the spiritual potency of an object" or "a phenomenon", the force which made "everything in Nature responsive to man".[5] Other suggestions have been offered,[a] but all involve some relationship to beings or powers that the colonists associated with the devil or evil.[b] It is, therefore, unlikely that it was his birth name rather than one that he acquired or assumed later in life, but there is no historical evidence on this point. The name may suggest, for example, that he underwent special spiritual and military training and was selected for his role as liaison with the settlers in 1620 for that reason.[8]

Early life edit

Almost nothing is known of Tisquantum's life before his first contact with Europeans, and even when and how that first encounter took place is subject to contradictory assertions.[9] First-hand descriptions of him written between 1618 and 1622 do not remark on his youth or old age, and Salisbury has suggested that he was in his twenties or thirties when he was captured and taken to Spain in 1614.[10] If that was the case, he would have been born around 1585 (±10 years).

Native culture edit

 
1605 map drawn by Samuel de Champlain of Plymouth Harbor (which he called Port St. Louis); "F" designates wigwams and cultivated fields.

The tribes who lived in southern New England at the beginning of the 17th century referred to themselves as Ninnimissinuok, a variation of the Narragansett word Ninnimissinnȗwock meaning "people" and signifying "familiarity and shared identity".[11] Tisquantum's tribe of the Patuxets occupied the coastal area west of Cape Cod Bay, and he told an English trader that the Patuxets once numbered 2,000.[12] They spoke a dialect of Eastern Algonquian common to tribes as far west as Narragansett Bay.[c] The various Algonquian dialects of Southern New England were sufficiently similar to allow effective communications.[d] The term patuxet refers to the site of Plymouth, Massachusetts, and means "at the little falls"[e] referencing Morison.[17] Morison gives Mourt's Relation as authority for both assertions.

The annual growing season in southern Maine and Canada was not long enough to produce maize harvests. Indian tribes in those areas were required to live a fairly nomadic existence,[18] while the southern New England Algonquins were "sedentary cultivators" by contrast.[19] They grew enough for their own winter needs and for trade, especially to northern tribes, and enough to relieve the colonists' distress for many years when their harvests were insufficient.[20]

 
Champlain's drawing of Southern New England Algonquians emphasizing their pacific nature and sedentary and agricultural lifestyle

The groups that made up the Ninnimissinuok were presided over by one or two sachems.[21] The chief functions of the sachems were to allocate land for cultivation,[22] to manage the trade with other sachems or more distant tribes,[23] to dispense justice (including capital punishment),[24] to collect and store tribute from harvests and hunts,[25] and leading in war.[26]

Sachems were advised by "principal men" of the community called ahtaskoaog, generally called "nobles" by the colonists. Sachems achieved consensus through the consent of these men, who probably also were involved in the selection of new sachems. One or more principal men were generally present when sachems ceded land.[27] There was a class called the pniesesock among the Pokanokets which collected the annual tribute to the sachem, led warriors into battle, and had a special relationship with their god Abbomocho (Hobbomock) who was invoked in pow wows for healing powers, a force that the colonists equated with the devil.[f] The priest class came from this order, and the shamans also acted as orators, giving them political power within their societies.[32] Salisbury has suggested that Tisquantum was a pniesesock.[8] This class may have produced something of a praetorian guard, equivalent to the "valiant men" described by Roger Williams among the Narragansetts, the only Southern New England society with an elite class of warriors.[33] In addition to the class of commoners (sanops), there were outsiders who attached themselves to a tribe. They had few rights except the expectation of protection against any common enemy.[32]

Contact with Europeans edit

The Ninnimissinuok had sporadic contact with European explorers for nearly a century before the landing of the Mayflower in 1620. The fishermen off the Newfoundland banks from Bristol, Normandy, and Brittany began making annual spring visits beginning as early as 1581 to bring cod to Southern Europe.[34] These early encounters had long-term effects. Europeans very likely introduced diseases[g] for which the Indian population had no resistance. When the Mayflower arrived, the Pilgrims discovered that an entire village was devoid of inhabitants.[36] European fur traders traded goods with different tribes, and this exacerbated intertribal rivalries and hostilities.[37]

The first kidnappings edit

 
Captain Weymouth impressing Natives of Pemaquid, Maine, with a sword he magnetized by means of a lodestone.

In 1605, George Weymouth set out on an expedition to explore the possibility of settlement in upper New England, sponsored by Henry Wriothesley and Thomas Arundell.[38] They had a chance encounter with a hunting party, then decided to kidnap a number of Indians. The capture of Indians was "a matter of great importance for the full accomplement of our voyage".[39]

They took five captives to England and gave three to Sir Ferdinando Gorges. Gorges was an investor in the Weymouth voyage and became the chief promoter of the scheme when Arundell withdrew from the project.[40] Gorges wrote of his delight in Weymouth's kidnapping, and named Tisquantum as one of the three given to him.

Captain George Weymouth, having failed at finding a Northwest Passage, happened into a River on the Coast of America, called Pemmaquid, from whence he brought five of the Natives, three of whose names were Manida, Sellwarroes, and Tasquantum, whom I seized upon, they were all of one Nation, but of severall parts, and severall Families; This accident must be acknowledged the meanes under God of putting on foote, and giving life to all our Plantations.[41]

However, it is unlikely that the "Tasquantum" identified by Gorges refers to the same man. Circumstantial evidence makes this nearly impossible. The Indians taken by Weymouth and given to Gorges were Eastern Abenaki from Maine, whereas the subject Tisquantum was Patuxet, a Southern New England Algonquin. He lived in Plymouth, and the Archangel did not sail that far south on the voyage of 1605. Adams maintains that "it is not supposable that a member of the Pokánoket [Patuxet] tribe would be passing the summer of 1605 in a visit among his deadly enemies the Tarratines, whose language was not even intelligible to him ... and be captured as one of a party of them in the way described by Rosier."[42] No modern historian entertains this supposition.[h]

Abduction edit

 
John Smith's 1614 Map of New England.

In 1614, an English expedition headed by John Smith sailed along the coast of Maine and Massachusetts Bay collecting fish and furs. Smith returned to England in one of the vessels and left Thomas Hunt in command of the second ship. Hunt was to complete the haul of cod and proceed to Málaga, Spain, where there was a market for dried fish,[43] but Hunt decided to enhance the value of his shipment by adding human cargo. He sailed to Plymouth harbor ostensibly to trade with the village of Patuxet, where he lured 20 Indians aboard his vessel under promise of trade, including Tisquantum.[43] Once aboard, they were confined and the ship sailed across Cape Cod Bay where Hunt abducted seven more from the Nausets.[44] He then set sail for Málaga.

Smith and Gorges both disapproved of Hunt's decision to enslave the Indians.[45] Gorges worried about the prospect of "a warre now new begun between the inhabitants of those parts, and us",[46] although he seemed mostly concerned about whether this event had upset his gold-finding plans with Epenow on Martha's Vineyard.[47] Smith suggested that Hunt got his just desserts because "this wilde act kept him ever after from any more imploiment to those parts."[43]

 
Málaga in 1572, 40 years before Tisquantum was delivered there in slavery

According to Gorges, Hunt took the Indians to the Strait of Gibraltar where he sold as many as he could. But the "Friers (sic) of those parts" discovered what he was doing, and they took the remaining Indians to be "instructed in the Christian Faith; and so disappointed this unworthy fellow of his hopes of gaine".[48]

No truly primary sources of Tisquantum's arrival in Spain were known to exist until Spanish researcher Ms. Purificación Ruiz uncovered two deeds in public archives in Málaga, documenting the facts with original notarial records.[49] It turns out that on October 22nd, 1614 one Thomas Hunt sold a grand total of twenty-five Native Americans to Juan Bautista Reales, a larger-than-life adventurer well known to historians for having been at the same time Catholic priest, businessman and spy. The sale of the captives was thinly disguised owing to its illegal nature, because while slavery of North African captives was rampant, enslavement of Native Americans was against the law. Further research by Ms. Ruiz indeed found two more notarial records showing that only two weeks later Málaga's Corregidor had regained control of twenty captives and distributed them among a number of local notables, with orders to have them educated in the Catholic faith and local mores. No further documents have been found but research continues and there is some hope that any hitherto undocumented involvement of Spanish friars or other individuals may be brought to light.

No records show how long Tisquantum lived in Spain, what he did there, or how he "got away for England", as Bradford puts it.[50] Prowse asserts that he spent four years in slavery in Spain and was then smuggled aboard a ship belonging to Guy's colony, taken to England, and then to Newfoundland.[51] Smith attested that Tisquantum lived in England "a good time", although he does not say what he was doing there.[52] Plymouth Governor William Bradford knew him best and recorded that he lived in Cornhill, London with "Master John Slanie".[53] Slany was a merchant and shipbuilder who became another of the merchant adventurers of London hoping to make money from colonizing projects in America and was an investor in the East India Company.

Return to New England edit

According to the report by the Plymouth Council for New England in 1622, Tisquantum was in Newfoundland "with Captain Mason Governor there for the undertaking of that Plantation".[54] Thomas Dermer was at Cuper's Cove in Conception Bay,[55] an adventurer who had accompanied Smith on his abortive 1615 voyage to New England. Tisquantum and Dermer talked of New England while in Newfoundland, and Tisquantum persuaded him that he could make his fortune there, and Dermer wrote Gorges and requested that Gorges send him a commission to act in New England.

 
Map of New England from Newfoundland to Cape Cod in Purchas 1625, pp. IV:1880–81

Toward the end of 1619, Dermer and Tisquantum sailed down the New England coast to Massachusetts Bay. They discovered that all inhabitants had died in Tisquantum's home village at Patucket, so they moved inland to the village of Nemasket. Dermer sent Tisquantum[56] to the village of Pokanoket near Bristol, Rhode Island, seat of Chief Massasoit. A few days later, Massasoit arrived at Nemasket along with Tisquantum and 50 warriors. It is not known whether Tisquantum and Massasoit had met prior to these events, but their interrelations can be traced at least to this date.

Dermer returned to Nemasket in June 1620, but this time he discovered that the Indians there bore "an inveterate malice to the English", according to a June 30, 1620, letter transcribed by Bradford. This sudden and dramatic change from friendliness to hostility was due to an incident the previous year, when a European coastal vessel lured some Indians on board with the promise of trade, only to mercilessly slaughter them. Dermer wrote that "Squanto cannot deny but they would have killed me when I was in Nemask, had he not entreated hard for me."[57]

Some time after this encounter, Indians attacked Dermer, Tisquantum and their party on Martha's Vineyard. Dermer received "14 mortal wounds in the process".[58] He fled to Virginia where he died. Sometime after this, Tisquantum fell in with the Pokanokets (neighbors of his native village), and was living with them by March 1622 when he was introduced to the Pilgrims.

Plymouth Colony edit

 
Map of Southern New England, 1620–22 showing Indian tribes, settlements, and exploration sites

The Massachusett Indians were north of Plymouth Colony, led by Chief Massasoit, and the Pokanoket tribe were north, east, and south. Tisquantum was living with the Pokanokets, as his native tribe of the Patuxets had been effectively wiped out prior to the arrival of the Mayflower; indeed, the Pilgrims had established the Patuxets former habitation as the site of Plymouth Colony.[59] The Narragansett tribe inhabited Rhode Island.

Massasoit was faced with the dilemma whether to form an alliance with the Plymouth colonists, who might protect him from the Narragansetts, or try to put together a tribal coalition to drive out the colonists. To decide the issue, according to Bradford's account, "they got all the Powachs of the country, for three days together in a horrid and devilish manner, to curse and execrate them with their conjurations, which assembly and service they held in a dark and dismal swamp."[60] Philbrick sees this as a convocation of shamans brought together to drive the colonists from the shores by supernatural means.[i] Tisquantum had lived in England, and he told Massassoit "what wonders he had seen" there. He urged Massasoit to become friends with the Plymouth colonists, because his enemies would then be "Constrained to bowe to him".[61] Also connected to Massasoit was Samoset, a minor Abenaki sachem who hailed from the Muscongus Bay area of Maine. Samoset (a mispronunciation of Somerset) had learned English in England as a captive of the Merchant Tailors Guild.

 
Samoset comes "boldly" into Plymouth settlement; woodcut designed by A.R. Waud and engraved by J.P. Davis (1876)

On Friday, March 16, 1621 (Old Style), the settlers were conducting military training when Samoset "boldly came alone" into the settlement.[62] The colonists were initially alarmed, but he immediately set their fears at ease by asking for beer.[63] He spent the day giving them intelligence of the surrounding tribes, then stayed for the night, leaving on Saturday morning. The next day, Samoset returned with five men all bearing deer skins and one cat skin. The settlers entertained them but refused to trade with them because it was Sunday, although they encouraged them to return with more furs. All left but Samoset who lingered until Wednesday, feigning illness.[64] He returned once more on Thursday, March 22, 1622, this time with Tisquantum. The men brought important news: Massasoit, his brother Quadrquina, and all of their men were close by. After an hour's discussion, the sachem and his train of 60 men appeared on Strawberry Hill. Both the colonists and Massasoit's men were unwilling to make the first move, but Tisquantum shuttled between the groups and effected the simple protocol which permitted Edward Winslow to approach the sachem. Winslow, with Tisquantum as translator, proclaimed the loving and peaceful intentions of King James and the desire of their governor to trade and make peace with him.[65] After Massasoit ate, Miles Standish led him to a house which was furnished with pillows and a rug. Governor Carver then came "with Drumme and Trumpet after him" to meet Massasoit. The parties ate together, then negotiated a treaty of peace and mutual defense between the Plymouth settlers and the Pokanoket people.[66] According to Bradford, "all the while he sat by the Governour, he trembled for feare".[67] Massasoit's followers applauded the treaty,[67] and the peace terms were kept by both parties during Massasoit's lifetime.

Guide to frontier survival edit

Massasoit and his men left the day after the treaty, but Samoset and Tisquantum remained.[68] Tisquantum and Bradford developed a close friendship, and Bradford relied on him heavily during his years as governor of the colony. Bradford considered him "a special instrument sent of God for their good beyond their expectation".[69] Tisquantum instructed them in survival skills and acquainted them with their environment. "He directed them how to set their corn, where to take fish, and to procure other commodities, and was also their pilot to bring them to unknown places for their profit, and never left them till he died."[69]

The day after Massasoit left Plymouth, Tisquantum spent the day at Eel River treading eels out of the mud with his feet. The bucketful of eels he brought back were "fat and sweet".[70] Collection of eels became part of the settlers' annual practice. But Bradford makes special mention of Tisquantum's instruction concerning local horticulture. He had arrived at the time of planting for that year's crops, and Bradford said that "Squanto stood them in great stead, showing them both the manner how to set it, and after how to dress and tend it."[71] Bradford wrote that Squanto showed them how to fertilize exhausted soil:

He told them, except they got fish and set with it [corn seed] in these old grounds it would come to nothing. And he showed them that in the middle of April they should have store enough [of fish] come up the brook by which they began to build, and taught them how to take it, and where to get other provisions necessary for them. All of which they found true by trial and experience.[72]

Edward Winslow made the same point about the value of Indian cultivation methods in a letter to England at the end of the year:

We set the last Spring some twentie Acres of Indian Corne, and sowed some six Acres of Barly and Pease; and according to the manner of the Indians, we manured our ground with Herings or rather Shadds, which we have in great abundance, and take with great ease at our doores. Our Corn did prove well, & God be praysed, we had a good increase of Indian-Corne, and our Barly indifferent good, but our Pease were not worth the gathering, for we feared they were too late sowne.[73]

The method shown by Tisquantum became the regular practice of the settlers.[74] Tisquantum also showed the Plymouth colonists how they could obtain pelts with the "few trifling commodities they brought with them at first". Bradford reported that there was not "any amongst them that ever saw a beaver skin till they came here and were informed by Squanto".[75] Fur trading became an important way for the colonists to pay off their financial debt to their financial sponsors in England.

Role in settler diplomacy edit

Thomas Morton stated that Massasoit was freed as a result of the peace treaty and "suffered [Tisquantum] to live with the English",[76] and Tisquantum remained loyal to the colonists. One commentator has suggested that the loneliness occasioned by the wholesale extinction of his people was the motive for his attachment to the Plymouth settlers.[77] Another has suggested that it was self-interest that he conceived while in the captivity of the Pokanoket.[78] The settlers were forced to rely on Tisquantum because he was the only means by which they could communicate with the surrounding Indians, and he was involved in every contact for the 20 months that he lived with them.

Mission to Pokanoket edit

Plymouth Colony decided in June that a mission to Massasoit in Pokatoket would enhance their security and reduce visits by Indians who drained their food resources. Winslow wrote that they wanted to ensure that the peace treaty was still valued by the Pokanoket and to reconnoiter the surrounding country and the strength of the various tribes. They also hoped to show their willingness to repay the grain that they took on Cape Cod the previous winter, in the words of Winslow to "make satisfaction for some conceived injuries to be done on our parts".[79]

 
Sculpture of Massasoit in Mill Creek Park, Kansas City, Missouri by Cyrus E. Dallin (1920)

Governor Bradford selected Edward Winslow and Stephen Hopkins to make the journey with Tisquantum. They set off on July 2[j] carrying a "Horse-mans coat" as a gift for Massasoit made of red cotton and trimmed "with a slight lace". They also took a copper chain and a message expressing their desire to continue and strengthen the peace between the two peoples and explaining the purpose of the chain. The colony was uncertain of their first harvest, and they requested that Massasoit restrain his people from visiting Plymouth as frequently as they had—though they wished always to entertain any guest of Massasoit. So if he gave anyone the chain, they would know that the visitor was sent by him and they would always receive him. The message also attempted to explain the settlers' conduct on Cape Cod when they took some corn, and they requested that he send his men to the Nauset to express the settlers' wish to make restitution. They departed at 9 a.m.,[83] and traveled for two days meeting friendly Indians along the way. When they arrived at Pokanoket, Massasoit had to be sent for, and Winslow and Hopkins gave him a salute with their muskets when he arrived, at Tisquantum's suggestion. Massasoit was grateful for the coat and assured them on all points that they made. He assured them that his 30 tributary villages would remain in peace and would bring furs to Plymouth. The colonists stayed for two days,[84] then sent Tisquantum off to the various villages to seek trading partners for the English while they returned to Plymouth.

Mission to the Nauset edit

Winslow writes that young John Billington had wandered off and had not returned for five days. Bradford sent word to Massasoit, who made inquiry and found that the child had wandered into a Manumett village, who turned him over to the Nausets.[85] Ten settlers set out and took Tisquantum as a translator and Tokamahamon as "a special friend," in Winslow's words. They sailed to Cummaquid by evening and spent the night anchored in the bay. In the morning, the two Indians on board were sent to speak to two Indians who were lobstering. They were told that the boy was at Nauset, and the Cape Cod Indians invited all the men to take food with them. The Plymouth colonists waited until the tide allowed the boat to reach the shore, and then they were escorted to sachem Iyanough who was in his mid-20s and "very personable, gentle, courteous, and fayre conditioned, indeed not like a Savage", in Winslow's words. The colonists were lavishly entertained, and Iyanough even agreed to accompany them to the Nausets.[86] While in this village, they met an old woman, "no lesse then an hundred yeeres old", who wanted to see the colonists, and she told them of how her two sons were kidnapped by Hunt at the same time that Tisquantum was, and she had not seen them since. Winslow assured her that they would never treat Indians that way and "gave her some small trifles, which somewhat appeased her".[87] After their lunch, the settlers took the boat to Nauset with the sachem and two of his band, but the tide prevented the boat from reaching shore, so the colonists sent Inyanough and Tisquantum to meet Nauset sachem Aspinet. The colonists remained in their shallop and Nauset men came "very thick" to entreat them to come ashore, but Winslow's party was afraid because this was the very spot of the First Encounter. One of the Indians whose corn they had taken the previous winter came out to meet them, and they promised to reimburse him.[k] That night, the sachem came with more than 100 men, the colonists estimated, and he bore the boy out to the shallop. The colonists gave Aspinet a knife and one to the man who carried the boy to the boat. By this, Winslow considered that "they made peace with us."

The Nausets departed, but the colonists learned (probably from Tisquantum) that the Narragansetts had attacked the Pokanokets and taken Massasoit. This caused great alarm because their own settlement was not well guarded given that so many were on this mission. The men tried to set off immediately, but they had no fresh water. After stopping again at Iyanough's village, they set off for Plymouth.[89] This mission resulted in a working relationship between the Plymouth settlers and the Cape Cod Indians, both the Nausets and the Cummaquid, and Winslow attributed that outcome to Tisquantum.[90] Bradford wrote that the Indians whose corn they had taken the previous winter came and received compensation, and peace generally prevailed.[91]

Action to save Tisquantum in Nemasket edit

The men returned to Plymouth after rescuing the Billington boy, and it was confirmed to them that Massasoit had been ousted or taken by the Narragansetts.[92] They also learned that Corbitant, a Pocasset[93] sachem formerly tributary to Massasoit, was at Nemasket attempting to pry that band away from Massasoit. Corbitant was reportedly also railing against the peace initiatives that the Plymouth settlers had just had with the Cummaquid and the Nauset. Tisquantum was an object of Corbitant's ire because of his role in mediating peace with the Cape Cod Indians, but also because he was the principal means by which the settlers could communicate with the Indians. "If he were dead, the English had lost their tongue," he reportedly said.[94] Hobomok was a Pokanoket pniese residing with the colonists,[l] and he had also been threatened for his loyalty to Massasoit.[96] Tisquantum and Hobomok were evidently too frightened to seek out Massasoit, and instead went to Nemasket to find out what they could. Tokamahamon, however, went looking for Massasoit. Corbitant discovered Tisquantum and Hobomok at Nemasket and captured them. He held Tisquantum with a knife to his breast, but Hobomok broke free and ran to Plymouth to alert them, thinking that Tisquantum had died.[97]

Governor Bradford organized an armed task force of about a dozen men under the command of Miles Standish,[98][99] and they set off before daybreak on August 14[100] under the guidance of Hobomok. The plan was to march the 14 miles to Nemasket, rest, and then take the village unawares in the night. The surprise was total, and the villagers were terrified. The colonists could not make the Indians understand that they were only looking for Corbitant, and there were "three sore wounded" trying to escape the house.[101] The colonists realized that Tisquantum was unharmed and staying in the village, and that Corbitant and his men had returned to Pocaset. The colonists searched the dwelling, and Tisquantum came out after Hobomok called him from the top of the building. The settlers commandeered the house for the night. The next day, they explained to the village that they were interested only in Corbitant and those supporting him. They warned that they would exact retribution if Corbitant continued threatening them, or if Massasoit did not return from the Narragansetts, or if anyone attempted harm to any of Massasoit's subjects, including Tisquantum and Hobomok. They then marched back to Plymouth with Nemasket villagers helping bear their equipment.[102]

Bradford wrote that this action resulted in a firmer peace, and that "divers sachems" congratulated the settlers and more came to terms with them. Even Corbitant made his peace through Massasoit.[100] Nathaniel Morton later recorded that nine sub-sachems came to Plymouth on September 13, 1621, and signed a document declaring themselves "Loyal Subjects of King James, King of Great Britain, France and Ireland".[103]

Mission to the Massachuset people edit

The Plymouth colonists resolved to meet with the Massachusetts Indians who had frequently threatened them.[104] On August 18, a crew of ten settlers set off around midnight, with Tisquantum and two other Indians as interpreters, hoping to arrive before daybreak. But they misjudged the distance and were forced to anchor off shore and stay in the shallop over the next night.[105] Once ashore, they found a woman coming to collect the trapped lobsters, and she told them where the villagers were. Tisquantum was sent to make contact, and they discovered that the sachem presided over a considerably reduced band of followers. His name was Obbatinewat, and he was a tributary of Massasoit. He explained that his current location within Boston harbor was not a permanent residence since he moved regularly to avoid the Tarentines[m] and the Squa Sachim (the widow of Nanepashemet).[107] Obbatinewat agreed to submit himself to King James in exchange for the colonists' promise to protect him from his enemies. He also took them to see the squa sachem across the Massachusetts Bay.

 
Engraving of a Pequot fort on Block Island in 1637 with design similar to the description of Nenepashemet's fort observed by Plymouth settlers in 1621

On Friday, September 21, the colonists went ashore and marched a house where Nanepashemet was buried.[108] They remained there and sent Tisquantum and another Indian to find the people. There were signs of hurried removal, but they found the women together with their corn and later a man who was brought trembling to the settlers. They assured him that they did not intend harm, and he agreed to trade furs with them. Tisquantum urged the colonists to simply "rifle" the women and take their skins on the ground, that "they are a bad people and oft threatned you,"[109] but the colonists insisted on treating them fairly. The women followed the men to the shallop, selling them everything that they had, including the coats off their backs. As the colonists shipped off, they noticed that the many islands in the harbor had been inhabited, some cleared entirely, but all the inhabitants had died.[110] They returned with "a good quantity of beaver", but the men who had seen Boston Harbor expressed their regret that they had not settled there.[100]

Peace regime edit

During the fall of 1621, the Plymouth settlers had every reason to be contented with their condition, less than one year after the "starving times". Bradford expressed the sentiment with biblical allusion[n] that they found "the Lord to be with them in all their ways, and to bless their outgoings and incomings ..."[111] Winslow was more prosaic when he reviewed the political situation with respect to surrounding natives in December 1621: "Wee have found the Indians very faithfull in their Covenant of Peace with us; very loving and readie to pleasure us ...," not only the greatest, Massasoit, "but also all the Princes and peoples round about us" for fifty miles. Even a sachem from Martha's Vineyard, who they never saw, and also seven others came in to submit to King James "so that there is now great peace amongst the Indians themselves, which was not formerly, neither would have bin but for us ..."[112]

Thanksgiving edit

Bradford wrote in his journal that come fall together with their harvest of Indian corn, they had abundant fish and fowl, including many turkeys they took in addition to venison. He affirmed that the reports of plenty that many report "to their friends in England" were not "feigned but true reports".[113] He did not, however, describe any harvest festival with their native allies. Winslow, however, did, and the letter which was included in Mourt's Relation became the basis for the tradition of "the first Thanksgiving".[o]

Winslow's description of what was later celebrated as the first Thanksgiving was quite short. He wrote that after the harvest (of Indian corn, their planting of peas were not worth gathering and their harvest of barley was "indifferent"), Bradford sent out four men fowling "so we might after a more special manner rejoice together, after we had gathered the fruit of our labours ..."[115] The time was one of recreation, including the shooting of arms, and many Natives joined them, including Massasoit and 90 of his men,[p] who stayed three days. They killed five deer which they presented to Bradford, Standish and others in Plymouth. Winslow concluded his description by telling his readers that "we are so farre from want, that we often wish you partakers of our plentie."[117]

The Narragansett threat edit

The various treaties created a system where the English settlers filled the vacuum created by the epidemic. The villages and tribal networks surrounding Plymouth now saw themselves as tributaries to the English and (as they were assured) King James. The settlers also viewed the treaties as committing the Natives to a form of vassalage. Nathaniel Morton, Bradford's nephew, interpreted the original treaty with Massasoit, for example, as "at the same time" (not within the written treaty terms) acknowledging himeself "content to become the Subject of our Sovereign Lord the King aforesaid, His Heirs and Successors, and gave unto them all the Lands adjacent, to them and their Heirs for ever".[118] The problem with this political and commercial system was that it "incurred the resentment of the Narragansett by depriving them of tributaries just when Dutch traders were expanding their activities in the [Narragansett] bay".[119] In January 1622 the Narraganset responded by issuing an ultimatum to the English.

 
Map of Southern New England in the 17th century with locations of prominent societies of Ninnimissinuok.

In December 1621 the Fortune (which had brought 35 more settlers) had departed for England.[q] Not long afterwards rumors began to reach Plymouth that the Narragansett were making warlike preparations against the English.[r] Winslow believed that that nation had learned that the new settlers brought neither arms nor provisions and thus in fact weakened the English colony.[123] Bradford saw their belligerency as a result of their desire to "lord it over" the peoples who had been weakened by the epidemic (and presumably obtain tribute from them) and the colonists were "a bar in their way".[124] In January 1621/22 a messenger from Narraganset sachem Canonicus (who travelled with Tokamahamon, Winslow's "special friend") arrived looking for Tisquantum, who was away from the settlement. Winslow wrote that the messenger appeared relieved and left a bundle of arrows wrapped in a rattlesnake skin. Rather than let him depart, however, Bradford committed him to the custody of Standish. The captain asked Winslow, who had a "speciall familiaritie" with other Indians, to see if he could get anything out of the messenger. The messenger would not be specific but said that he believed "they were enemies to us." That night Winslow and another (probably Hopkins) took charge of him. After his fear subsided, the messenger told him that the messenger who had come from Canonicus last summer to treat for peace, returned and persuaded the sachem on war. Canonicus was particularly aggrieved by the "meannesse" of the gifts sent him by the English, not only in relation to what he sent to colonists but also in light of his own greatness. On obtaining this information, Bradford ordered the messenger released.[125]

When Tisquantum returned he explained that the meaning of the arrows wrapped in snake skin was enmity; it was a challenge. After consultation, Bradford stuffed the snake skin with powder and shot and had a Native return it to Canonicus with a defiant message. Winslow wrote that the returned emblem so terrified Canonicus that he refused to touch it, and that it passed from hand to hand until, by a circuitous route, it was returned to Plymouth.[126]

Double dealing edit

Notwithstanding the colonists' bold response to the Narragansett challenge, the settlers realized their defenselessness to attack.[127] Bradford instituted a series of measures to secure Plymouth. Most important they decided to enclose the settlement within a pale (probably much like what was discovered surrounding Nenepashemet's fort). They shut the inhabitants within gates that were locked at night, and a night guard was posted. Standish divided the men into four squadrons and drilled them in where to report in the event of alarm. They also came up with a plan of how to respond to fire alarms so as to have a sufficient armed force to respond to possible Native treachery.[128] The fence around the settlement required the most effort since it required felling suitable large trees, digging holes deep enough to support the large timbers and securing them close enough to each other to prevent penetration by arrows. This work had to be done in the winter and at a time too when the settlers were on half rations because of the new and unexpected settlers.[129] The work took more than a month to complete.[130]

False alarms edit

By the beginning of March, the fortification of the settlement had been accomplished. It was now time when the settlers had promised the Massachuset they would come to trade for furs. They received another alarm however, this time from Hobomok, who was still living with them. Hobomok told of his fear that the Massachuset had joined in a confederacy with the Narraganset and if Standish and his men went there, they would be cut off and at the same time the Narraganset would attack the settlement at Plymouth. Hobomok also told them that Tisquantum was part of this conspiracy, that he learned this from other Natives he met in the woods and that the settlers would find this out when Tisquantum would urge the settlers into the Native houses "for their better advantage".[131] This allegation must have come as a shock to the English given that Tisquantum's conduct for nearly a year seemed to have aligned him perfectly with the English interest both in helping to pacify surrounding societies and in obtaining goods that could be used to reduce their debt to the settlers' financial sponsors. Bradford consulted with his advisors, and they concluded that they had to make the mission despite this information. The decision was made partly for strategic reasons. If the colonists cancelled the promised trip out of fear and instead stayed shut up "in our new-enclosed towne", they might encourage even more aggression. But the main reason they had to make the trip was that their "Store was almost emptie" and without the corn they could obtain by trading "we could not long subsist ..."[132] The governor therefore deputed Standish and 10 men to make the trip and sent along both Tisquantum and Hobomok, given "the jealousy between them".[133]

Not long after the shallop departed, "an Indian belonging to Squanto's family" came running in. He betrayed signs of great fear, constantly looking behind him as if someone "were at his heels". He was taken to Bradford to whom he told that many of the Narraganset together with Corbitant "and he thought Massasoit" were about to attack Plymouth.[133] Winslow (who was not there but wrote closer to the time of the incident than did Bradford) gave even more graphic details: The Native's face was covered in fresh blood which he explained was a wound he received when he tried speaking up for the settlers. In this account he said that the combined forces were already at Nemasket and were set on taking advantage of the opportunity supplied by Standish's absence.[134] Bradford immediately put the settlement on military readiness and had the ordnance discharge three rounds in the hope that the shallop had not gone too far. Because of calm seas Standish and his men had just reached Gurnet's Nose, heard the alarm and quickly returned. When Hobomok first heard the news he "said flatly that it was false ..." Not only was he assured of Massasoit's faithfulness, he knew that his being a pniese meant he would have been consulted by Massasoit before he undertook such a scheme. To make further sure Hobomok volunteered his wife to return to Pokanoket to assess the situation for herself. At the same time Bradford had the watch maintained all that night, but there were no signs of Natives, hostile or otherwise.[135]

Hobomok's wife found the village of Pokanoket quiet with no signs of war preparations. She then informed Massasoit of the commotion at Plymouth. The sachem was "much offended at the carriage of Tisquantum" but was grateful for Bradford's trust in him [Massasoit]. He also sent word back that he would send word to the governor, pursuant to the first article of the treaty they had entered, if any hostile actions were preparing.[136]

Allegations against Tisquantum edit

Winslow writes that "by degrees wee began to discover Tisquantum," but he does not describe the means or over what period of time this discovery took place. There apparently was no formal proceeding. The conclusion reached, according to Winslow, was that Tisquantum had been using his proximity and apparent influence over the English settlers "to make himselfe great in the eyes of" local Natives for his own benefit. Winslow explains that Tisquantum convinced locals that he had the ability to influence the English toward peace or war and that he frequently extorted Natives by claiming that the settlers were about to kill them in order "that thereby hee might get gifts to himself to work their peace ..."[137]

Bradford's account agrees with Winslow's to this point, and he also explains where the information came from: "by the former passages, and other things of like nature",[138] evidently referring to rumors Hobomok said he heard in the woods. Winslow goes much further in his charge, however, claiming that Tisquantum intended to sabotage the peace with Massasoit by false claims of Massasoit aggression "hoping whilest things were hot in the heat of bloud, to provoke us to march into his Country against him, whereby he hoped to kindle such a flame as would not easily be quenched, and hoping if that blocke were once removed, there were no other betweene him and honour" which he preferred over life and peace.[139] Winslow later remembered "one notable (though) wicked practice of this Tisquantum"; namely, that he told the locals that the English possessed the "plague" buried under their storehouse and that they could unleash it at will. What he referred to was their cache of gunpowder.[s]

Massasoit's demand for Tisquantum edit

Captain Standish and his men eventually did go to the Massachuset and returned with a "good store of Trade". On their return, they saw that Massasoit was there and he was displaying his anger against Tisquantum. Bradford did his best to appease him, and he eventually departed. Not long afterward, however, he sent a messenger demanding that Tisquantum be put to death. Bradford responded that although Tisquantum "deserved to die both in respect of him [Massasoit] and us", but said that Tisquantum was too useful to the settlers because otherwise, he had no one to translate. Not long afterward, the same messenger returned, this time with "divers others", demanding Tisquantum. They argued that Tisquantum being a subject of Massasoit, was subject, pursuant to the first article of the Peace Treaty, to the sachem's demand, in effect, rendition. They further argued that if Bradford would not produce pursuant to the Treaty, Massasoit had sent many beavers' skins to induce his consent. Finally, if Bradford still would not release him to them, the messenger had brought Massasoit's own knife by which Bradford himself could cut off Tisquantum's head and hands to be returned with the messenger. Bradford avoided the question of Massasoit's right under the treaty[t] but refused the beaver pelts saying that "It was not the manner of the English to sell men's lives at a price ..." The governor called Tisquantum (who had promised not to flee), who denied the charges and ascribed them to Hobomok's desire for his downfall. He nonetheless offered to abide by Bradford's decision. Bradford was "ready to deliver him into the hands of his Executioners" but at that instance, a boat passed before the town in the harbor. Fearing that it might be the French, Bradford said he had to first identify the ship before dealing with the demand. The messenger and his companions, however, "mad with rage, and impatient at delay" left "in great heat".[142]

Final mission with the settlers edit

Arrival of the Sparrow edit

The ship the English saw pass before the town was not French, but rather a shallop from the Sparrow, a shipping vessel sponsored by Thomas Weston and one other of the Plymouth settlement's sponsors, which was plying the eastern fishing grounds.[143] This boat brought seven additional settlers but no provisions whatsoever "nor any hope of any".[144] In a letter they brought, Weston explained that the settlers were to set up a salt pan operation on one of the islands in the harbor for the private account of Weston. He asked the Plymouth colony, however, to house and feed these newcomers, provide them with seed stock and (ironically) salt, until he was able to send the salt pan to them.[145] The Plymouth settlers had spent the winter and spring on half rations in order to feed the settlers that had been sent nine months ago without provisions.[146] Now Weston was exhorting them to support new settlers who were not even sent to help the plantation.[147] He also announced that he would be sending another ship that would discharge more passengers before it would sail on to Virginia. He requested that the settlers entertain them in their houses so that they could go out and cut down timber to lade the ship quickly so as not to delay its departure.[148] Bradford found the whole business "but cold comfort to fill their hungry bellies".[149] Bradford was not exaggerating. Winslow described the dire straits. They now were without bread "the want whereof much abated the strength and the flesh of some, and swelled others".[150] Without hooks or seines or netting, they could not collect the bass in the rivers and cove, and without tackle and navigation rope, they could not fish for the abundant cod in the sea. Had it not been for shellfish which they could catch by hand, they would have perished.[151] But there was more, Weston also informed them that the London backers had decided to dissolve the venture. Weston urged the settlers to ratify the decision; only then might the London merchants send them further support, although what motivation they would then have he did not explain.[152] That boat also, evidently,[u] contained alarming news from the South. John Huddleston, who was unknown to them but captained a fishing ship that had returned from Virginia to the Maine fishing grounds, advised his "good friends at Plymouth" of the massacre in the Jamestown settlements by the Powhatan in which he said 400 had been killed. He warned them: "Happy is he whom other men's harms doth make to beware."[156] This last communication Bradford decided to turn to their advantage. Sending a return for this kindness, they might also seek fish or other provisions from the fishermen. Winslow and a crew were selected to make the voyage to Maine, 150 miles away, to a place they had never been.[159] In Winslow's reckoning, he left at the end of May for Damariscove.[v] Winslow found the fishermen more than sympathetic and they freely gave what they could. Even though this was not as much as Winslow hoped, it was enough to keep them going until the harvest.[164]

When Winslow returned, the threat they felt had to be addressed. The general anxiety aroused by Huddleston's letter was heightened by the increasingly hostile taunts they learned of. Surrounding villagers were "glorying in our weaknesse", and the English heard threats about how "easie it would be ere long to cut us off". Even Massasoit turned cool towards the English, and could not be counted on to tamp down this rising hostility. So they decided to build a fort on burying hill in town. And just as they did when building the palisade, the men had to cut down trees, haul them from the forest and up the hill and construct the fortified building, all with inadequate nutrition and at the neglect of dressing their crops.[165]

Weston's English settlers edit

They might have thought they reached the end of their problems, but in June 1622 the settlers saw two more vessels arrive, carrying 60 additional mouths to feed. These were the passengers that Weston had written would be unloaded from the vessel going on to Virginia. That vessel also carried more distressing news. Weston informed the governor that he was no longer a part of the company sponsoring the Plymouth settlement. The settlers he sent just now, and requested the Plymouth settlement to house and feed, were for his own enterprise. The "sixty lusty men" would not work for the benefit of Plymouth; in fact he had obtained a patent and as soon as they were ready they would settle an area in Massachusetts Bay. Other letters also were brought. The other venturers in London explained that they had bought out Weston, and everyone was better off without him. Weston, who saw the letter before it was sent, advised the settlers to break off from the remaining merchants, and as a sign of good faith delivered a quantity of bread and cod to them. (Although, as Bradford noted in the margin, he "left not his own men a bite of bread.") The arrivals also brought news that the Fortune had been taken by French pirates, and therefore all their past effort to export American cargo (valued at £500) would count for nothing. Finally Robert Cushman sent a letter advising that Weston's men "are no men for us; wherefore I prey you entertain them not"; he also advised the Plymouth Separatists not to trade with them or loan them anything except on strict collateral."I fear these people will hardly deal so well with the savages as they should. I pray you therefore signify to Squanto that they are a distinct body from us, and we have nothing to do with them, neither must be blamed for their faults, much less can warrant their fidelity." As much as all this vexed the governor, Bradford took in the men and fed and housed them as he did the others sent to him, even though Weston's men would compete with his colony for pelts and other Native trade.[166] But the words of Cushman would prove prophetic.

 
Map contained as frontispiece to Wood 1634.

Weston's men, "stout knaves" in the words of Thomas Morton,[167] were roustabouts collected for adventure[168] and they scandalized the mostly strictly religious villagers of Plymouth. Worse, they stole the colony's corn, wandering into the fields and snatching the green ears for themselves.[169] When caught, they were "well whipped", but hunger drove them to steal "by night and day". The harvest again proved disappointing, so that it appeared that "famine must still ensue, the next year also" for lack of seed. And they could not even trade for staples because their supply of items the Natives sought had been exhausted.[170] Part of their cares were lessened when their coasters returned from scouting places in Weston's patent and took Weston's men (except for the sick, who remained) to the site they selected for settlement, called Wessagusset (now Weymouth). But not long after, even there they plagued Plymouth, who heard, from Natives once friendly with them, that Weston's settlers were stealing their corn and committing other abuses.[171] At the end of August a fortuitous event staved off another starving winter: the Discovery, bound for London, arrived from a coasting expedition from Virginia. The ship had a cargo of knives, beads and other items prized by Natives, but seeing the desperation of the colonists the captain drove a hard bargain: He required them to buy a large lot, charged them double their price and valued their beaver pelts at 3s. per pound, which he could sell at 20s. "Yet they were glad of the occasion and fain to buy at any price ..."[172]

Trading expedition with Weston's men edit

The Charity returned from Virginia at the end of September–beginning of October. It proceeded on to England, leaving the Wessagusset settlers well provisioned. The Swan was left for their use as well.[173] It was not long after they learned that the Plymouth settlers had acquired a store of trading goods that they wrote Bradford proposing that they jointly undertake a trading expedition, they to supply the use of the Swan. They proposed equal division of the proceeds with payment for their share of the goods traded to await arrival of Weston. (Bradford assumed they had burned through their provisions.) Bradford agreed and proposed an expedition southward of the Cape.[174]

Winslow wrote that Tisquantum and Massasoit had "wrought" a peace (although he doesn't explain how this came about). With Tisquantum as guide, they might find the passage among the Monomoy Shoals to Nantucket Sound;[w] Tisquantum had advised them he twice sailed through the shoals, once on an English and once on a French vessel.[176] The venture ran into problems from the start. When in Plymouth Richard Green, Weston's brother-in-law and temporary governor of the colony, died. After his burial and receiving directions to proceed from the succeeding governor of Wessagusset, Standish was appointed leader but twice the voyage was turned back by violent winds. On the second attempt, Standish fell ill. On his return Bradford himself took charge of the enterprise.[177] In November they set out. When they reached the shoals, Tisquantum piloted the vessel, but the master of the vessel did not trust the directions and bore up. Tisquantum directed him through a narrow passage, and they were able to harbor near Mamamoycke (now Chatham).

That night Bradford went ashore with a few others, Tisquantum acting as translator and facilitator. Not having seen any of these Englishmen before, the Natives were initially reluctant. But Tisquantum coaxed them and they provided a plentiful meal of venison and other victuals. They were reluctant to allow the English to see their homes, but when Bradford showed his intention to stay on shore, they invited him to their shelters, having first removed all their belongings. As long as the English stayed, the Natives would disappear "bag and baggage" whenever their possessions were seen. Eventually Tisquantum persuaded them to trade and as a result, the settlers obtained eight hogsheads of corn and beans. The villagers also told them that they had seen vessels "of good burthen" pass through the shoals. And so, with Tisquantum feeling confident, the English were prepared to make another attempt. But suddenly Tisquantum became ill and died.[178]

Death edit

The sickness seems to have greatly shaken Bradford, for they lingered there for several days before he died. Bradford described his death in some detail:

In this place Tisquantum fell sick of Indian fever, bleeding much at the nose (which the Indians take as a symptom of death) and within a few days died there; desiring the Governor to pray for him, that he might go to the Englishmen's God in Heaven; and bequeathed sundry of his things to English friends, as remembrances of his love; of whom they had a great loss.[179]

Without Tisquantum to pilot them, the English settlers decided against trying the shoals again and returned to Cape Cod Bay.[180]

The English Separatists were comforted by the fact that Tisquantum had become a Christian convert. William Wood writing a little more than a decade later explained why some of the Ninnimissinuok began recognizing the power of "the Englishmens God, as they call him": "because they could never yet have power by their conjurations to damnifie the English either in body or goods" and since the introduction of the new spirit "the times and seasons being much altered in seven or eight years, freer from lightning and thunder, and long droughts, suddaine and tempestuous dashes of rain, and lamentable cold Winters".[181]

Philbrick speculates that Tisquantum may have been poisoned by Massasoit. His bases for the claim are (i) that other Native Americans had engaged in assassinations during the 17th century; and (ii) that Massasoit's own son, Metacomet, may have assassinated John Sassamon, an event that led to the bloody King Philip's War a half-century later. He suggests that the "peace" Winslow says was lately made between the two could have been a "rouse" but does not explain how Massasoit could have accomplished the feat on the very remote southeast end of Cape Cod, more than 85 miles distant from Pokanoket.[182]

Tisquantum is reputed to be buried in the village of Chatham Port.[x]

Assessment, memorials, representations, and folklore edit

Historical assessment edit

Because almost all the historical records of Tisquantum were written by English Separatists and because most of that writing had the purpose to attract new settlers, give account of their actions to their financial sponsors or to justify themselves to co-religionists, they tended to relegate Tisquantum (or any other Native American) to the role of assistant to them in their activities. No real attempt was made to understand Tisquantum or Native culture, particularly religion. The closest that Bradford got in analyzing him was to say "that Tisquantum sought his own ends and played his own game, ... to enrich himself". But in the end, he gave "sundry of his things to sundry of his English friends".[179]

Historians' assessment of Tisquantum depended on the extent they were willing to consider the possible biases or motivations of the writers. Earlier writers tended to take the colonists' statements at face value. Current writers, especially those familiar with ethnohistorical research, have given a more nuanced view of Tisquantum, among other Native Americans. As a result, the assessment of historians has run the gamut. Adams characterized him as "a notable illustration of the innate childishness of the Indian character".[184] By contrast, Shuffelton says he "in his own way, was quite as sophisticated as his English friends, and he was one of the most widely traveled men in the New England of his time, having visited Spain, England, and Newfoundland, as well as a large expanse of his own region."[185] Early Plymouth historian Judge John Davis, more than a half century before, also saw Tisquantum as a "child of nature", but was willing to grant him some usefulness to the enterprise: "With some aberrations, his conduct was generally irreproachable, and his useful services to the infant settlement, entitle him to grateful remembrance."[186] In the middle of the 20th century Adolf was much harder on the character of Tisquantum ("his attempt to aggrandize himself by playing the Whites and Indians against each other indicates an unsavory facet of his personality") but gave him more importance (without him "the founding and development of Plymouth would have been much more difficult, if not impossible.").[187] Most have followed the line that Baylies early took of acknowledging the alleged duplicity and also the significant contribution to the settlers' survival: "Although Squanto had discovered some traits of duplicity, yet his loss was justly deemed a public misfortune, as he had rendered the English much service."[188]

Memorials and landmarks edit

As for monuments and memorials, although many (as Willison put it) "clutter up the Pilgrim towns there is none to Squanto..."[189] The first settlers may have named after him the peninsula called Squantum once in Dorchester,[190] now in Quincy, during their first expedition there with Tisquantum as their guide.[191] Thomas Morton refers to a place called "Squanto's Chappell",[192] but this is probably another name for the peninsula.[193]

Literature and popular entertainment edit

Tisquantum rarely makes appearances in literature or popular entertainment. Of all the 19th-century New England poets and story tellers who drew on pre-Revolution America for their characters, only one seems to have mentioned Tisquantum. And while Henry Wadsworth Longfellow himself had five ancestors aboard the Mayflower, "The Courtship of Miles Standish" has the captain blustering at the beginning, daring the savages to attack, yet the enemies he addresses could not have been known to him by name until their peaceful intentions had already been made known:

Let them come if they like, be it sagamore, sachem, or pow-wow,
Aspinet, Samoset, Corbitant, Squanto, or Tokamahamon!

Tisquantum is almost equally scarce in popular entertainment, but when he appeared it was typically in implausible fantasies. Very early in what Willison calls the "Pilgrim Apotheosis", marked by the 1793 sermon of Reverend Chandler Robbins, in which he described the Mayflower settlers as "pilgrims",[194] a "Melo Drama" was advertised in Boston titled "The Pilgrims, Or the Landing of the Forefathrs at Plymouth Rock" filled with Indian threats and comic scenes. In Act II Samoset carries off the maiden Juliana and Winslow for a sacrifice, but the next scene presents "A dreadful Combat with Clubs and Shileds, between Samoset and Squanto".[195] Nearly two centuries later Tisquantum appears again as an action figure in the Disney film Squanto: A Warrior's Tale (1994) with not much more fidelity to history. Tisquantum (voiced by Frank Welker) appears in the first episode ("The Mayflower Voyagers", aired October 21, 1988) of the animated mini-series This Is America, Charlie Brown. A more historically accurate depiction of Tisquantum (as played by Kalani Queypo) appeared in the National Geographic Channel film Saints & Strangers, written by Eric Overmyer and Seth Fisher, which aired the week of Thanksgiving 2015.[196] A brief story of Squanto appears in the novel Dark Tides by Philippa Gregory (Apria Books, 2020).

Didactic literature and folklore edit

 
Tisquantum returning John Billington from the Nauset in a 1922 storybook for children.

Where Tisquantum is most encountered is in literature designed to instruct children and young people, provide inspiration, or guide them to a patriotic or religious truth. This came about for two reasons. First, Lincoln's establishment of Thanksgiving as a national holiday enshrined the New England Anglo-Saxon festival, vaguely associated with an American strain of Protestantism, as something of a national origins myth, in the middle of a divisive Civil War when even some Unionists were becoming concerned with rising non-Anglo-Saxon immigration.[197] This coincided, as Ceci noted, with the "noble savage" movement, which was "rooted in romantic reconstructions of Indians (for example, Hiawatha) as uncorrupted natural beings—who were becoming extinct—in contrast to rising industrial and urban mobs". She points to the Indian Head coin first struck in 1859 "to commemorate their passing.'"[198] Even though there was only the briefest mention of "Thanksgiving" in the Plymouth settlers' writings, and despite the fact that he was not mentioned as being present (although, living with the settlers, he likely was), Tisquantum was the focus around which both storylines could be wrapped. He is, or at least a fictionalized portrayal of him, thus a favorite of certain politically conservative American Protestant groups.[y]

The story of the selfless "noble savage" who patiently guided and occasionally saved the "Pilgrims" (to whom he was subservient and who attributed their good fortune solely to their faith, all celebrated during a bounteous festival) was thought to be an enchanting figure for children and young adults. Beginning early in the 20th century Tisquantum entered high school textbooks,[z] children's read-aloud and self-reading books,[aa] more recently learn-to-read and coloring books[ab] and children's religious inspiration books.[ac] Over time and particularly depending on the didactic purpose, these books have greatly fictionalized what little historical evidence remains of Tisquantum's life. Their portraits of Tisquantum's life and times spans the gamut of accuracy. Those intending to teach a moral lesson or tell history from a religious viewpoint tend to be the least accurate even when they claim to be telling a true historical story.[ad] Recently there have been attempts to tell the story as accurately as possible, without reducing Tisquantum to a mere servant of the English.[ae] There have even been attempts to place the story in the social and historical context of fur trade, epidemics and land disputes.[199] Almost none, however, have dealt with Tisquantum's life after "Thanksgiving" (except occasionally the story of the rescue of John Billington). An exception to all of that is the publication of a "young adult" version of Philbrick's best-selling adult history.[200] Nevertheless, given the sources which can be drawn on, Tisquantum's story inevitably is seen from the European perspective.

Notes, references and sources edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Kinnicutt proposes meanings for the various renderings of his name: Squantam, a contracted form of Musquantum meaning "He is angry"; Tantum is a shortened form of Keilhtannittoom, meaning "My great god"; Tanto, from Kehtanito, for "He is the greatest god": and Tisquantam, for Atsquantam, possibly for "He possesses the god of evil."[6]
  2. ^ Dockstader writes that Tiquantum means "door" or "entrance", although his source is not explained.[7]
  3. ^ The languages of Southern New England are known today as Western Abenaki, Massachusett, Loup A and Loup B, Narragansett, Mohegan-Pequot, and Quiripi-Unquachog.[13] Many 17th-century writers state that numerous people in the coastal areas of Southern New England were fluent in two or more of these languages.[14]
  4. ^ Roger Williams writes in his grammar of the Narragansett language that "their Dialects doe exceedingly differ" between the French settlements in Canada and the Dutch settlements in New York, "but (within that compass) a man may, by this helpe, converse with thousands of Natives all over the Countrey."[15]
  5. ^ Adolf,[16]
  6. ^ Winslow called this supernatural being Hobbamock (the Indians north of the Pokanokets call it Hobbamoqui, he said) and expressly equated him with the devil.[28] William Wood called this same supernatural being Abamacho and said that it presided over the infernal regions where "loose livers" were condemned to dwell after death.[29] Winslow used the term powah to refer to the shaman who conducted the healing ceremony,[30] and Wood described these ceremonies in detail.[31]
  7. ^ Paleopathological evidence exists for European importation of typhoid, diphtheria, influenza, measles, chicken pox, whooping cough, tuberculosis, yellow fever, scarlet fever, gonorrhea and smallpox.[35]
  8. ^ See, e.g., Salisbury 1982, pp. 265–66 n.15; Shuffelton 1976, p. 109; Adolf 1964, p. 247; Adams 1892, p. 24 n. 2; Deane 1885, p. 37; Kinnicutt 1914, pp. 109–11
  9. ^ See Philbrick 2006, pp. 95–96
  10. ^ Mourt's Relation says that they left on June 10, but Prince points out that it was a Sabbath and therefore unlikely to be the day of their departure.[80] Both he and Young[81] follow Bradford, who recorded that they left on July 2.[82]
  11. ^ "we promised him restitution, & desired him either to come Patuxet for satisfaction, or else we would bring them so much corne againe, he promised to come, wee used him very kindly for the present."[88]
  12. ^ Bradford describes him as "a proper lusty man, and a man of account for his valour and parts amongst the Indians".[95]
  13. ^ The Abeneki were known as "Tarrateens" or "Tarrenteens" and lived on the Kennebec and nearby rivers in Maine. "There was great enmity between the Tarrentines and the Alberginians, or the Indians of Massachusetts Bay."[106]
  14. ^ Bradford quoted Deuteronomy 32:8, which those familiar would understand the unspoken allusion to a "waste howling wilderness." But the chapter also has the assurance that the Lord kept Jacob "as the apple of his eye."
  15. ^ So Alexander Young put it as early as 1841.[114]
  16. ^ Humins surmises that the entourage included sachems and other headmen of the confederation's villages."[116]
  17. ^ According to John Smith's account in New England Trials (1622), the Fortune arrived at New Plymouth on November 11, 1621 o.s. and departed December 12.[120] Bradford described the 35 that were to remain as "unexpected or looked for" and detailed how they were less prepared than the original settlers had been, bringing no provisions, no material to construct habitation and only the poorest of clothes. It was only when they entered Cape Cod Bay, according to Bradford, that they began to consider what desperation they would be in if the original colonists had perished. The Fortune also brought a letter from London financier Thomas Weston complaining about holding the Mayflower for so long the previous year and failing to lade her for her return. Bradford's response was surprisingly mild. They also shipped back three hogshead of furs as well as sasssafras, and clapboard for a total freight value of £500.[121]
  18. ^ Winslow wrote that the Narragansett had sought and obtained a peace agreement with the Plymouth settlers the previous summer,[122] although no mention of it is made in any of the writings of the settlers.
  19. ^ The story was revealed by Tisquantum himself when some barrels of gunpowder were unearthed under a house. Hobomok asked what they were, and Tisquantum replied that it was the plague that he had told him and others about. Oddly in a tale of the wickedness of Tisquantum for claiming the English had control over the plague is this addendum: Hobomok asked one of the settlers whether it was true, and the settler replied, "no; But the God of the English had it in store, and could send it at is pleasure to the destruction of his and our enemies."[140]
  20. ^ The first two numbered items of the treaty as it was printed in Mourt's Relation provided: "1. That neither he nor any of his should injure or doe hurt to any of our people. 2. And if any of his did hurt to any of ours, he should send the offender, that we might punish him."[141] As printed the terms do not seem reciprocal, but Massasoit apparently thought they were. Neither Bradford in his answer to the messenger, nor Bradford or Winslow in their history of this event denies that the treaty entitled Massasoit to the return of Tisquantum.
  21. ^ The events in Bradford's and Winslow's chronologies, or at least the ordering of the narratives, do not agree. Bradford's order is: (1) Provisions spent, no source of food found; (2) end of May brings shallop from Sparrow with Weston letters and seven new settlers; (3) Charity and Swan arrive depositing "sixty lusty men"'; (4) amidst "their straights" letter from Huddleston brought by "this boat" from the east; (5) Winslow and men return with them; (6) "this summer" they build fort.[153] Winslow's sequence is: (1) Shallop from Sparrow arrives; (2) end of May 1622, food storehouse spent; (3) Winslow and his men sail to Damariscove in Maine; (4) on return finds state of colony much weakened from lack of bread; (5) Native taunts cause settlers to start building fort, at expense of planting; (6) end of June–beginning of July Charity and Swan arrive.[154] The chronology adopted below follows Willison's combination of the two accounts.[155] Although Bradford's rather careless use of pronouns makes it unclear which "pilot" Winslow followed to the fishing grounds in Maine (which carried the Huddleton letter) or indeed who brought the Huddleton letter,[156] it is likely the shallop from the Sparrow and not another boat from Huddleston himself, as Willison and Adams before him[157] conclude. Philbrick has Huddleston's letter arrive after the Charity and Swan, and only mentions Winslow's voyage to the fishing grounds, which, if it took place after the arrival of those two vessels, would have taken place after the end of the fishing season.[158]
  22. ^ The islands off the Damariscove river in Maine early on provided stages for fishermen from early times.[160] Damariscove Island was called Damerill's Isles on John Smith's 1614 map. Bradford noted that in 1622 there "were many more ships come afishing".[161] The Sparrow was stationed on these grounds.[162] Morison states that 300 to 400 sails of different countries, including 30 to 40 English as well as some from Virginia, came to fish these grounds in May, leaving in the summer.[163] Winslow's mission was to beg or borrow supplies from these fishermen.
  23. ^ These were the same "perilous shoals and breakers" that caused the Mayflower to turn back on November 9, 1620 o.s.[175]
  24. ^ A marker on the front lawn of the Nickerson Genealogical Research Center on Orleans Road in Chatham states that Tisquantum is buried at the head of Ryder's Cove. Nickerson claims that the skeleton which washed out "of a hill between Head of the Bay and Cove's Pond" around 1770 was probably Squanto's.[183]
  25. ^ See, for example, . Christian Worldview Journal. August 26, 2009. Archived from the original on December 8, 2013.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link); "Squanto: A Thanksgiving Drama". Focus on the Family Daily Broadcast. May 1, 2007.; "Tell Your Kids the Story of Squanto". Christian Headlines. November 19, 2014.; "History of Thanksgiving Indian: Why Squanto already knew English". Bill Petro: Building the Gap from Strategy and Execution. November 23, 2016..
  26. ^ The illustration at the head of this article, for example, is one of two of Tisquantum in Bricker, Garland Armor (1911). The Teaching of Agriculture in the High School. New York: Macmillan Co. (Plates after p. 112.)
  27. ^ For example, Olcott, Frances Jenkins (1922). Good Stories for Great Birthdays, Arranged for Story-Telling and Reading Aloud and for the Children's Own Reading. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co. This book was reissued by the University of Virginia Library in 1995. Tisquantum is referred to as "Tisquantum" and "A Big Indian" in the stories entitled "The Father of the New England Colonies" (William Bradford), at pp. 125–139. See also Bradstreet, Howard (1925). Squanto. [Hartford? Conn.]: [Bradstreet?].
  28. ^ E.g.: Beals, Frank L.; Ballard, Lowell C. (1954). Real Adventure with the Pilgrim Settlers: William Bradford, Miles Standish, Squanto, Roger Williams. San Francisco: H. Wagner Publishing Co. Bulla, Clyde Robert (1954). Squanto, Friend of the White Men. New York: T.Y. Crowell. Bulla, Clyde Robert (1956). John Billington, friend of Squanto. New York: Crowell. Stevenson, Augusta; Goldstein, Nathan (1962). Squanto, Young Indian Hunter. Indianapolis, Indiana: Bobbs-Merrill. Anderson, A.M. (1962). Squanto and the Pilgrims. Chicago: Wheeler. Ziner, Feenie (1965). Dark Pilgrim. Philadelphia: Chilton Books. Graff, Robert; Graff (1965). Squanto: Indian Adventurer. Champaign, Illinois: Garrard Publishing Co. Grant, Matthew G. (1974). Squanto: The Indian who Saved the Pilgrims. Chicago: Creative Education. Jassem, Kate (1979). Squanto: The Pilgrim Adventure. Mahwah, New Jersey: Troll Associates. ISBN 9780893751616. Cole, Joan Wade; Newsom, Tom (1979). Squanto. Oklahoma City, Oklahoma: Economy Co. ;Kessel, Joyce K. (1983). Squanto and the First Thanksgiving. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Carolrhoda Bookr. Rothaus, James R. (1988). Squanto: The Indian who Saved the Pilgrims (1500 -1622). Mankato, Minnesota: Creative Education.;Celsi, Teresa Noel (1992). Squanto and the First Thanksgiving. Austin, Texas: Raintree Steck-Vaughn. Dubowski, Cathy East (1997). The Story of Squanto: First Friend to the P. Milwaukee, Wisconsin: Gareth Stevens Publishers. ;Bruchac, Joseph (2000). Squanto's Journey: The Story of the First Thanksgiving. n.l.: Silver Whistle. Samoset and Squanto. Peterborough, New Hampshire: Cobblestone Publishing Co. 2001. Whitehurst, Susan (2002). A Plymouth Partnership: Pilgrims and Native Americans. New York: PowerKids Press. ISBN 9780823958108. Buckley, Susan Washborn (2003). Squanto the Pilgrims' Friend. New York: Scholastic. Hirschfelder, Arlene B. (2004). Squanto, 1585?-1622. Mankato, Minnesota: Blue Earth Books. Roop, Peter; Roop, Connie (2005). Thank You, Squanto!. New York: Scholastic. Banks, Joan (2006). Squanto. Chicago: Wright Group / McGraw Hill. Ghiglieri, Carol; Noll, Cheryl Kirk (2007). Squanto: A Friend to the Pilgrims. New York: Scholastic.
  29. ^ E.g., Hobbs, Carolyn; Roland, Pat (1981). Squanto. Milton, Florida: Printed by the Children's Bible Club. The Legend of Squanto. Carol Stream, Illinois. 2005.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Metaxas, Eric (2005). Squanto and the First Thanksgiving. Rowayton, Connecticut: ABDO Publishing Co. The book was retitled Squanto and the Miracle of Thanksgiving when it was republished in 2014 by the religious publisher Thomas Nelson. The book was turned into an animated video by Rabbit Ears Entertainment in 2007.
  30. ^ For example, Metaxas 2005, praised as a "true story" by the author's colleague Chuck Colson, misstates almost every well documented fact in Tisquantum's life. It begins with the abduction of 12 year old Tisquantum which the first sentence dates at "the year of our Lord 1608" (rather than 1614). When he meets the "Pilgrims" he greets Governor Bradford (rather than Carver). The rest is a fictIonalized religious parable which ends with Tisquantum (after "Thanksgiving" and before any allegations of treachery) thanking God for the Pilgrims.
  31. ^ Bruchac 2000, for example, even names Hunt, Smith and Dermer and tries to portray Tisquantum from a Native American, rather than "Pilgrim," perspective.

References edit

  1. ^ Nies, Judith (1996). Native American history: a chronology of the vast achievements of a culture and their links to world events. New York: Ballantine Books. p. 122. ISBN 0345393503. Retrieved November 25, 2022. Ransomed by monks, he worked in a monastery
  2. ^ Baxter 1890, p. I104 n.146; Kinnicutt 1914, pp. 110–12.
  3. ^ Young 1841, p. 202 n.1.
  4. ^ Mann 2005.
  5. ^ Martin 1978, p. 34.
  6. ^ Kinnicutt 1914, p. 112.
  7. ^ Dockstader 1977, p. 278.
  8. ^ a b Salisbury 1981, p. 230.
  9. ^ Salisbury 1981, pp. 228.
  10. ^ Salisbury 1981, pp. 228–29.
  11. ^ Bragdon 1996, p. i.
  12. ^ Letter of Emmanuel Altham to his brother Sir Edward Altham, September 1623, in James 1963, p. 29. A copy of the letter is also reproduced online by MayflowerHistory.com.
  13. ^ Goddard 1978, pp. passim.
  14. ^ Bragdon 1996, pp. 28–29, 34.
  15. ^ Williams 1643, pp. [ii]–[iii]. See also Salisbury 1981, p. 229.
  16. ^ Adolf 1964, p. 257 n.1.
  17. ^ Bradford 1952, p. 82 n.7.
  18. ^ Bennett 1955, pp. 370–71.
  19. ^ Bennett 1955, pp. 374–75.
  20. ^ Russell 1980, pp. 120–21; Jennings 1976, pp. 65–67.
  21. ^ Jennings 1976, p. 112.
  22. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 57 reprinted at Young 1841, p. 361
  23. ^ Bragdon 1996, p. 146.
  24. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 59–60 reprinted at Young 1841, pp. 364–65; Wood 1634, p. 90; Williams 1643, p. 136
  25. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 57–58 reprinted at Young 1841, pp. 362–63; Jennings 1976, p. 113
  26. ^ Williams 1643, pp. 178–79; Bragdon 1996, pp. 148–50.
  27. ^ Bragdon 1996, p. 142.
  28. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 53 reprinted at Young 1841, p. 356.
  29. ^ Wood 1634, p. 105 For more on Abbomocho, see Bragdon 1996, pp. 143, 188–90, 201–02.
  30. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 54 reprinted at Young 1841, p. 357.
  31. ^ Wood 1634, pp. 92–94.
  32. ^ a b Robbins 1956, p. 61.
  33. ^ Bragdon 1996, p. 143.
  34. ^ Martin 1978, p. 41.
  35. ^ Martin 1978, p. 43.
  36. ^ Jennings 1976, pp. 15–16, 22–24, 26–31; Martin 1978, pp. 43–51.
  37. ^ Jennings 1976, pp. 85–88.
  38. ^ Burrage 1906, p. 355.
  39. ^ Rosier 1605 reprinted at Burrage 1906, p. 379.
  40. ^ Rosier 1605 reprinted at Burrage 1906, p. 357.
  41. ^ Gorges 1658 reprinted at Baxter 1890, p. II:8.
  42. ^ Adams 1892, p. 24 n.2 (cont'd)
  43. ^ a b c Smith 1907, p. II:4.
  44. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 233 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 186. See also Dunn 1993, p. 39 and Salisbury 1981, p. 234.
  45. ^ Smith 1907, pp. II:4–5.
  46. ^ Baxter 1890, p. I:211. See Salisbury 1981, p. 234.
  47. ^ Baxter 1890, p. I:209.
  48. ^ Gorges 1622, p. 11 reprinted in Baxter 1890, pp. I:209–10.
  49. ^ Ruiz, Purificacion. "Málaga, Squanto, y el día de acción de gracias". Sociedad, Boletín de la Sociedad de Amigos de la Cultura de Vélez Málaga. Número 20/21: 89–94.
  50. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 81 and Davis 1908, p. 112.
  51. ^ Prowse 1895, p. 104 n.2.
  52. ^ Smith 1907, p. II:62.
  53. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 35 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 191. Bradford simply notes that he "was entertained by a merchant in London". OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 81 and Davis 1908, p. 112.
  54. ^ Gorges 1622, p. 13 reprinted in Baxter 1890, p. I:212.
  55. ^ Deane 1885, p. 134.
  56. ^ Dunn 1993, p. 40.
  57. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 82 reprinted in Davis 1908, pp. 112–13.
  58. ^ Gorges 1658, p. 20 reprinted in Baxter 1890, p. II:29.
  59. ^ Russell 1980, p. 22.
  60. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 84 and Davis 1908, p. 114.
  61. ^ Pratt 1858, p. 485
  62. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 31–32 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 81–83 and Young 1841, pp. 181–82.
  63. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 33 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 84 and Young 1841, p. 181.
  64. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 33–35 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 87–89 and Young 1841, pp. 186–89.
  65. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 35–36 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 90–92 and Young 1841, pp. 190–92.
  66. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 36–37 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 92–94 and Young 1841, pp. 192–93.
  67. ^ a b Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 37 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 94 and Young 1841, p. 194.
  68. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 38–39 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 95–97 and Young 1841, pp. 195–97.
  69. ^ a b OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 81 and Davis 1908, p. 111.
  70. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 39 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 97 and Young 1841, p. 196.
  71. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 85 and Davis 1908, pp. 115–16.
  72. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 85 and Davis 1908, p. 116.
  73. ^ Letter from E.W. to [George Morton?], dated December 11, 1621 in Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 60 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 131–42, at 132–33 and Young 1841, pp. 230–38, at 230–31.
  74. ^ Letter of John Pory to the Earl of Southampton, January 13, 1622/23 in James 1963, pp. 7–8.
  75. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 94 and Davis 1908, p. 123.
  76. ^ harvnb|Morton|1637|p=104 reprinted in Adams 1883, p. 245
  77. ^ Adolf 1964, p. 249.
  78. ^ Salisbury 1981, pp. 240, 242–43.
  79. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 40 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 98 and Young 1841, p. 202.
  80. ^ Prince 1826, p. 191 n.*.
  81. ^ Young 1841, p. 204 n.3.
  82. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 87 and Davis 1908, pp. 117–18.
  83. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 40–41 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 98–101 and Young 1841, pp. 202–04.
  84. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 45–46 reprinted in (Dexter 1865, pp. 45–47) and Young 1841, pp. 210–211.
  85. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 87–88 and Davis 1908, p. 118.
  86. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 49–50 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 112–13 and Young 1841, pp. 214–15.
  87. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 50 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 113–14 and Young 1841, pp. 215–16.
  88. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 51 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 115 and Young 1841, p. 217
  89. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 50–52 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 114–17 and Young 1841, pp. 216–18.
  90. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 119 and Young 1841, p. 219.
  91. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 88 and Davis 1908, pp. 118–19.
  92. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 118 and Young 1841, p. 219.
  93. ^ Bradford 1952, p. 88 n.4.
  94. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 118–20 and Young 1841, pp. 219–20.
  95. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 88 and Davis 1908, p. 119.
  96. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 118–19 and Young 1841, p. 219.
  97. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 118–19 and Young 1841, pp. 219–20.
  98. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 88 and Davis 1908, p. 119
  99. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 54 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 120 and Young 1841, p. 220.
  100. ^ a b c OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 89 and Davis 1908, p. 120.
  101. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 89 and Davis 1908, p. =120,
  102. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 54–56 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 121–23 and Young 1841, pp. 220–23.
  103. ^ Morton 1669, p. 29.
  104. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 57 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 124 and Young 1841, p. 224.
  105. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 57 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 124–25 and Young 1841, pp. 224–25.
  106. ^ Hutchinson 1765, pp. 456–57.
  107. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 57–58 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 125–26 and Young 1841, p. 225.
  108. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 58 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 127–28 and Young 1841, pp. 226–27.
  109. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 59 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 129 and Young 1841, p. 227.
  110. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, pp. 58–60 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 127–30 and Young 1841, pp. 226–29.
  111. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 90 and Davis 1908, p. 120.
  112. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865, pp. 133–35 and Young 1841, pp. 232–33.
  113. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 90 and Davis 1908, p. 121
  114. ^ Young 1841, p. 231 n.3.
  115. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 133 and Young 1841, p. 231.
  116. ^ Humins 1987, p. 61.
  117. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 133 and Young 1841, pp. 231–32.
  118. ^ Morton 1669, p. 24.
  119. ^ Salisbury 1981, p. 241.
  120. ^ Arber 1910, p. I:260.
  121. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 90–96 and Davis 1908, pp. 121–25.
  122. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 1 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 280.
  123. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 1–2 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 280–81.
  124. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 96–97 and Davis 1908, p. 125.
  125. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 2–3 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 281–83.
  126. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 3–4 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 283–84.
  127. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 4 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 284.
  128. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 97 and Davis 1908, p. 126.
  129. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 96 and Davis 1908, p. 125; Winslow 1624, pp. 4–5 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 284–85.
  130. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 96 and Davis 1908, p. 125.
  131. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 5 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 285.
  132. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 6 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 286.
  133. ^ a b OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 98 and Davis 1908, p. 127.
  134. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 6–7 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 287.
  135. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 98 and Davis 1908, p. 127; Winslow 1624, p. 7 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 287–88.
  136. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 7–8 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 288–89.
  137. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 8 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 289,
  138. ^ OP: Bradford 1952, p. 99 and Davis 1908, p. 128.
  139. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 128 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 289–90.
  140. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 10–11 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 292–92.
  141. ^ Mourt's Relation 1622, p. 37 reprinted in Dexter 1865, p. 93 and Young 1841, p. 193.
  142. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 9–10 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 290–91.
  143. ^ Bradford 1952, p. 99–100 nn. 3 & 4.
  144. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 99–100 and Davis 1908, p. 128.
  145. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 100 and Young 1841, pp. 129. See also Bradford 1952, p. 100 n.5; Willison 1945, p. 204.
  146. ^ Philbrick 2006, p. 135.
  147. ^ Willison 1945, p. 204.
  148. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 101 and Davis 1908, p. 129.
  149. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 101 and Davis 1908, p. 130.
  150. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 12 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 294.
  151. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 12–13 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 294–95.
  152. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 102 and Davis 1908, pp. 130–31.
  153. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 99–112 and Davis 1908, pp. 128–48.
  154. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 12–15 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 292–97.
  155. ^ Willison 1945, pp. 204–10.
  156. ^ a b OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 110 and Davis 1908, p. 138.
  157. ^ Adams 1892, p. 53.
  158. ^ Philbrick 2006, pp. 15–36.
  159. ^ Willison 1945, p. 206.
  160. ^ Williamson 1839, p. 56 & n.†.
  161. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 99 and Davis 1908, p. 128
  162. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 99 and Davis 1908, p. 128.
  163. ^ Bradford 1952, p. 99 n. 4.
  164. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 11–13 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 292–95.
  165. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 13 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 295.
  166. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 103–09 and Davis 1908, pp. 132–37.
  167. ^ Morton 1637, p. 117 reprinted in Adams 1883, p. 261.
  168. ^ Adams 1892, p. 56.
  169. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 13–14 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 296–97.
  170. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 112 and Davis 1908, p. 139.
  171. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 14–15 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 297–98.
  172. ^ Bradford 1952, p. 112 and Davis 1908, p. 139.
  173. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 15 reprinted in Young 1841, p. 299.
  174. ^ OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 113–14 and Davis 1908, pp. 140–41.
  175. ^ Young 1841, p. 103 n.1.
  176. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 15–16 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 299–300.
  177. ^ Winslow 1624, p. 16 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 299–300; OPP: Bradford 1952, pp. 113–14 and Davis 1908, p. 141.
  178. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 17–18 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 300–02.
  179. ^ a b OPP: Bradford 1952, p. 114 and Davis 1908, p. 141.
  180. ^ Winslow 1624, pp. 17–18 reprinted in Young 1841, pp. 301–02.
  181. ^ Wood 1634, p. 94.
  182. ^ Philbrick 2006, pp. 138 & 383.
  183. ^ Nickerson 1994, p. 200.
  184. ^ Adams 1892, p. I: 36.
  185. ^ Shuffelton 1976, p. 108.
  186. ^ Davis 1826, pp. 85–86 n.§.
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  193. ^ Young 1841, pp. 190–91 n.3; Adams 1883, p. 216 n.3.
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  195. ^ Willison 1945, pp. 484–85.
  196. ^ Friedlander, Whitney (October 29, 2015). "'Saints & Strangers' Cast on Bringing Early American Settlers to Life". Variety. Retrieved December 15, 2017.
  197. ^ Hobsbawm & Ranger 1983, p. 279.
  198. ^ Ceci 1990, p. 83.
  199. ^ See. e.g., Stefoff, Rebecca (2001). The Colonies. New York: Benchmark Books.
  200. ^ Philbrick, Nathaniel (2008). The Mayflower and the Pilgrims' New World. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons. ISBN 9780399247958.

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  • Tolman, Adams (1902). "Indian Relics in Concord". Publications of the Concord Antiquarian Society. 10.
  • Tomlins, Christophr L. (2010). Freedom Bound: Law, Labor, and Civic Identity in Colonizing English America, 1580-1865. Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521761390.
  • Trumbull, J. Hammond, ed. (1859). The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut, May, 1678 – June 1689. Vol. 3. Hartford, Connecticut: Press of Case, Lockwood & Co.
  • Vaughan, Alden T. (1995). New England Frontier: Puritans and Indians, 1620–1675 (3rd ed.). Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 080612718X.
  • Warden, G.B. (September 19, 1975). "Letter: Indian Corn Cultivation". Science. 189 (4207): 946. doi:10.1126/science.189.4207.946. JSTOR 1740631. PMID 17789141.
  • Weston, Thomas (1906). History of the Town of Middleboro, Massachusetts 1669–1905. Boston: Houghton, Mifflin and Company. LCCN 06023056.
  • Williams, Herbert Upham (1909). The Epidemic of the Indians of New England, 1616-1620, with Remarks on Native American Infections. n.p.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) This is a reprint of an article by the same name published in Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin. 20 (224): 340–49 (November 1909).
  • Williamson, William D. (1839). History of the State of Maine; From its First Discovery, A.D. 1602, to the Separation, A.D. 1820, Inclusive. Vol. 1. Hallowell: Glazier, Masters & Smith.
  • Willison, George F. (1945). Saints and Strangers. New York: Reynal & Hitchcock. LCCN 45006745//r83.
  • Young, Alexander, ed. (1841). Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers of the Colony of Plymouth, from 1602–1625. Boston: C. C. Little and J. Brown. LCCN 01012110. Da Capo published a facsimile reprinting of this volume in 1971.

External links edit

  • Modern History Sourcebook: William Bradford: from History of Plymouth Plantation, c. 1650 · Treaty with the Indians 1621
  • Caleb Johnson's MayflowerHistory.com

squanto, 1994, film, warrior, tale, tisquantum, 1585, years, november, 1622, more, commonly, known, member, wampanoag, patuxet, tribe, best, known, being, early, liaison, between, native, american, population, southern, england, mayflower, pilgrims, made, thei. For the 1994 film see Squanto A Warrior s Tale Tisquantum t ɪ s ˈ k w ɒ n t em c 1585 10 years November 30 1622 O S more commonly known as Squanto ˈ s k w ɒ n t oʊ was a member of the Wampanoag Patuxet tribe best known for being an early liaison between the Native American population in Southern New England and the Mayflower Pilgrims who made their settlement at the site of Tisquantum s former summer village now Plymouth Massachusetts The Patuxet tribe had lived on the western coast of Cape Cod Bay but an epidemic infection wiped them out likely brought by previous European explorers Tisquantum Squanto 1911 illustration of Tisquantum Squanto teaching the Plymouth colonists to plant maize Bornc 1580 Patuxet now Plymouth Massachusetts DiedNovember 30 1622 O S Mamamoycke or Monomoit now Chatham Massachusetts NationalityPatuxetKnown forGuidance advice and translation services to the Mayflower settlers Tisquantum was kidnapped by English explorer and slaver Captain Thomas Hunt who trafficked him to Spain where he sold him in the city of Malaga He was among several captives traditionally claimed to have been ransomed 1 by local Franciscan monks who focused on their education and evangelization Tisquantum is said to have been baptized a Catholic although no known primary sources support this claim He eventually travelled to England and from there returned to his native village in America in 1619 only to find that an epidemic infection had wiped out his tribe Tisquantum was the last of the Patuxet and went to live with the Wampanoags The Mayflower landed in Cape Cod Bay in 1620 and Tisquantum worked to broker peaceable relations between the Pilgrims and the local Pokanokets He played a crucial role in the early meetings in March 1621 partly because he spoke English He then lived with the Pilgrims for 20 months as an interpreter guide and advisor He introduced the settlers to the fur trade and taught them how to sow and fertilize native crops this proved vital because the seeds the Pilgrims had brought from England mostly failed As food shortages worsened Plymouth Colony Governor William Bradford relied on Tisquantum to pilot a ship of settlers on a trading expedition around Cape Cod and through dangerous shoals During that voyage Tisquantum contracted what Bradford called an Indian fever Bradford stayed with him for several days until he died which Bradford described as a great loss Contents 1 Name 2 Early life 2 1 Native culture 3 Contact with Europeans 3 1 The first kidnappings 3 2 Abduction 3 3 Return to New England 4 Plymouth Colony 4 1 Guide to frontier survival 4 2 Role in settler diplomacy 4 2 1 Mission to Pokanoket 4 2 2 Mission to the Nauset 4 2 3 Action to save Tisquantum in Nemasket 4 2 4 Mission to the Massachuset people 4 3 Peace regime 4 3 1 Thanksgiving 4 3 2 The Narragansett threat 4 4 Double dealing 4 4 1 False alarms 4 4 2 Allegations against Tisquantum 4 4 3 Massasoit s demand for Tisquantum 4 5 Final mission with the settlers 4 5 1 Arrival of the Sparrow 4 5 2 Weston s English settlers 4 5 3 Trading expedition with Weston s men 5 Death 6 Assessment memorials representations and folklore 6 1 Historical assessment 6 2 Memorials and landmarks 6 3 Literature and popular entertainment 6 4 Didactic literature and folklore 7 Notes references and sources 7 1 Notes 7 2 References 7 3 Sources 7 3 1 Primary 7 3 2 Secondary 8 External linksName editDocuments from the 17th century variously render the spelling of Tisquantum s name as Tisquantum Tasquantum and Tusquantum and alternately call him Squanto Squantum Tantum and Tantam 2 Even the two Mayflower settlers who dealt with him closely spelled his name differently Bradford nicknamed him Squanto while Edward Winslow invariably referred to him as Tisquantum which historians believe was his proper name 3 One suggestion of the meaning is that it is derived from the Algonquian expression for the rage of the Manitou the world suffusing spiritual power at the heart of coastal Indians religious beliefs 4 Manitou was the spiritual potency of an object or a phenomenon the force which made everything in Nature responsive to man 5 Other suggestions have been offered a but all involve some relationship to beings or powers that the colonists associated with the devil or evil b It is therefore unlikely that it was his birth name rather than one that he acquired or assumed later in life but there is no historical evidence on this point The name may suggest for example that he underwent special spiritual and military training and was selected for his role as liaison with the settlers in 1620 for that reason 8 Early life editAlmost nothing is known of Tisquantum s life before his first contact with Europeans and even when and how that first encounter took place is subject to contradictory assertions 9 First hand descriptions of him written between 1618 and 1622 do not remark on his youth or old age and Salisbury has suggested that he was in his twenties or thirties when he was captured and taken to Spain in 1614 10 If that was the case he would have been born around 1585 10 years Native culture edit Main article Ninnimissinuok nbsp 1605 map drawn by Samuel de Champlain of Plymouth Harbor which he called Port St Louis F designates wigwams and cultivated fields The tribes who lived in southern New England at the beginning of the 17th century referred to themselves as Ninnimissinuok a variation of the Narragansett word Ninnimissinnȗwock meaning people and signifying familiarity and shared identity 11 Tisquantum s tribe of the Patuxets occupied the coastal area west of Cape Cod Bay and he told an English trader that the Patuxets once numbered 2 000 12 They spoke a dialect of Eastern Algonquian common to tribes as far west as Narragansett Bay c The various Algonquian dialects of Southern New England were sufficiently similar to allow effective communications d The term patuxet refers to the site of Plymouth Massachusetts and means at the little falls e referencing Morison 17 Morison gives Mourt s Relation as authority for both assertions The annual growing season in southern Maine and Canada was not long enough to produce maize harvests Indian tribes in those areas were required to live a fairly nomadic existence 18 while the southern New England Algonquins were sedentary cultivators by contrast 19 They grew enough for their own winter needs and for trade especially to northern tribes and enough to relieve the colonists distress for many years when their harvests were insufficient 20 nbsp Champlain s drawing of Southern New England Algonquians emphasizing their pacific nature and sedentary and agricultural lifestyle The groups that made up the Ninnimissinuok were presided over by one or two sachems 21 The chief functions of the sachems were to allocate land for cultivation 22 to manage the trade with other sachems or more distant tribes 23 to dispense justice including capital punishment 24 to collect and store tribute from harvests and hunts 25 and leading in war 26 Sachems were advised by principal men of the community called ahtaskoaog generally called nobles by the colonists Sachems achieved consensus through the consent of these men who probably also were involved in the selection of new sachems One or more principal men were generally present when sachems ceded land 27 There was a class called the pniesesock among the Pokanokets which collected the annual tribute to the sachem led warriors into battle and had a special relationship with their god Abbomocho Hobbomock who was invoked in pow wows for healing powers a force that the colonists equated with the devil f The priest class came from this order and the shamans also acted as orators giving them political power within their societies 32 Salisbury has suggested that Tisquantum was a pniesesock 8 This class may have produced something of a praetorian guard equivalent to the valiant men described by Roger Williams among the Narragansetts the only Southern New England society with an elite class of warriors 33 In addition to the class of commoners sanops there were outsiders who attached themselves to a tribe They had few rights except the expectation of protection against any common enemy 32 Contact with Europeans editThe Ninnimissinuok had sporadic contact with European explorers for nearly a century before the landing of the Mayflower in 1620 The fishermen off the Newfoundland banks from Bristol Normandy and Brittany began making annual spring visits beginning as early as 1581 to bring cod to Southern Europe 34 These early encounters had long term effects Europeans very likely introduced diseases g for which the Indian population had no resistance When the Mayflower arrived the Pilgrims discovered that an entire village was devoid of inhabitants 36 European fur traders traded goods with different tribes and this exacerbated intertribal rivalries and hostilities 37 The first kidnappings edit Main article George Weymouth nbsp Captain Weymouth impressing Natives of Pemaquid Maine with a sword he magnetized by means of a lodestone In 1605 George Weymouth set out on an expedition to explore the possibility of settlement in upper New England sponsored by Henry Wriothesley and Thomas Arundell 38 They had a chance encounter with a hunting party then decided to kidnap a number of Indians The capture of Indians was a matter of great importance for the full accomplement of our voyage 39 They took five captives to England and gave three to Sir Ferdinando Gorges Gorges was an investor in the Weymouth voyage and became the chief promoter of the scheme when Arundell withdrew from the project 40 Gorges wrote of his delight in Weymouth s kidnapping and named Tisquantum as one of the three given to him Captain George Weymouth having failed at finding a Northwest Passage happened into a River on the Coast of America called Pemmaquid from whence he brought five of the Natives three of whose names were Manida Sellwarroes and Tasquantum whom I seized upon they were all of one Nation but of severall parts and severall Families This accident must be acknowledged the meanes under God of putting on foote and giving life to all our Plantations 41 However it is unlikely that the Tasquantum identified by Gorges refers to the same man Circumstantial evidence makes this nearly impossible The Indians taken by Weymouth and given to Gorges were Eastern Abenaki from Maine whereas the subject Tisquantum was Patuxet a Southern New England Algonquin He lived in Plymouth and the Archangel did not sail that far south on the voyage of 1605 Adams maintains that it is not supposable that a member of the Pokanoket Patuxet tribe would be passing the summer of 1605 in a visit among his deadly enemies the Tarratines whose language was not even intelligible to him and be captured as one of a party of them in the way described by Rosier 42 No modern historian entertains this supposition h Abduction edit nbsp John Smith s 1614 Map of New England In 1614 an English expedition headed by John Smith sailed along the coast of Maine and Massachusetts Bay collecting fish and furs Smith returned to England in one of the vessels and left Thomas Hunt in command of the second ship Hunt was to complete the haul of cod and proceed to Malaga Spain where there was a market for dried fish 43 but Hunt decided to enhance the value of his shipment by adding human cargo He sailed to Plymouth harbor ostensibly to trade with the village of Patuxet where he lured 20 Indians aboard his vessel under promise of trade including Tisquantum 43 Once aboard they were confined and the ship sailed across Cape Cod Bay where Hunt abducted seven more from the Nausets 44 He then set sail for Malaga Smith and Gorges both disapproved of Hunt s decision to enslave the Indians 45 Gorges worried about the prospect of a warre now new begun between the inhabitants of those parts and us 46 although he seemed mostly concerned about whether this event had upset his gold finding plans with Epenow on Martha s Vineyard 47 Smith suggested that Hunt got his just desserts because this wilde act kept him ever after from any more imploiment to those parts 43 nbsp Malaga in 1572 40 years before Tisquantum was delivered there in slavery According to Gorges Hunt took the Indians to the Strait of Gibraltar where he sold as many as he could But the Friers sic of those parts discovered what he was doing and they took the remaining Indians to be instructed in the Christian Faith and so disappointed this unworthy fellow of his hopes of gaine 48 No truly primary sources of Tisquantum s arrival in Spain were known to exist until Spanish researcher Ms Purificacion Ruiz uncovered two deeds in public archives in Malaga documenting the facts with original notarial records 49 It turns out that on October 22nd 1614 one Thomas Hunt sold a grand total of twenty five Native Americans to Juan Bautista Reales a larger than life adventurer well known to historians for having been at the same time Catholic priest businessman and spy The sale of the captives was thinly disguised owing to its illegal nature because while slavery of North African captives was rampant enslavement of Native Americans was against the law Further research by Ms Ruiz indeed found two more notarial records showing that only two weeks later Malaga s Corregidor had regained control of twenty captives and distributed them among a number of local notables with orders to have them educated in the Catholic faith and local mores No further documents have been found but research continues and there is some hope that any hitherto undocumented involvement of Spanish friars or other individuals may be brought to light No records show how long Tisquantum lived in Spain what he did there or how he got away for England as Bradford puts it 50 Prowse asserts that he spent four years in slavery in Spain and was then smuggled aboard a ship belonging to Guy s colony taken to England and then to Newfoundland 51 Smith attested that Tisquantum lived in England a good time although he does not say what he was doing there 52 Plymouth Governor William Bradford knew him best and recorded that he lived in Cornhill London with Master John Slanie 53 Slany was a merchant and shipbuilder who became another of the merchant adventurers of London hoping to make money from colonizing projects in America and was an investor in the East India Company Return to New England edit According to the report by the Plymouth Council for New England in 1622 Tisquantum was in Newfoundland with Captain Mason Governor there for the undertaking of that Plantation 54 Thomas Dermer was at Cuper s Cove in Conception Bay 55 an adventurer who had accompanied Smith on his abortive 1615 voyage to New England Tisquantum and Dermer talked of New England while in Newfoundland and Tisquantum persuaded him that he could make his fortune there and Dermer wrote Gorges and requested that Gorges send him a commission to act in New England nbsp Map of New England from Newfoundland to Cape Cod in Purchas 1625 pp IV 1880 81 Toward the end of 1619 Dermer and Tisquantum sailed down the New England coast to Massachusetts Bay They discovered that all inhabitants had died in Tisquantum s home village at Patucket so they moved inland to the village of Nemasket Dermer sent Tisquantum 56 to the village of Pokanoket near Bristol Rhode Island seat of Chief Massasoit A few days later Massasoit arrived at Nemasket along with Tisquantum and 50 warriors It is not known whether Tisquantum and Massasoit had met prior to these events but their interrelations can be traced at least to this date Dermer returned to Nemasket in June 1620 but this time he discovered that the Indians there bore an inveterate malice to the English according to a June 30 1620 letter transcribed by Bradford This sudden and dramatic change from friendliness to hostility was due to an incident the previous year when a European coastal vessel lured some Indians on board with the promise of trade only to mercilessly slaughter them Dermer wrote that Squanto cannot deny but they would have killed me when I was in Nemask had he not entreated hard for me 57 Some time after this encounter Indians attacked Dermer Tisquantum and their party on Martha s Vineyard Dermer received 14 mortal wounds in the process 58 He fled to Virginia where he died Sometime after this Tisquantum fell in with the Pokanokets neighbors of his native village and was living with them by March 1622 when he was introduced to the Pilgrims Plymouth Colony edit nbsp Map of Southern New England 1620 22 showing Indian tribes settlements and exploration sites The Massachusett Indians were north of Plymouth Colony led by Chief Massasoit and the Pokanoket tribe were north east and south Tisquantum was living with the Pokanokets as his native tribe of the Patuxets had been effectively wiped out prior to the arrival of the Mayflower indeed the Pilgrims had established the Patuxets former habitation as the site of Plymouth Colony 59 The Narragansett tribe inhabited Rhode Island Massasoit was faced with the dilemma whether to form an alliance with the Plymouth colonists who might protect him from the Narragansetts or try to put together a tribal coalition to drive out the colonists To decide the issue according to Bradford s account they got all the Powachs of the country for three days together in a horrid and devilish manner to curse and execrate them with their conjurations which assembly and service they held in a dark and dismal swamp 60 Philbrick sees this as a convocation of shamans brought together to drive the colonists from the shores by supernatural means i Tisquantum had lived in England and he told Massassoit what wonders he had seen there He urged Massasoit to become friends with the Plymouth colonists because his enemies would then be Constrained to bowe to him 61 Also connected to Massasoit was Samoset a minor Abenaki sachem who hailed from the Muscongus Bay area of Maine Samoset a mispronunciation of Somerset had learned English in England as a captive of the Merchant Tailors Guild nbsp Samoset comes boldly into Plymouth settlement woodcut designed by A R Waud and engraved by J P Davis 1876 On Friday March 16 1621 Old Style the settlers were conducting military training when Samoset boldly came alone into the settlement 62 The colonists were initially alarmed but he immediately set their fears at ease by asking for beer 63 He spent the day giving them intelligence of the surrounding tribes then stayed for the night leaving on Saturday morning The next day Samoset returned with five men all bearing deer skins and one cat skin The settlers entertained them but refused to trade with them because it was Sunday although they encouraged them to return with more furs All left but Samoset who lingered until Wednesday feigning illness 64 He returned once more on Thursday March 22 1622 this time with Tisquantum The men brought important news Massasoit his brother Quadrquina and all of their men were close by After an hour s discussion the sachem and his train of 60 men appeared on Strawberry Hill Both the colonists and Massasoit s men were unwilling to make the first move but Tisquantum shuttled between the groups and effected the simple protocol which permitted Edward Winslow to approach the sachem Winslow with Tisquantum as translator proclaimed the loving and peaceful intentions of King James and the desire of their governor to trade and make peace with him 65 After Massasoit ate Miles Standish led him to a house which was furnished with pillows and a rug Governor Carver then came with Drumme and Trumpet after him to meet Massasoit The parties ate together then negotiated a treaty of peace and mutual defense between the Plymouth settlers and the Pokanoket people 66 According to Bradford all the while he sat by the Governour he trembled for feare 67 Massasoit s followers applauded the treaty 67 and the peace terms were kept by both parties during Massasoit s lifetime Guide to frontier survival edit Massasoit and his men left the day after the treaty but Samoset and Tisquantum remained 68 Tisquantum and Bradford developed a close friendship and Bradford relied on him heavily during his years as governor of the colony Bradford considered him a special instrument sent of God for their good beyond their expectation 69 Tisquantum instructed them in survival skills and acquainted them with their environment He directed them how to set their corn where to take fish and to procure other commodities and was also their pilot to bring them to unknown places for their profit and never left them till he died 69 The day after Massasoit left Plymouth Tisquantum spent the day at Eel River treading eels out of the mud with his feet The bucketful of eels he brought back were fat and sweet 70 Collection of eels became part of the settlers annual practice But Bradford makes special mention of Tisquantum s instruction concerning local horticulture He had arrived at the time of planting for that year s crops and Bradford said that Squanto stood them in great stead showing them both the manner how to set it and after how to dress and tend it 71 Bradford wrote that Squanto showed them how to fertilize exhausted soil He told them except they got fish and set with it corn seed in these old grounds it would come to nothing And he showed them that in the middle of April they should have store enough of fish come up the brook by which they began to build and taught them how to take it and where to get other provisions necessary for them All of which they found true by trial and experience 72 Edward Winslow made the same point about the value of Indian cultivation methods in a letter to England at the end of the year We set the last Spring some twentie Acres of Indian Corne and sowed some six Acres of Barly and Pease and according to the manner of the Indians we manured our ground with Herings or rather Shadds which we have in great abundance and take with great ease at our doores Our Corn did prove well amp God be praysed we had a good increase of Indian Corne and our Barly indifferent good but our Pease were not worth the gathering for we feared they were too late sowne 73 The method shown by Tisquantum became the regular practice of the settlers 74 Tisquantum also showed the Plymouth colonists how they could obtain pelts with the few trifling commodities they brought with them at first Bradford reported that there was not any amongst them that ever saw a beaver skin till they came here and were informed by Squanto 75 Fur trading became an important way for the colonists to pay off their financial debt to their financial sponsors in England Role in settler diplomacy edit Thomas Morton stated that Massasoit was freed as a result of the peace treaty and suffered Tisquantum to live with the English 76 and Tisquantum remained loyal to the colonists One commentator has suggested that the loneliness occasioned by the wholesale extinction of his people was the motive for his attachment to the Plymouth settlers 77 Another has suggested that it was self interest that he conceived while in the captivity of the Pokanoket 78 The settlers were forced to rely on Tisquantum because he was the only means by which they could communicate with the surrounding Indians and he was involved in every contact for the 20 months that he lived with them Mission to Pokanoket edit Plymouth Colony decided in June that a mission to Massasoit in Pokatoket would enhance their security and reduce visits by Indians who drained their food resources Winslow wrote that they wanted to ensure that the peace treaty was still valued by the Pokanoket and to reconnoiter the surrounding country and the strength of the various tribes They also hoped to show their willingness to repay the grain that they took on Cape Cod the previous winter in the words of Winslow to make satisfaction for some conceived injuries to be done on our parts 79 nbsp Sculpture of Massasoit in Mill Creek Park Kansas City Missouri by Cyrus E Dallin 1920 Governor Bradford selected Edward Winslow and Stephen Hopkins to make the journey with Tisquantum They set off on July 2 j carrying a Horse mans coat as a gift for Massasoit made of red cotton and trimmed with a slight lace They also took a copper chain and a message expressing their desire to continue and strengthen the peace between the two peoples and explaining the purpose of the chain The colony was uncertain of their first harvest and they requested that Massasoit restrain his people from visiting Plymouth as frequently as they had though they wished always to entertain any guest of Massasoit So if he gave anyone the chain they would know that the visitor was sent by him and they would always receive him The message also attempted to explain the settlers conduct on Cape Cod when they took some corn and they requested that he send his men to the Nauset to express the settlers wish to make restitution They departed at 9 a m 83 and traveled for two days meeting friendly Indians along the way When they arrived at Pokanoket Massasoit had to be sent for and Winslow and Hopkins gave him a salute with their muskets when he arrived at Tisquantum s suggestion Massasoit was grateful for the coat and assured them on all points that they made He assured them that his 30 tributary villages would remain in peace and would bring furs to Plymouth The colonists stayed for two days 84 then sent Tisquantum off to the various villages to seek trading partners for the English while they returned to Plymouth Mission to the Nauset edit Winslow writes that young John Billington had wandered off and had not returned for five days Bradford sent word to Massasoit who made inquiry and found that the child had wandered into a Manumett village who turned him over to the Nausets 85 Ten settlers set out and took Tisquantum as a translator and Tokamahamon as a special friend in Winslow s words They sailed to Cummaquid by evening and spent the night anchored in the bay In the morning the two Indians on board were sent to speak to two Indians who were lobstering They were told that the boy was at Nauset and the Cape Cod Indians invited all the men to take food with them The Plymouth colonists waited until the tide allowed the boat to reach the shore and then they were escorted to sachem Iyanough who was in his mid 20s and very personable gentle courteous and fayre conditioned indeed not like a Savage in Winslow s words The colonists were lavishly entertained and Iyanough even agreed to accompany them to the Nausets 86 While in this village they met an old woman no lesse then an hundred yeeres old who wanted to see the colonists and she told them of how her two sons were kidnapped by Hunt at the same time that Tisquantum was and she had not seen them since Winslow assured her that they would never treat Indians that way and gave her some small trifles which somewhat appeased her 87 After their lunch the settlers took the boat to Nauset with the sachem and two of his band but the tide prevented the boat from reaching shore so the colonists sent Inyanough and Tisquantum to meet Nauset sachem Aspinet The colonists remained in their shallop and Nauset men came very thick to entreat them to come ashore but Winslow s party was afraid because this was the very spot of the First Encounter One of the Indians whose corn they had taken the previous winter came out to meet them and they promised to reimburse him k That night the sachem came with more than 100 men the colonists estimated and he bore the boy out to the shallop The colonists gave Aspinet a knife and one to the man who carried the boy to the boat By this Winslow considered that they made peace with us The Nausets departed but the colonists learned probably from Tisquantum that the Narragansetts had attacked the Pokanokets and taken Massasoit This caused great alarm because their own settlement was not well guarded given that so many were on this mission The men tried to set off immediately but they had no fresh water After stopping again at Iyanough s village they set off for Plymouth 89 This mission resulted in a working relationship between the Plymouth settlers and the Cape Cod Indians both the Nausets and the Cummaquid and Winslow attributed that outcome to Tisquantum 90 Bradford wrote that the Indians whose corn they had taken the previous winter came and received compensation and peace generally prevailed 91 Action to save Tisquantum in Nemasket edit The men returned to Plymouth after rescuing the Billington boy and it was confirmed to them that Massasoit had been ousted or taken by the Narragansetts 92 They also learned that Corbitant a Pocasset 93 sachem formerly tributary to Massasoit was at Nemasket attempting to pry that band away from Massasoit Corbitant was reportedly also railing against the peace initiatives that the Plymouth settlers had just had with the Cummaquid and the Nauset Tisquantum was an object of Corbitant s ire because of his role in mediating peace with the Cape Cod Indians but also because he was the principal means by which the settlers could communicate with the Indians If he were dead the English had lost their tongue he reportedly said 94 Hobomok was a Pokanoket pniese residing with the colonists l and he had also been threatened for his loyalty to Massasoit 96 Tisquantum and Hobomok were evidently too frightened to seek out Massasoit and instead went to Nemasket to find out what they could Tokamahamon however went looking for Massasoit Corbitant discovered Tisquantum and Hobomok at Nemasket and captured them He held Tisquantum with a knife to his breast but Hobomok broke free and ran to Plymouth to alert them thinking that Tisquantum had died 97 Governor Bradford organized an armed task force of about a dozen men under the command of Miles Standish 98 99 and they set off before daybreak on August 14 100 under the guidance of Hobomok The plan was to march the 14 miles to Nemasket rest and then take the village unawares in the night The surprise was total and the villagers were terrified The colonists could not make the Indians understand that they were only looking for Corbitant and there were three sore wounded trying to escape the house 101 The colonists realized that Tisquantum was unharmed and staying in the village and that Corbitant and his men had returned to Pocaset The colonists searched the dwelling and Tisquantum came out after Hobomok called him from the top of the building The settlers commandeered the house for the night The next day they explained to the village that they were interested only in Corbitant and those supporting him They warned that they would exact retribution if Corbitant continued threatening them or if Massasoit did not return from the Narragansetts or if anyone attempted harm to any of Massasoit s subjects including Tisquantum and Hobomok They then marched back to Plymouth with Nemasket villagers helping bear their equipment 102 Bradford wrote that this action resulted in a firmer peace and that divers sachems congratulated the settlers and more came to terms with them Even Corbitant made his peace through Massasoit 100 Nathaniel Morton later recorded that nine sub sachems came to Plymouth on September 13 1621 and signed a document declaring themselves Loyal Subjects of King James King of Great Britain France and Ireland 103 Mission to the Massachuset people edit The Plymouth colonists resolved to meet with the Massachusetts Indians who had frequently threatened them 104 On August 18 a crew of ten settlers set off around midnight with Tisquantum and two other Indians as interpreters hoping to arrive before daybreak But they misjudged the distance and were forced to anchor off shore and stay in the shallop over the next night 105 Once ashore they found a woman coming to collect the trapped lobsters and she told them where the villagers were Tisquantum was sent to make contact and they discovered that the sachem presided over a considerably reduced band of followers His name was Obbatinewat and he was a tributary of Massasoit He explained that his current location within Boston harbor was not a permanent residence since he moved regularly to avoid the Tarentines m and the Squa Sachim the widow of Nanepashemet 107 Obbatinewat agreed to submit himself to King James in exchange for the colonists promise to protect him from his enemies He also took them to see the squa sachem across the Massachusetts Bay nbsp Engraving of a Pequot fort on Block Island in 1637 with design similar to the description of Nenepashemet s fort observed by Plymouth settlers in 1621 On Friday September 21 the colonists went ashore and marched a house where Nanepashemet was buried 108 They remained there and sent Tisquantum and another Indian to find the people There were signs of hurried removal but they found the women together with their corn and later a man who was brought trembling to the settlers They assured him that they did not intend harm and he agreed to trade furs with them Tisquantum urged the colonists to simply rifle the women and take their skins on the ground that they are a bad people and oft threatned you 109 but the colonists insisted on treating them fairly The women followed the men to the shallop selling them everything that they had including the coats off their backs As the colonists shipped off they noticed that the many islands in the harbor had been inhabited some cleared entirely but all the inhabitants had died 110 They returned with a good quantity of beaver but the men who had seen Boston Harbor expressed their regret that they had not settled there 100 Peace regime edit During the fall of 1621 the Plymouth settlers had every reason to be contented with their condition less than one year after the starving times Bradford expressed the sentiment with biblical allusion n that they found the Lord to be with them in all their ways and to bless their outgoings and incomings 111 Winslow was more prosaic when he reviewed the political situation with respect to surrounding natives in December 1621 Wee have found the Indians very faithfull in their Covenant of Peace with us very loving and readie to pleasure us not only the greatest Massasoit but also all the Princes and peoples round about us for fifty miles Even a sachem from Martha s Vineyard who they never saw and also seven others came in to submit to King James so that there is now great peace amongst the Indians themselves which was not formerly neither would have bin but for us 112 Thanksgiving edit Bradford wrote in his journal that come fall together with their harvest of Indian corn they had abundant fish and fowl including many turkeys they took in addition to venison He affirmed that the reports of plenty that many report to their friends in England were not feigned but true reports 113 He did not however describe any harvest festival with their native allies Winslow however did and the letter which was included in Mourt s Relation became the basis for the tradition of the first Thanksgiving o Winslow s description of what was later celebrated as the first Thanksgiving was quite short He wrote that after the harvest of Indian corn their planting of peas were not worth gathering and their harvest of barley was indifferent Bradford sent out four men fowling so we might after a more special manner rejoice together after we had gathered the fruit of our labours 115 The time was one of recreation including the shooting of arms and many Natives joined them including Massasoit and 90 of his men p who stayed three days They killed five deer which they presented to Bradford Standish and others in Plymouth Winslow concluded his description by telling his readers that we are so farre from want that we often wish you partakers of our plentie 117 The Narragansett threat edit The various treaties created a system where the English settlers filled the vacuum created by the epidemic The villages and tribal networks surrounding Plymouth now saw themselves as tributaries to the English and as they were assured King James The settlers also viewed the treaties as committing the Natives to a form of vassalage Nathaniel Morton Bradford s nephew interpreted the original treaty with Massasoit for example as at the same time not within the written treaty terms acknowledging himeself content to become the Subject of our Sovereign Lord the King aforesaid His Heirs and Successors and gave unto them all the Lands adjacent to them and their Heirs for ever 118 The problem with this political and commercial system was that it incurred the resentment of the Narragansett by depriving them of tributaries just when Dutch traders were expanding their activities in the Narragansett bay 119 In January 1622 the Narraganset responded by issuing an ultimatum to the English nbsp Map of Southern New England in the 17th century with locations of prominent societies ofNinnimissinuok In December 1621 the Fortune which had brought 35 more settlers had departed for England q Not long afterwards rumors began to reach Plymouth that the Narragansett were making warlike preparations against the English r Winslow believed that that nation had learned that the new settlers brought neither arms nor provisions and thus in fact weakened the English colony 123 Bradford saw their belligerency as a result of their desire to lord it over the peoples who had been weakened by the epidemic and presumably obtain tribute from them and the colonists were a bar in their way 124 In January 1621 22 a messenger from Narraganset sachem Canonicus who travelled with Tokamahamon Winslow s special friend arrived looking for Tisquantum who was away from the settlement Winslow wrote that the messenger appeared relieved and left a bundle of arrows wrapped in a rattlesnake skin Rather than let him depart however Bradford committed him to the custody of Standish The captain asked Winslow who had a speciall familiaritie with other Indians to see if he could get anything out of the messenger The messenger would not be specific but said that he believed they were enemies to us That night Winslow and another probably Hopkins took charge of him After his fear subsided the messenger told him that the messenger who had come from Canonicus last summer to treat for peace returned and persuaded the sachem on war Canonicus was particularly aggrieved by the meannesse of the gifts sent him by the English not only in relation to what he sent to colonists but also in light of his own greatness On obtaining this information Bradford ordered the messenger released 125 When Tisquantum returned he explained that the meaning of the arrows wrapped in snake skin was enmity it was a challenge After consultation Bradford stuffed the snake skin with powder and shot and had a Native return it to Canonicus with a defiant message Winslow wrote that the returned emblem so terrified Canonicus that he refused to touch it and that it passed from hand to hand until by a circuitous route it was returned to Plymouth 126 Double dealing edit Notwithstanding the colonists bold response to the Narragansett challenge the settlers realized their defenselessness to attack 127 Bradford instituted a series of measures to secure Plymouth Most important they decided to enclose the settlement within a pale probably much like what was discovered surrounding Nenepashemet s fort They shut the inhabitants within gates that were locked at night and a night guard was posted Standish divided the men into four squadrons and drilled them in where to report in the event of alarm They also came up with a plan of how to respond to fire alarms so as to have a sufficient armed force to respond to possible Native treachery 128 The fence around the settlement required the most effort since it required felling suitable large trees digging holes deep enough to support the large timbers and securing them close enough to each other to prevent penetration by arrows This work had to be done in the winter and at a time too when the settlers were on half rations because of the new and unexpected settlers 129 The work took more than a month to complete 130 False alarms edit By the beginning of March the fortification of the settlement had been accomplished It was now time when the settlers had promised the Massachuset they would come to trade for furs They received another alarm however this time from Hobomok who was still living with them Hobomok told of his fear that the Massachuset had joined in a confederacy with the Narraganset and if Standish and his men went there they would be cut off and at the same time the Narraganset would attack the settlement at Plymouth Hobomok also told them that Tisquantum was part of this conspiracy that he learned this from other Natives he met in the woods and that the settlers would find this out when Tisquantum would urge the settlers into the Native houses for their better advantage 131 This allegation must have come as a shock to the English given that Tisquantum s conduct for nearly a year seemed to have aligned him perfectly with the English interest both in helping to pacify surrounding societies and in obtaining goods that could be used to reduce their debt to the settlers financial sponsors Bradford consulted with his advisors and they concluded that they had to make the mission despite this information The decision was made partly for strategic reasons If the colonists cancelled the promised trip out of fear and instead stayed shut up in our new enclosed towne they might encourage even more aggression But the main reason they had to make the trip was that their Store was almost emptie and without the corn they could obtain by trading we could not long subsist 132 The governor therefore deputed Standish and 10 men to make the trip and sent along both Tisquantum and Hobomok given the jealousy between them 133 Not long after the shallop departed an Indian belonging to Squanto s family came running in He betrayed signs of great fear constantly looking behind him as if someone were at his heels He was taken to Bradford to whom he told that many of the Narraganset together with Corbitant and he thought Massasoit were about to attack Plymouth 133 Winslow who was not there but wrote closer to the time of the incident than did Bradford gave even more graphic details The Native s face was covered in fresh blood which he explained was a wound he received when he tried speaking up for the settlers In this account he said that the combined forces were already at Nemasket and were set on taking advantage of the opportunity supplied by Standish s absence 134 Bradford immediately put the settlement on military readiness and had the ordnance discharge three rounds in the hope that the shallop had not gone too far Because of calm seas Standish and his men had just reached Gurnet s Nose heard the alarm and quickly returned When Hobomok first heard the news he said flatly that it was false Not only was he assured of Massasoit s faithfulness he knew that his being a pniese meant he would have been consulted by Massasoit before he undertook such a scheme To make further sure Hobomok volunteered his wife to return to Pokanoket to assess the situation for herself At the same time Bradford had the watch maintained all that night but there were no signs of Natives hostile or otherwise 135 Hobomok s wife found the village of Pokanoket quiet with no signs of war preparations She then informed Massasoit of the commotion at Plymouth The sachem was much offended at the carriage of Tisquantum but was grateful for Bradford s trust in him Massasoit He also sent word back that he would send word to the governor pursuant to the first article of the treaty they had entered if any hostile actions were preparing 136 Allegations against Tisquantum edit Winslow writes that by degrees wee began to discover Tisquantum but he does not describe the means or over what period of time this discovery took place There apparently was no formal proceeding The conclusion reached according to Winslow was that Tisquantum had been using his proximity and apparent influence over the English settlers to make himselfe great in the eyes of local Natives for his own benefit Winslow explains that Tisquantum convinced locals that he had the ability to influence the English toward peace or war and that he frequently extorted Natives by claiming that the settlers were about to kill them in order that thereby hee might get gifts to himself to work their peace 137 Bradford s account agrees with Winslow s to this point and he also explains where the information came from by the former passages and other things of like nature 138 evidently referring to rumors Hobomok said he heard in the woods Winslow goes much further in his charge however claiming that Tisquantum intended to sabotage the peace with Massasoit by false claims of Massasoit aggression hoping whilest things were hot in the heat of bloud to provoke us to march into his Country against him whereby he hoped to kindle such a flame as would not easily be quenched and hoping if that blocke were once removed there were no other betweene him and honour which he preferred over life and peace 139 Winslow later remembered one notable though wicked practice of this Tisquantum namely that he told the locals that the English possessed the plague buried under their storehouse and that they could unleash it at will What he referred to was their cache of gunpowder s Massasoit s demand for Tisquantum edit Captain Standish and his men eventually did go to the Massachuset and returned with a good store of Trade On their return they saw that Massasoit was there and he was displaying his anger against Tisquantum Bradford did his best to appease him and he eventually departed Not long afterward however he sent a messenger demanding that Tisquantum be put to death Bradford responded that although Tisquantum deserved to die both in respect of him Massasoit and us but said that Tisquantum was too useful to the settlers because otherwise he had no one to translate Not long afterward the same messenger returned this time with divers others demanding Tisquantum They argued that Tisquantum being a subject of Massasoit was subject pursuant to the first article of the Peace Treaty to the sachem s demand in effect rendition They further argued that if Bradford would not produce pursuant to the Treaty Massasoit had sent many beavers skins to induce his consent Finally if Bradford still would not release him to them the messenger had brought Massasoit s own knife by which Bradford himself could cut off Tisquantum s head and hands to be returned with the messenger Bradford avoided the question of Massasoit s right under the treaty t but refused the beaver pelts saying that It was not the manner of the English to sell men s lives at a price The governor called Tisquantum who had promised not to flee who denied the charges and ascribed them to Hobomok s desire for his downfall He nonetheless offered to abide by Bradford s decision Bradford was ready to deliver him into the hands of his Executioners but at that instance a boat passed before the town in the harbor Fearing that it might be the French Bradford said he had to first identify the ship before dealing with the demand The messenger and his companions however mad with rage and impatient at delay left in great heat 142 Final mission with the settlers edit Arrival of the Sparrow edit The ship the English saw pass before the town was not French but rather a shallop from the Sparrow a shipping vessel sponsored by Thomas Weston and one other of the Plymouth settlement s sponsors which was plying the eastern fishing grounds 143 This boat brought seven additional settlers but no provisions whatsoever nor any hope of any 144 In a letter they brought Weston explained that the settlers were to set up a salt pan operation on one of the islands in the harbor for the private account of Weston He asked the Plymouth colony however to house and feed these newcomers provide them with seed stock and ironically salt until he was able to send the salt pan to them 145 The Plymouth settlers had spent the winter and spring on half rations in order to feed the settlers that had been sent nine months ago without provisions 146 Now Weston was exhorting them to support new settlers who were not even sent to help the plantation 147 He also announced that he would be sending another ship that would discharge more passengers before it would sail on to Virginia He requested that the settlers entertain them in their houses so that they could go out and cut down timber to lade the ship quickly so as not to delay its departure 148 Bradford found the whole business but cold comfort to fill their hungry bellies 149 Bradford was not exaggerating Winslow described the dire straits They now were without bread the want whereof much abated the strength and the flesh of some and swelled others 150 Without hooks or seines or netting they could not collect the bass in the rivers and cove and without tackle and navigation rope they could not fish for the abundant cod in the sea Had it not been for shellfish which they could catch by hand they would have perished 151 But there was more Weston also informed them that the London backers had decided to dissolve the venture Weston urged the settlers to ratify the decision only then might the London merchants send them further support although what motivation they would then have he did not explain 152 That boat also evidently u contained alarming news from the South John Huddleston who was unknown to them but captained a fishing ship that had returned from Virginia to the Maine fishing grounds advised his good friends at Plymouth of the massacre in the Jamestown settlements by the Powhatan in which he said 400 had been killed He warned them Happy is he whom other men s harms doth make to beware 156 This last communication Bradford decided to turn to their advantage Sending a return for this kindness they might also seek fish or other provisions from the fishermen Winslow and a crew were selected to make the voyage to Maine 150 miles away to a place they had never been 159 In Winslow s reckoning he left at the end of May for Damariscove v Winslow found the fishermen more than sympathetic and they freely gave what they could Even though this was not as much as Winslow hoped it was enough to keep them going until the harvest 164 When Winslow returned the threat they felt had to be addressed The general anxiety aroused by Huddleston s letter was heightened by the increasingly hostile taunts they learned of Surrounding villagers were glorying in our weaknesse and the English heard threats about how easie it would be ere long to cut us off Even Massasoit turned cool towards the English and could not be counted on to tamp down this rising hostility So they decided to build a fort on burying hill in town And just as they did when building the palisade the men had to cut down trees haul them from the forest and up the hill and construct the fortified building all with inadequate nutrition and at the neglect of dressing their crops 165 Weston s English settlers edit They might have thought they reached the end of their problems but in June 1622 the settlers saw two more vessels arrive carrying 60 additional mouths to feed These were the passengers that Weston had written would be unloaded from the vessel going on to Virginia That vessel also carried more distressing news Weston informed the governor that he was no longer a part of the company sponsoring the Plymouth settlement The settlers he sent just now and requested the Plymouth settlement to house and feed were for his own enterprise The sixty lusty men would not work for the benefit of Plymouth in fact he had obtained a patent and as soon as they were ready they would settle an area in Massachusetts Bay Other letters also were brought The other venturers in London explained that they had bought out Weston and everyone was better off without him Weston who saw the letter before it was sent advised the settlers to break off from the remaining merchants and as a sign of good faith delivered a quantity of bread and cod to them Although as Bradford noted in the margin he left not his own men a bite of bread The arrivals also brought news that the Fortune had been taken by French pirates and therefore all their past effort to export American cargo valued at 500 would count for nothing Finally Robert Cushman sent a letter advising that Weston s men are no men for us wherefore I prey you entertain them not he also advised the Plymouth Separatists not to trade with them or loan them anything except on strict collateral I fear these people will hardly deal so well with the savages as they should I pray you therefore signify to Squanto that they are a distinct body from us and we have nothing to do with them neither must be blamed for their faults much less can warrant their fidelity As much as all this vexed the governor Bradford took in the men and fed and housed them as he did the others sent to him even though Weston s men would compete with his colony for pelts and other Native trade 166 But the words of Cushman would prove prophetic nbsp Map contained as frontispiece to Wood 1634 Weston s men stout knaves in the words of Thomas Morton 167 were roustabouts collected for adventure 168 and they scandalized the mostly strictly religious villagers of Plymouth Worse they stole the colony s corn wandering into the fields and snatching the green ears for themselves 169 When caught they were well whipped but hunger drove them to steal by night and day The harvest again proved disappointing so that it appeared that famine must still ensue the next year also for lack of seed And they could not even trade for staples because their supply of items the Natives sought had been exhausted 170 Part of their cares were lessened when their coasters returned from scouting places in Weston s patent and took Weston s men except for the sick who remained to the site they selected for settlement called Wessagusset now Weymouth But not long after even there they plagued Plymouth who heard from Natives once friendly with them that Weston s settlers were stealing their corn and committing other abuses 171 At the end of August a fortuitous event staved off another starving winter the Discovery bound for London arrived from a coasting expedition from Virginia The ship had a cargo of knives beads and other items prized by Natives but seeing the desperation of the colonists the captain drove a hard bargain He required them to buy a large lot charged them double their price and valued their beaver pelts at 3s per pound which he could sell at 20s Yet they were glad of the occasion and fain to buy at any price 172 Trading expedition with Weston s men edit The Charity returned from Virginia at the end of September beginning of October It proceeded on to England leaving the Wessagusset settlers well provisioned The Swan was left for their use as well 173 It was not long after they learned that the Plymouth settlers had acquired a store of trading goods that they wrote Bradford proposing that they jointly undertake a trading expedition they to supply the use of the Swan They proposed equal division of the proceeds with payment for their share of the goods traded to await arrival of Weston Bradford assumed they had burned through their provisions Bradford agreed and proposed an expedition southward of the Cape 174 Winslow wrote that Tisquantum and Massasoit had wrought a peace although he doesn t explain how this came about With Tisquantum as guide they might find the passage among the Monomoy Shoals to Nantucket Sound w Tisquantum had advised them he twice sailed through the shoals once on an English and once on a French vessel 176 The venture ran into problems from the start When in Plymouth Richard Green Weston s brother in law and temporary governor of the colony died After his burial and receiving directions to proceed from the succeeding governor of Wessagusset Standish was appointed leader but twice the voyage was turned back by violent winds On the second attempt Standish fell ill On his return Bradford himself took charge of the enterprise 177 In November they set out When they reached the shoals Tisquantum piloted the vessel but the master of the vessel did not trust the directions and bore up Tisquantum directed him through a narrow passage and they were able to harbor near Mamamoycke now Chatham That night Bradford went ashore with a few others Tisquantum acting as translator and facilitator Not having seen any of these Englishmen before the Natives were initially reluctant But Tisquantum coaxed them and they provided a plentiful meal of venison and other victuals They were reluctant to allow the English to see their homes but when Bradford showed his intention to stay on shore they invited him to their shelters having first removed all their belongings As long as the English stayed the Natives would disappear bag and baggage whenever their possessions were seen Eventually Tisquantum persuaded them to trade and as a result the settlers obtained eight hogsheads of corn and beans The villagers also told them that they had seen vessels of good burthen pass through the shoals And so with Tisquantum feeling confident the English were prepared to make another attempt But suddenly Tisquantum became ill and died 178 Death editThe sickness seems to have greatly shaken Bradford for they lingered there for several days before he died Bradford described his death in some detail In this place Tisquantum fell sick of Indian fever bleeding much at the nose which the Indians take as a symptom of death and within a few days died there desiring the Governor to pray for him that he might go to the Englishmen s God in Heaven and bequeathed sundry of his things to English friends as remembrances of his love of whom they had a great loss 179 Without Tisquantum to pilot them the English settlers decided against trying the shoals again and returned to Cape Cod Bay 180 The English Separatists were comforted by the fact that Tisquantum had become a Christian convert William Wood writing a little more than a decade later explained why some of the Ninnimissinuok began recognizing the power of the Englishmens God as they call him because they could never yet have power by their conjurations to damnifie the English either in body or goods and since the introduction of the new spirit the times and seasons being much altered in seven or eight years freer from lightning and thunder and long droughts suddaine and tempestuous dashes of rain and lamentable cold Winters 181 Philbrick speculates that Tisquantum may have been poisoned by Massasoit His bases for the claim are i that other Native Americans had engaged in assassinations during the 17th century and ii that Massasoit s own son Metacomet may have assassinated John Sassamon an event that led to the bloody King Philip s War a half century later He suggests that the peace Winslow says was lately made between the two could have been a rouse but does not explain how Massasoit could have accomplished the feat on the very remote southeast end of Cape Cod more than 85 miles distant from Pokanoket 182 Tisquantum is reputed to be buried in the village of Chatham Port x Assessment memorials representations and folklore editHistorical assessment edit Because almost all the historical records of Tisquantum were written by English Separatists and because most of that writing had the purpose to attract new settlers give account of their actions to their financial sponsors or to justify themselves to co religionists they tended to relegate Tisquantum or any other Native American to the role of assistant to them in their activities No real attempt was made to understand Tisquantum or Native culture particularly religion The closest that Bradford got in analyzing him was to say that Tisquantum sought his own ends and played his own game to enrich himself But in the end he gave sundry of his things to sundry of his English friends 179 Historians assessment of Tisquantum depended on the extent they were willing to consider the possible biases or motivations of the writers Earlier writers tended to take the colonists statements at face value Current writers especially those familiar with ethnohistorical research have given a more nuanced view of Tisquantum among other Native Americans As a result the assessment of historians has run the gamut Adams characterized him as a notable illustration of the innate childishness of the Indian character 184 By contrast Shuffelton says he in his own way was quite as sophisticated as his English friends and he was one of the most widely traveled men in the New England of his time having visited Spain England and Newfoundland as well as a large expanse of his own region 185 Early Plymouth historian Judge John Davis more than a half century before also saw Tisquantum as a child of nature but was willing to grant him some usefulness to the enterprise With some aberrations his conduct was generally irreproachable and his useful services to the infant settlement entitle him to grateful remembrance 186 In the middle of the 20th century Adolf was much harder on the character of Tisquantum his attempt to aggrandize himself by playing the Whites and Indians against each other indicates an unsavory facet of his personality but gave him more importance without him the founding and development of Plymouth would have been much more difficult if not impossible 187 Most have followed the line that Baylies early took of acknowledging the alleged duplicity and also the significant contribution to the settlers survival Although Squanto had discovered some traits of duplicity yet his loss was justly deemed a public misfortune as he had rendered the English much service 188 Memorials and landmarks edit As for monuments and memorials although many as Willison put it clutter up the Pilgrim towns there is none to Squanto 189 The first settlers may have named after him the peninsula called Squantum once in Dorchester 190 now in Quincy during their first expedition there with Tisquantum as their guide 191 Thomas Morton refers to a place called Squanto s Chappell 192 but this is probably another name for the peninsula 193 Literature and popular entertainment edit Tisquantum rarely makes appearances in literature or popular entertainment Of all the 19th century New England poets and story tellers who drew on pre Revolution America for their characters only one seems to have mentioned Tisquantum And while Henry Wadsworth Longfellow himself had five ancestors aboard the Mayflower The Courtship of Miles Standish has the captain blustering at the beginning daring the savages to attack yet the enemies he addresses could not have been known to him by name until their peaceful intentions had already been made known Let them come if they like be it sagamore sachem or pow wow Aspinet Samoset Corbitant Squanto or Tokamahamon Tisquantum is almost equally scarce in popular entertainment but when he appeared it was typically in implausible fantasies Very early in what Willison calls the Pilgrim Apotheosis marked by the 1793 sermon of Reverend Chandler Robbins in which he described the Mayflower settlers as pilgrims 194 a Melo Drama was advertised in Boston titled The Pilgrims Or the Landing of the Forefathrs at Plymouth Rock filled with Indian threats and comic scenes In Act II Samoset carries off the maiden Juliana and Winslow for a sacrifice but the next scene presents A dreadful Combat with Clubs and Shileds between Samoset and Squanto 195 Nearly two centuries later Tisquantum appears again as an action figure in the Disney film Squanto A Warrior s Tale 1994 with not much more fidelity to history Tisquantum voiced by Frank Welker appears in the first episode The Mayflower Voyagers aired October 21 1988 of the animated mini series This Is America Charlie Brown A more historically accurate depiction of Tisquantum as played by Kalani Queypo appeared in the National Geographic Channel film Saints amp Strangers written by Eric Overmyer and Seth Fisher which aired the week of Thanksgiving 2015 196 A brief story of Squanto appears in the novel Dark Tides by Philippa Gregory Apria Books 2020 Didactic literature and folklore edit nbsp Tisquantum returning John Billington from the Nauset in a 1922 storybook for children Where Tisquantum is most encountered is in literature designed to instruct children and young people provide inspiration or guide them to a patriotic or religious truth This came about for two reasons First Lincoln s establishment of Thanksgiving as a national holiday enshrined the New England Anglo Saxon festival vaguely associated with an American strain of Protestantism as something of a national origins myth in the middle of a divisive Civil War when even some Unionists were becoming concerned with rising non Anglo Saxon immigration 197 This coincided as Ceci noted with the noble savage movement which was rooted in romantic reconstructions of Indians for example Hiawatha as uncorrupted natural beings who were becoming extinct in contrast to rising industrial and urban mobs She points to the Indian Head coin first struck in 1859 to commemorate their passing 198 Even though there was only the briefest mention of Thanksgiving in the Plymouth settlers writings and despite the fact that he was not mentioned as being present although living with the settlers he likely was Tisquantum was the focus around which both storylines could be wrapped He is or at least a fictionalized portrayal of him thus a favorite of certain politically conservative American Protestant groups y The story of the selfless noble savage who patiently guided and occasionally saved the Pilgrims to whom he was subservient and who attributed their good fortune solely to their faith all celebrated during a bounteous festival was thought to be an enchanting figure for children and young adults Beginning early in the 20th century Tisquantum entered high school textbooks z children s read aloud and self reading books aa more recently learn to read and coloring books ab and children s religious inspiration books ac Over time and particularly depending on the didactic purpose these books have greatly fictionalized what little historical evidence remains of Tisquantum s life Their portraits of Tisquantum s life and times spans the gamut of accuracy Those intending to teach a moral lesson or tell history from a religious viewpoint tend to be the least accurate even when they claim to be telling a true historical story ad Recently there have been attempts to tell the story as accurately as possible without reducing Tisquantum to a mere servant of the English ae There have even been attempts to place the story in the social and historical context of fur trade epidemics and land disputes 199 Almost none however have dealt with Tisquantum s life after Thanksgiving except occasionally the story of the rescue of John Billington An exception to all of that is the publication of a young adult version of Philbrick s best selling adult history 200 Nevertheless given the sources which can be drawn on Tisquantum s story inevitably is seen from the European perspective Notes references and sources editNotes edit Kinnicutt proposes meanings for the various renderings of his name Squantam a contracted form of Musquantum meaning He is angry Tantum is a shortened form of Keilhtannittoom meaning My great god Tanto from Kehtanito for He is the greatest god and Tisquantam for Atsquantam possibly for He possesses the god of evil 6 Dockstader writes that Tiquantum means door or entrance although his source is not explained 7 The languages of Southern New England are known today as Western Abenaki Massachusett Loup A and Loup B Narragansett Mohegan Pequot and Quiripi Unquachog 13 Many 17th century writers state that numerous people in the coastal areas of Southern New England were fluent in two or more of these languages 14 Roger Williams writes in his grammar of the Narragansett language that their Dialects doe exceedingly differ between the French settlements in Canada and the Dutch settlements in New York but within that compass a man may by this helpe converse with thousands of Natives all over the Countrey 15 Adolf 16 Winslow called this supernatural being Hobbamock the Indians north of the Pokanokets call it Hobbamoqui he said and expressly equated him with the devil 28 William Wood called this same supernatural being Abamacho and said that it presided over the infernal regions where loose livers were condemned to dwell after death 29 Winslow used the term powah to refer to the shaman who conducted the healing ceremony 30 and Wood described these ceremonies in detail 31 Paleopathological evidence exists for European importation of typhoid diphtheria influenza measles chicken pox whooping cough tuberculosis yellow fever scarlet fever gonorrhea and smallpox 35 See e g Salisbury 1982 pp 265 66 n 15 Shuffelton 1976 p 109 Adolf 1964 p 247 Adams 1892 p 24 n 2 Deane 1885 p 37 Kinnicutt 1914 pp 109 11 See Philbrick 2006 pp 95 96 Mourt s Relation says that they left on June 10 but Prince points out that it was a Sabbath and therefore unlikely to be the day of their departure 80 Both he and Young 81 follow Bradford who recorded that they left on July 2 82 we promised him restitution amp desired him either to come Patuxet for satisfaction or else we would bring them so much corne againe he promised to come wee used him very kindly for the present 88 Bradford describes him as a proper lusty man and a man of account for his valour and parts amongst the Indians 95 The Abeneki were known as Tarrateens or Tarrenteens and lived on the Kennebec and nearby rivers in Maine There was great enmity between the Tarrentines and the Alberginians or the Indians of Massachusetts Bay 106 Bradford quoted Deuteronomy 32 8 which those familiar would understand the unspoken allusion to a waste howling wilderness But the chapter also has the assurance that the Lord kept Jacob as the apple of his eye So Alexander Young put it as early as 1841 114 Humins surmises that the entourage included sachems and other headmen of the confederation s villages 116 According to John Smith s account in New England Trials 1622 the Fortune arrived at New Plymouth on November 11 1621 o s and departed December 12 120 Bradford described the 35 that were to remain as unexpected or looked for and detailed how they were less prepared than the original settlers had been bringing no provisions no material to construct habitation and only the poorest of clothes It was only when they entered Cape Cod Bay according to Bradford that they began to consider what desperation they would be in if the original colonists had perished The Fortune also brought a letter from London financier Thomas Weston complaining about holding the Mayflower for so long the previous year and failing to lade her for her return Bradford s response was surprisingly mild They also shipped back three hogshead of furs as well as sasssafras and clapboard for a total freight value of 500 121 Winslow wrote that the Narragansett had sought and obtained a peace agreement with the Plymouth settlers the previous summer 122 although no mention of it is made in any of the writings of the settlers The story was revealed by Tisquantum himself when some barrels of gunpowder were unearthed under a house Hobomok asked what they were and Tisquantum replied that it was the plague that he had told him and others about Oddly in a tale of the wickedness of Tisquantum for claiming the English had control over the plague is this addendum Hobomok asked one of the settlers whether it was true and the settler replied no But the God of the English had it in store and could send it at is pleasure to the destruction of his and our enemies 140 The first two numbered items of the treaty as it was printed in Mourt s Relation provided 1 That neither he nor any of his should injure or doe hurt to any of our people 2 And if any of his did hurt to any of ours he should send the offender that we might punish him 141 As printed the terms do not seem reciprocal but Massasoit apparently thought they were Neither Bradford in his answer to the messenger nor Bradford or Winslow in their history of this event denies that the treaty entitled Massasoit to the return of Tisquantum The events in Bradford s and Winslow s chronologies or at least the ordering of the narratives do not agree Bradford s order is 1 Provisions spent no source of food found 2 end of May brings shallop from Sparrow with Weston letters and seven new settlers 3 Charity and Swan arrive depositing sixty lusty men 4 amidst their straights letter from Huddleston brought by this boat from the east 5 Winslow and men return with them 6 this summer they build fort 153 Winslow s sequence is 1 Shallop from Sparrow arrives 2 end of May 1622 food storehouse spent 3 Winslow and his men sail to Damariscove in Maine 4 on return finds state of colony much weakened from lack of bread 5 Native taunts cause settlers to start building fort at expense of planting 6 end of June beginning of July Charity and Swan arrive 154 The chronology adopted below follows Willison s combination of the two accounts 155 Although Bradford s rather careless use of pronouns makes it unclear which pilot Winslow followed to the fishing grounds in Maine which carried the Huddleton letter or indeed who brought the Huddleton letter 156 it is likely the shallop from the Sparrow and not another boat from Huddleston himself as Willison and Adams before him 157 conclude Philbrick has Huddleston s letter arrive after the Charity and Swan and only mentions Winslow s voyage to the fishing grounds which if it took place after the arrival of those two vessels would have taken place after the end of the fishing season 158 The islands off the Damariscove river in Maine early on provided stages for fishermen from early times 160 Damariscove Island was called Damerill s Isles on John Smith s 1614 map Bradford noted that in 1622 there were many more ships come afishing 161 The Sparrow was stationed on these grounds 162 Morison states that 300 to 400 sails of different countries including 30 to 40 English as well as some from Virginia came to fish these grounds in May leaving in the summer 163 Winslow s mission was to beg or borrow supplies from these fishermen These were the same perilous shoals and breakers that caused the Mayflower to turn back on November 9 1620 o s 175 A marker on the front lawn of the Nickerson Genealogical Research Center on Orleans Road in Chatham states that Tisquantum is buried at the head of Ryder s Cove Nickerson claims that the skeleton which washed out of a hill between Head of the Bay and Cove s Pond around 1770 was probably Squanto s 183 See for example The Story of Squanto Christian Worldview Journal August 26 2009 Archived from the original on December 8 2013 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Squanto A Thanksgiving Drama Focus on the Family Daily Broadcast May 1 2007 Tell Your Kids the Story of Squanto Christian Headlines November 19 2014 History of Thanksgiving Indian Why Squanto already knew English Bill Petro Building the Gap from Strategy and Execution November 23 2016 The illustration at the head of this article for example is one of two of Tisquantum in Bricker Garland Armor 1911 The Teaching of Agriculture in the High School New York Macmillan Co Plates after p 112 For example Olcott Frances Jenkins 1922 Good Stories for Great Birthdays Arranged for Story Telling and Reading Aloud and for the Children s Own Reading Boston Houghton Mifflin Co This book was reissued by the University of Virginia Library in 1995 Tisquantum is referred to as Tisquantum and A Big Indian in the stories entitled The Father of the New England Colonies William Bradford at pp 125 139 See also Bradstreet Howard 1925 Squanto Hartford Conn Bradstreet E g Beals Frank L Ballard Lowell C 1954 Real Adventure with the Pilgrim Settlers William Bradford Miles Standish Squanto Roger Williams San Francisco H Wagner Publishing Co Bulla Clyde Robert 1954 Squanto Friend of the White Men New York T Y Crowell Bulla Clyde Robert 1956 John Billington friend of Squanto New York Crowell Stevenson Augusta Goldstein Nathan 1962 Squanto Young Indian Hunter Indianapolis Indiana Bobbs Merrill Anderson A M 1962 Squanto and the Pilgrims Chicago Wheeler Ziner Feenie 1965 Dark Pilgrim Philadelphia Chilton Books Graff Robert Graff 1965 Squanto Indian Adventurer Champaign Illinois Garrard Publishing Co Grant Matthew G 1974 Squanto The Indian who Saved the Pilgrims Chicago Creative Education Jassem Kate 1979 Squanto The Pilgrim Adventure Mahwah New Jersey Troll Associates ISBN 9780893751616 Cole Joan Wade Newsom Tom 1979 Squanto Oklahoma City Oklahoma Economy Co Kessel Joyce K 1983 Squanto and the First Thanksgiving Minneapolis Minnesota Carolrhoda Bookr Rothaus James R 1988 Squanto The Indian who Saved the Pilgrims 1500 1622 Mankato Minnesota Creative Education Celsi Teresa Noel 1992 Squanto and the First Thanksgiving Austin Texas Raintree Steck Vaughn Dubowski Cathy East 1997 The Story of Squanto First Friend to the P Milwaukee Wisconsin Gareth Stevens Publishers Bruchac Joseph 2000 Squanto s Journey The Story of the First Thanksgiving n l Silver Whistle Samoset and Squanto Peterborough New Hampshire Cobblestone Publishing Co 2001 Whitehurst Susan 2002 A Plymouth Partnership Pilgrims and Native Americans New York PowerKids Press ISBN 9780823958108 Buckley Susan Washborn 2003 Squanto the Pilgrims Friend New York Scholastic Hirschfelder Arlene B 2004 Squanto 1585 1622 Mankato Minnesota Blue Earth Books Roop Peter Roop Connie 2005 Thank You Squanto New York Scholastic Banks Joan 2006 Squanto Chicago Wright Group McGraw Hill Ghiglieri Carol Noll Cheryl Kirk 2007 Squanto A Friend to the Pilgrims New York Scholastic E g Hobbs Carolyn Roland Pat 1981 Squanto Milton Florida Printed by the Children s Bible Club The Legend of Squanto Carol Stream Illinois 2005 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Metaxas Eric 2005 Squanto and the First Thanksgiving Rowayton Connecticut ABDO Publishing Co The book was retitled Squanto and the Miracle of Thanksgiving when it was republished in 2014 by the religious publisher Thomas Nelson The book was turned into an animated video by Rabbit Ears Entertainment in 2007 For example Metaxas 2005 praised as a true story by the author s colleague Chuck Colson misstates almost every well documented fact in Tisquantum s life It begins with the abduction of 12 year old Tisquantum which the first sentence dates at the year of our Lord 1608 rather than 1614 When he meets the Pilgrims he greets Governor Bradford rather than Carver The rest is a fictIonalized religious parable which ends with Tisquantum after Thanksgiving and before any allegations of treachery thanking God for the Pilgrims Bruchac 2000 for example even names Hunt Smith and Dermer and tries to portray Tisquantum from a Native American rather than Pilgrim perspective References edit Nies Judith 1996 Native American history a chronology of the vast achievements of a culture and their links to world events New York Ballantine Books p 122 ISBN 0345393503 Retrieved November 25 2022 Ransomed by monks he worked in a monastery Baxter 1890 p I104 n 146 Kinnicutt 1914 pp 110 12 Young 1841 p 202 n 1 Mann 2005 Martin 1978 p 34 Kinnicutt 1914 p 112 Dockstader 1977 p 278 a b Salisbury 1981 p 230 Salisbury 1981 pp 228 Salisbury 1981 pp 228 29 Bragdon 1996 p i Letter of Emmanuel Altham to his brother Sir Edward Altham September 1623 in James 1963 p 29 A copy of the letter is also reproduced online by MayflowerHistory com Goddard 1978 pp passim Bragdon 1996 pp 28 29 34 Williams 1643 pp ii iii See also Salisbury 1981 p 229 Adolf 1964 p 257 n 1 Bradford 1952 p 82 n 7 Bennett 1955 pp 370 71 Bennett 1955 pp 374 75 Russell 1980 pp 120 21 Jennings 1976 pp 65 67 Jennings 1976 p 112 Winslow 1624 p 57 reprinted at Young 1841 p 361 Bragdon 1996 p 146 Winslow 1624 pp 59 60 reprinted at Young 1841 pp 364 65 Wood 1634 p 90 Williams 1643 p 136 Winslow 1624 pp 57 58 reprinted at Young 1841 pp 362 63 Jennings 1976 p 113 Williams 1643 pp 178 79 Bragdon 1996 pp 148 50 Bragdon 1996 p 142 Winslow 1624 p 53 reprinted at Young 1841 p 356 Wood 1634 p 105 For more on Abbomocho see Bragdon 1996 pp 143 188 90 201 02 Winslow 1624 p 54 reprinted at Young 1841 p 357 Wood 1634 pp 92 94 a b Robbins 1956 p 61 Bragdon 1996 p 143 Martin 1978 p 41 Martin 1978 p 43 Jennings 1976 pp 15 16 22 24 26 31 Martin 1978 pp 43 51 Jennings 1976 pp 85 88 Burrage 1906 p 355 Rosier 1605 reprinted at Burrage 1906 p 379 Rosier 1605 reprinted at Burrage 1906 p 357 Gorges 1658 reprinted at Baxter 1890 p II 8 Adams 1892 p 24 n 2 cont d a b c Smith 1907 p II 4 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 233 reprinted in Young 1841 p 186 See also Dunn 1993 p 39 and Salisbury 1981 p 234 Smith 1907 pp II 4 5 Baxter 1890 p I 211 See Salisbury 1981 p 234 Baxter 1890 p I 209 Gorges 1622 p 11 reprinted in Baxter 1890 pp I 209 10 Ruiz Purificacion Malaga Squanto y el dia de accion de gracias Sociedad Boletin de la Sociedad de Amigos de la Cultura de Velez Malaga Numero 20 21 89 94 OPP Bradford 1952 p 81 and Davis 1908 p 112 Prowse 1895 p 104 n 2 Smith 1907 p II 62 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 35 reprinted in Young 1841 p 191 Bradford simply notes that he was entertained by a merchant in London OPP Bradford 1952 p 81 and Davis 1908 p 112 Gorges 1622 p 13 reprinted in Baxter 1890 p I 212 Deane 1885 p 134 Dunn 1993 p 40 OPP Bradford 1952 p 82 reprinted in Davis 1908 pp 112 13 Gorges 1658 p 20 reprinted in Baxter 1890 p II 29 Russell 1980 p 22 OPP Bradford 1952 p 84 and Davis 1908 p 114 Pratt 1858 p 485 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 31 32 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 81 83 and Young 1841 pp 181 82 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 33 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 84 and Young 1841 p 181 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 33 35 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 87 89 and Young 1841 pp 186 89 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 35 36 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 90 92 and Young 1841 pp 190 92 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 36 37 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 92 94 and Young 1841 pp 192 93 a b Mourt s Relation 1622 p 37 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 94 and Young 1841 p 194 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 38 39 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 95 97 and Young 1841 pp 195 97 a b OPP Bradford 1952 p 81 and Davis 1908 p 111 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 39 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 97 and Young 1841 p 196 OPP Bradford 1952 p 85 and Davis 1908 pp 115 16 OPP Bradford 1952 p 85 and Davis 1908 p 116 Letter from E W to George Morton dated December 11 1621 in Mourt s Relation 1622 p 60 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 131 42 at 132 33 and Young 1841 pp 230 38 at 230 31 Letter of John Pory to the Earl of Southampton January 13 1622 23 in James 1963 pp 7 8 OPP Bradford 1952 p 94 and Davis 1908 p 123 harvnb Morton 1637 p 104 reprinted in Adams 1883 p 245 Adolf 1964 p 249 Salisbury 1981 pp 240 242 43 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 40 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 98 and Young 1841 p 202 Prince 1826 p 191 n Young 1841 p 204 n 3 OPP Bradford 1952 p 87 and Davis 1908 pp 117 18 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 40 41 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 98 101 and Young 1841 pp 202 04 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 45 46 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 45 47 and Young 1841 pp 210 211 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 87 88 and Davis 1908 p 118 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 49 50 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 112 13 and Young 1841 pp 214 15 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 50 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 113 14 and Young 1841 pp 215 16 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 51 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 115 and Young 1841 p 217 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 50 52 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 114 17 and Young 1841 pp 216 18 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 119 and Young 1841 p 219 OPP Bradford 1952 p 88 and Davis 1908 pp 118 19 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 118 and Young 1841 p 219 Bradford 1952 p 88 n 4 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 118 20 and Young 1841 pp 219 20 OPP Bradford 1952 p 88 and Davis 1908 p 119 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 118 19 and Young 1841 p 219 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 53 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 118 19 and Young 1841 pp 219 20 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 88 and Davis 1908 p 119 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 54 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 120 and Young 1841 p 220 a b c OPP Bradford 1952 p 89 and Davis 1908 p 120 OPP Bradford 1952 p 89 and Davis 1908 p 120 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 54 56 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 121 23 and Young 1841 pp 220 23 Morton 1669 p 29 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 57 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 124 and Young 1841 p 224 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 57 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 124 25 and Young 1841 pp 224 25 Hutchinson 1765 pp 456 57 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 57 58 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 125 26 and Young 1841 p 225 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 58 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 127 28 and Young 1841 pp 226 27 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 59 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 129 and Young 1841 p 227 Mourt s Relation 1622 pp 58 60 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 127 30 and Young 1841 pp 226 29 OPP Bradford 1952 p 90 and Davis 1908 p 120 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865 pp 133 35 and Young 1841 pp 232 33 OPP Bradford 1952 p 90 and Davis 1908 p 121 Young 1841 p 231 n 3 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 133 and Young 1841 p 231 Humins 1987 p 61 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 61 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 133 and Young 1841 pp 231 32 Morton 1669 p 24 Salisbury 1981 p 241 Arber 1910 p I 260 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 90 96 and Davis 1908 pp 121 25 Winslow 1624 p 1 reprinted in Young 1841 p 280 Winslow 1624 pp 1 2 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 280 81 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 96 97 and Davis 1908 p 125 Winslow 1624 pp 2 3 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 281 83 Winslow 1624 pp 3 4 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 283 84 Winslow 1624 p 4 reprinted in Young 1841 p 284 OPP Bradford 1952 p 97 and Davis 1908 p 126 OPP Bradford 1952 p 96 and Davis 1908 p 125 Winslow 1624 pp 4 5 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 284 85 OPP Bradford 1952 p 96 and Davis 1908 p 125 Winslow 1624 p 5 reprinted in Young 1841 p 285 Winslow 1624 p 6 reprinted in Young 1841 p 286 a b OPP Bradford 1952 p 98 and Davis 1908 p 127 Winslow 1624 pp 6 7 reprinted in Young 1841 p 287 OPP Bradford 1952 p 98 and Davis 1908 p 127 Winslow 1624 p 7 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 287 88 Winslow 1624 pp 7 8 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 288 89 Winslow 1624 p 8 reprinted in Young 1841 p 289 OP Bradford 1952 p 99 and Davis 1908 p 128 Winslow 1624 p 128 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 289 90 Winslow 1624 pp 10 11 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 292 92 Mourt s Relation 1622 p 37 reprinted in Dexter 1865 p 93 and Young 1841 p 193 Winslow 1624 pp 9 10 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 290 91 Bradford 1952 p 99 100 nn 3 amp 4 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 99 100 and Davis 1908 p 128 OPP Bradford 1952 p 100 and Young 1841 pp 129 See also Bradford 1952 p 100 n 5 Willison 1945 p 204 Philbrick 2006 p 135 Willison 1945 p 204 OPP Bradford 1952 p 101 and Davis 1908 p 129 OPP Bradford 1952 p 101 and Davis 1908 p 130 Winslow 1624 p 12 reprinted in Young 1841 p 294 Winslow 1624 pp 12 13 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 294 95 OPP Bradford 1952 p 102 and Davis 1908 pp 130 31 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 99 112 and Davis 1908 pp 128 48 Winslow 1624 pp 12 15 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 292 97 Willison 1945 pp 204 10 a b OPP Bradford 1952 p 110 and Davis 1908 p 138 Adams 1892 p 53 Philbrick 2006 pp 15 36 Willison 1945 p 206 Williamson 1839 p 56 amp n OPP Bradford 1952 p 99 and Davis 1908 p 128 OPP Bradford 1952 p 99 and Davis 1908 p 128 Bradford 1952 p 99 n 4 Winslow 1624 pp 11 13 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 292 95 Winslow 1624 p 13 reprinted in Young 1841 p 295 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 103 09 and Davis 1908 pp 132 37 Morton 1637 p 117 reprinted in Adams 1883 p 261 Adams 1892 p 56 Winslow 1624 pp 13 14 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 296 97 OPP Bradford 1952 p 112 and Davis 1908 p 139 Winslow 1624 pp 14 15 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 297 98 Bradford 1952 p 112 and Davis 1908 p 139 Winslow 1624 p 15 reprinted in Young 1841 p 299 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 113 14 and Davis 1908 pp 140 41 Young 1841 p 103 n 1 Winslow 1624 pp 15 16 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 299 300 Winslow 1624 p 16 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 299 300 OPP Bradford 1952 pp 113 14 and Davis 1908 p 141 Winslow 1624 pp 17 18 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 300 02 a b OPP Bradford 1952 p 114 and Davis 1908 p 141 Winslow 1624 pp 17 18 reprinted in Young 1841 pp 301 02 Wood 1634 p 94 Philbrick 2006 pp 138 amp 383 Nickerson 1994 p 200 Adams 1892 p I 36 Shuffelton 1976 p 108 Davis 1826 pp 85 86 n Adolf 1964 p 256 Baylies 1830 p 96 Willison 1945 p 468 n 3 Chronological and Topographical Account of Dorchester Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 9 147 99 164 1804 Young 1841 p 226 n 3 Morton 1637 pp 84 93 reprinted in Adams 1883 pp 216 229 Young 1841 pp 190 91 n 3 Adams 1883 p 216 n 3 Willison 1945 p 421 Willison 1945 pp 484 85 Friedlander Whitney October 29 2015 Saints amp Strangers Cast on Bringing Early American Settlers to Life Variety Retrieved December 15 2017 Hobsbawm amp Ranger 1983 p 279 Ceci 1990 p 83 See e g Stefoff Rebecca 2001 The Colonies New York Benchmark Books Philbrick Nathaniel 2008 The Mayflower and the Pilgrims New World New York G P Putnam s Sons ISBN 9780399247958 Sources edit Primary edit Archer Gabriel 1843 The Relation of Captain Gosnold s Voyage to the North part of Virginia begun the sixth and twentieth of March Anno 42 Elizabethae Reginae 1602 and delivered by Gabriel Archer a gentleman in the said voyage Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 3 8 72 81 The book was first published in Purchas 1625 pp IV 1647 51 An annotated version is contained in Levermore 1912 pp I 43 54 Bradford William 1906 Governor William Bradford s Letter Book Boston Massachusetts Massachusetts Society of Mayflower Descendants Bradford William 1952 Morison Samuel Eliot ed Of Plymouth Plantation 1620 1647 New York Alfred A Knopf LCCN 51013222 This is the modern critical edition of the manuscript by William Bradford entitled simply Of plimouth plantation In the notes and references the manuscript as opposed to the printed versions is sometimes referred to as OPP The first book of the manuscript had been copied into Plymouth church records by Nathaniel Morton Bradford s nephew and secretary and it was this version that was annotated and printed in Young 1841 pp 1 108 the original at a time having been missing since the beginning of the American Revolution In the decade after the publication by Young the original manuscript was discovered to be in the library of the Bishop of London in Fulham Palace The Massachusetts Historical Society arranged for a longhand copy to be made That version was published in Volume III of the Fourth Series of the Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 1856 which volume is hosted by the Internet Archive When the manuscript was returned to Massachusetts at the end of the 19th century the Massachusetts legislature commissioned a new transcription to be published While the version that resulted was more faithful to the idiosyncratic orthography of Bradford it contained according to Morison many of the same mistakes as the transcription published in 1856 The legislature s version was published in 1898 A copy is hosted by the Internet Archive That version was the basis of the annotated version published as Davis William T ed 1908 Bradford s History of Plymouth Plantation 1606 1646 New York C Scribner s Sons The 1982 Barnes amp Noble reprint of this edition can be found online at HathiTrust A digitized version with most of Davis s annotations and notes removed is hosted at the University of Maryland s Early Americas Digital Archive The most amply annotated and literrally transcribed edition of the work is Ford 1912 The history of the manuscript is described in the Editorial Preface to the 1856 publication by the Massachusetts Historical Society and more fully in the Introduction of Morison s edition pp xxvii xl which also contains a history of the published editions of the manuscript pp xl xliii Brereton John 1602 A Brief and true Relation of the Discoverie of the North Part of Virginia London Georg Bishop A facsimile reprint with introduction by Luther S Livingston and published by Dodd Mead amp Co in 1903 is hosted by the Internet Archive A digitized version with page numbers is also hosted by the University of Michigan An annotated version can also be found in Burrage 1906 pp 353 94 Brinley Francis 1798 A Brief Account of the Several Settlements and Governments in and about the lands of the Narragansett Bay Bay in New England Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 5 216 220 Champlain Samuel de 1878 82 Slafter Edmund F ed Title Voyages of Samuel de Champlain Translated by Otis Charles Pomeroy Boston The Prince Society LCCN 03017624 Hosted by Internet Archives Volume I 1567 35 1880 Volume II 1604 1610 1878 Volume III 1611 1618 1882 Cushman Robert 1622a A sermon preached at Plimmoth in New England December 9 1621 London Printed by I ohn D awson for Iohn Bellamie Repinted in Cushman Robert 1858 The First Sermon Ever Preached in New England New York J E D Comstock Cushman Robert 1622b Reasons amp considerations touching the lawfulnesse of removing out of England into the parts of America A relation or Journall of the beginning and proceedings of the English plantation setled at Plimoth in New England by certaine English adventurers both merchants and others London Printed for John Bellamie pp 60 72 Gookin Daniel 1792 Historical Collections of the Indians in New England Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 3rd series 1 141 229 Reprint of 1674 manuscript Gorges Ferdinando 1622 A briefe relation of the discovery and plantation of Nevv England London Printed by John Haviland and are to be sold by William Bladen Published under the authorship of Plymouth Council for New England This work was published in Purchas 1625 pp IV 1827 1832 in the 1905 07 reprint it is found volume 19 pp 269 284 and reprinted by the Massachusetts Historical Society as Gorges Ferdinando 1832 A Brief Relation of the Discovery and Plantation of New England Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 2nd series 9 1 25 The booklet was also reprinted in Baxter 1890 pp I 199 240 Gorges Ferdinando 1658 A Briefe Narration of the Originall Undertakings for the Advancement of Plantations into the Parts of America London Printed by E Beudenell for Nath Brook This pamphlet was reprinted by the Massachusetts Historical Society as Gorges Ferdinando 1837 A Briefe Narration of the Originall Undertakings for the Advancement of Plantations into the Parts of America Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 3rd series 6 45 93 Hosted by the Internet Archive And by the Maine Historical Society as Gorges Ferdinando 1847 A Briefe Narration Collections of the Maine Historical Society Collections of the Maine Historical Society v 2 v xiv 15 71 Hosted online by the HathiTrust It is also reprinted in Baxter 1890 pp II 1 81 Hubbard William 1677 A Narrative of the Troubles with the Indians in New England from the First Planting thereof in the year 1607 to this Present Year 1677 But Chiefly of the Late Troubles in the Two Last Years 1675 and 1676 To which is added a discourse about the warre with the Pequods in the year 1637 Boston Printed by John Foster LCCN 03026260 This volume was reprinted and annotated as Drake 1865 Johnson Edward 1654 Wonder Working Providence of Sions Saviour in New England London Printed for Nath Brooke A facsiile copy of the work with original page numbers is reproduced in the second volume of Poole William Frederick ed 1867 Wonder Working Providence of Sions Saviour in New England Andover Massachusetts W F Draper This work is hosted by Hathitrust Volume I and Volume II Morton Nathaniel 1669 New Englands Memorial Cambridge S G and M J for John Ulster of Boston A facsimile reproduction is contained in Lord Arthur ed 1903 New Englands Memorial Boston The Club of Odd Volumes An early annotated edition is Davis John ed 1826 New England s Memorial by Nathaniel Morton Boston Crocker amp Brewster This book is largely based on the manuscript Of Plymouth Plantation by William Bradford Morton s uncle Morton Thomas 1637 New English Canaan or New Canaan Amsterdam Jacob Frederick Stam an annotated version of which retaining the original orthography is contained together with introductory matter and notes in Adams Charles Frances Jr ed 1883 New England Canaan of Thomas Morton Boston The Prince Society Retrieved November 22 2016 Mourt s Relation 1622 A relation or Journall of the beginning and proceedings of the English plantation setled at Plimoth in New England by certaine English adventurers both merchants and others London Printed for John Bellamie This work the authors of which are not credited is commonly called Mourt s Relation and is generally accepted to have been written by William Bradford and Edward Winslow as to the narrative parts and Robert Cushman as to the religious and promotional parts An annotated version was first printed in Young 1841 pp 109 251 Another annotated version is Dexter Henry Martyn ed 1865 Mourt s Relation or Journal of the Plantation at Plymouth Boston John Kimball Wiggin Retrieved December 18 2016 via Internet Archive Several different copies of that book are also hosted by HathiTrust A version with contemporary orthography and comments was published in connection with the Plimouth Plantation Inc as Heath Dwight B ed 1963 Mourt s Relation A Journal of the Pilgrims at Plymouth Bedford Massachusetts Applewood Books ISBN 0918222842 Pratt Phineas 1858 A Declaration of the Affairs of the English People that First Inhabited New England Collections of the Massachusetts Historical Society 4 4 474 87 Purchas Samuel ed 1625 Hakluytus posthumus or Purchas his Pilgrimes Contayning a history of the world in sea voyages amp lande travells by Englishmen and others London Imprinted for H Fetherston The original imprint was In fower parts each containing five bookes All four volumes parts are hosted online by the Library of Congress The 1905 07 reproduction was printed in 20 volumves one for each book Purchas Samuel ed 1905 Hakluytus posthumus Works issued by the Hakluyt Society Extra series no 14 33 Glasgow J MacLehose and Sons Rosier James 1605 A True Relation of the most prosperous voyage made this present yeere 1605 by Captaine George Waymouth in the discovery of the land of Virginia London Geor Bishop The pamphlet was reprinted in an 1877 edition hosted online by HathiTrust It is reprinted with annotations at Burrage 1906 pp 357 94 Smith John 1616 A description of New England or The observations and discoveries of Captain John Smith admirall of that country in the north of America in the year of our Lord 1614 London Printed by Humfrey Lownes for Robert Clerke This book is reprinted in Arber 1910 pp 175 232 A digitized version can be downloaded from The Digital Commons at University of Nebraska Lincoln Smith John 1620 New Englands trials London Printed by William Jones Smith John 1624 The generall historie of Virginia New England amp the Summer Isles London Printed by I D and I H for Michael Sparkes Macmillan published a verbatim version of the first printing with different pagination of this work as well as Smith s 1630 autobiography and his Sea Grammar Smith John 1907 The generall historie of Virginia New England amp the Summer Isles together with The true travels adventures and observations and A sea grammar New York Macmillan The Macmillan version is hosted by the Library of Congress in two volumes Volume I and Volume II A searchable version with various download options of the same book is hosted by the Internet Archive Voume I and Volume II The Generall History of Virginia is also contained in Arber 1910 pp I 273 38 II 385 784 The work was twice republished in Smith s life in 1726 and 1727 and immediately after his death in 1732 Smith John 1631 Advertisement for the unexperienced Planters of New England or anywhere London John Haviland Whitmore W H ed 1867 John Dunton s Letters from New England Boston Printed for the Prince Society by T R Marvin amp Son Williams Roger 1643 A key into the language of America or An help to the language of the natives in that part of America called New England London Printed by Gregory Dexter A digitized version with modern typeface but 1643 pagination is hosted by the University of Michigan Winslow Edward 1624 Good newes from New England or A true relation of things very remarkable at the plantation of Plimoth in New England Together with a relation of such religious and civill lawes and customes as are in practise amongst the Indians London Printed by I D awson and Eliot s Court Press for William Bladen and John Bellamie The work is reprinted with annotations in Young 1841 pp 269 375 Wood William 1634 New Englands Prospect London Tho Coates for John Bellamie A facsimile reproduction with original pagination is printed in an 1865 edition together with a new preface and one from a 1764 reprinting by The Society of Boston and hosted by the Internet Archive Secondary edit Adams Charles Francis 1892 Three Episodes of Massachusetts History Boston Houghton Mifflin and Company Online via HathiTrust Multiple copies The Settlement of Boston Bay is found in Volume 1 pp 1 360 The chapter on Tisquantum is found at pp 23 44 Adolf Leonard A Summer 1964 Squanto s Role in Pilgrim Diplomacy Ethnohistory 11 3 247 61 doi 10 2307 480471 JSTOR 480471 Arber Edward ed 1910 Travels and Works of Captain John Smith Edinburgh John Grant Hosted online by the Internet Archive Volume I and Volume II Bartlett John Russell ed 1963 The Complete Writings of Roger Williams Vol 6 New York Russell amp Russell Inc LCCN 63011034 Axtell James January 1978 The Ethnohistory of Early America A Review Essay William and Mary Quarterly 35 1 110 44 doi 10 2307 1922574 JSTOR 1922574 Bancroft George 1862 History of the United States from the Discovery of the American Continent History of the Colonization of the United States Vol 1 Boston Massachusetts Little Brown amp Co Baxter James Phinney 1890 Sir Ferdinando Gorges and his Province of Maine Boston The Prince Society In three volumes online at the Internet Archive as follows Volume 1 consists of Baxter s memoir of Sir Ferdinando Gorges and A briefe relation of the discovery and plantation of New England London J Haviland for W Bladen 1622 Volume 2 includes A briefe narration of the original undertakings of the advancement of plantation into the parts of American by Sir Ferdinando Gorges London E Brudenell for N Brook 1658 as well as other works of Gorges and his son Thomas Gorges Volume 3 is devoted to Gorges s letters and other papers 1596 1646 Baylies Francis 1830 An Historical Memoir of the Colony of New Plymouth Vol 1 Part the First From 1620 to 1641 Boston Hilliard Gray Little and Wilkins Bennett M K October 1955 The Food Economy of the New England Indians 1605 75 Journal of Political Economy 63 5 369 397 doi 10 1086 257706 JSTOR 1826569 S2CID 154207490 Bicknell Thomas W 1908 Sowams With Ancient Records of Sowams and Parts Adjacent Illustrated New Haven Connecticut Associated Publishers of American Records LCCN 08019182 Bragdon Kathleen J 1996 Native People of Southern New England 1650 1775 Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 0806140046 Brown Alexander 1897 Genesis of the United States Vol 1 Boston Houghton Mifflin and Co Burrage Henry S ed 1906 Early English and French voyages chiefly from Hakluyt 1534 1608 New York Charles Scribner s Sons The work consists of first hand accounts of early voyages to the New World with introduction and notes by Burrage Burrage Henry S 1914 The Beginnings of Colonial Maine 1602 1658 Portland Mainee Printed for the state LCCN 14008527 Ceci Lynn April 4 1975 Fish Fertilizer A Native North American Practice Science 188 4183 26 30 Bibcode 1975Sci 188 26C doi 10 1126 science 188 4183 26 JSTOR 1740002 PMID 17760151 S2CID 6097798 Ceci Lynn September 19 1975 Letter Indian Corn Cultivation Science 189 4207 946 50 doi 10 1126 science 189 4207 946 b JSTOR 1740631 PMID 17789139 Ceci Lynn 1990 Squanto and the Pilgrims On Planting Corn in the manner of the Indians In Clifton James A ed The Invented Indian Cultural Fictions and Government Policies New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers pp 71 89 ISBN 0887383416 Cell Gillian T October 1965 The Newfoundland Company A Study of Subscribers to a Colonizing Venture William and Mary Quarterly 22 4 611 25 doi 10 2307 1922912 JSTOR 1922912 Chamberlain Alexander F October December 1902 Algonkian Words in American English A Study in the Contact of the White Man and the Indian The Journal of American Folklore 15 59 240 67 doi 10 2307 533199 JSTOR 533199 Chase Henry E 1885 Notes on the Wampanoag Indians Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution for the Year 1883 Washington D C Government Printing Office 878 907 Cook Sherburne F September 1973 The Significance of Disease in the Extinction of the New England Indians Human Biology 45 3 485 508 JSTOR 41459892 PMID 4584337 Crosby Alfred W April 1976 Virgin Soil Epidemics as a Factor in the Aboriginal Depopulation in America William and Mary Quarterly 33 2 289 99 doi 10 2307 1922166 JSTOR 1922166 PMID 11633588 De Forest John William 1851 History of the Indians of Connecticut from the Earliest Known Period to 1850 Hartford Connecticut Wm Jas Hamersley LCCN 02015045 Dean John Ward ed 1887 Capt John Mason the Founder of New Hampshire Boston The Prince Society A copy is also hosted by the HathiTrust Deane Charles March 1885 Indians Kidnapped from Maine Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 2nd 2 35 38 JSTOR 25079636 Deetz James Deetz Patricia E Scott 2000 The Times of Their Lives Life Love and Death in Plymouth Colony New York Random House ISBN 0716738309 Dockstader Frederick J 1977 Great North American Indians Profiles in Life and Leadership New York Van Nostrand Reinhold ISBN 0442021488 Drake Samuel G 1845 The Book of the Indians or Biography and History of the Indians of North America from its First Discovery to the Year 1841 9th ed Boston Benjamin B Mussey ISBN 9780665373534 Drake Samuel G ed 1865 The History of the Indian Wars in New England Roxbury Massachusetts Printed for W Elliot Woodward LCCN 02015135 Hosted by the Internet Archive in two volumes Volume I and Voume II Dunn Jerome P Spring 1993 Squanto Before He Met the Pilgrims Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society 54 1 38 42 Ford Worthington C 1912 History of Plymouth Plantation 1620 1647 Boston Houghton Mifflin Company for The Massachusetts Historical Society LCCN 12029493 The work is in two volumes hosted on the Internet Archive as Volume I and Volume II Goddard Ives 1978 Eastern Algonquian Languages In Trigger Bruce G ed Northeast Handbook of North American Indians Vol 15 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution pp 70 77 ISBN 0160045754 William C Sturtevant general editor Green Samuel Abbott 1881 History of Medicine in Massachusetts A Centennial Address Delivered before the Massachusetts Medical Society Boston A Williams amp Co Herndon G Melvin July 1967 Indian Agriculture in the Southern Colonies The North Carolina Historical Review 44 3 283 97 JSTOR 23517891 Hobsbawm Eric Ranger Terence eds 1983 The Invention of Tradition Cambridge United KingdomCambridge University Press ISBN 0521246458 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Holmes Oliver Wendell Sr 1891 The Medical Profession in Massachusetts Medical Essays 1842 1882 Riverside edition The writings of Oliver Wendell Holmes Vol IX Boston Houghton Mifflin and Company pp 312 69 This essay was originally a lecture delivered before the Lowell Institute January 29 1869 Hoyt Epaphras 1824 Antiquarian Researches Comprising a History of the Indian Wars in the Country Bordering Connecticut River and Parts Adjacent Antiquarian researches or Indian wars Greenfield Massachusetts A Phelps Humins John H March 1987 Squanto and Massasoit A Struggle for Power New England Quarterly 60 1 54 70 doi 10 2307 365654 JSTOR 365654 Hutchinson Thomas 1765 The History of the Colony of Massachusett s Bay From the First Settlement Thereof in 1628 until its Incorporation with the Colony of Plimouth Province Province of Main etc by the Charter of King William and Queen Mary in 1691 Vol 1 2d ed Boston Printed for Mr Richardson First of three volumes James Sydney V Jr ed 1963 Three Visitors to Early Plymouth Plymouth Massachusetts Plimouth Plantation Inc LCCN 66008244 Jennings Francis 1976 The Invasion of America Indians Colonialism and the Cant of Conquest New York Norton ISBN 0393008304 Kinnicutt Lincoln N November 1914 The Plymouth Settlement and Tisquantum Proceedings of the Massachusetts Historical Society 48 103 118 JSTOR 25080029 Kinnicutt Lincoln N October 1920 Plymouth s Debt to the Indians The Harvard Theological Review 13 4 345 61 doi 10 1017 s0017816000029916 JSTOR 1507717 S2CID 159526670 Knapp Samuel L 1836 The Library of American History New York C J Jackson amp Co Kruer Matthew Spring Summer 2003 A Country Wonderfully Prepared for their Entertainment The Aftermath of the New England Indian Epidemic of 1616 Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council Online Archive 129 Kupperman Karen Ordahl December 1977 Thomas Morton Historian The New England Quarterly 50 4 660 64 doi 10 2307 364252 JSTOR 364252 Kupperman Karen Ordahl 2000 Indians and English Facing Off in Early America Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 0801431786 Levermore Charles Herbert ed 1912 Forerunners and Competitors of the Pilgrims and Puritans or Narratives of Voyages Made by Persons Other than the Pilgrims and Puritans of the Bay Colony to the Shores of New England during the First Quarter of the Seventeenth Century 1601 1625 with Especial Reference to the Labors of Captain John Smith in Behalf of the Settlement of New England Brooklyn New York The Society New England Society of Brooklyn LCCN a17000511 The work is hosted on the Internet Archive Volume 1 and Volume II McManis Douglas 1972 European Impressions of the New England Coast 1497 1620 Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Department of Geography ISBN 0890650462 Major Minor Wallace Fall 1970 William Bradford versus Thomas Morton Early American Literature 5 2 1 13 JSTOR 25070464 Mann Charles C December 2005 Native Intelligence Smithsonian Magazine Retrieved November 22 2016 Marr John S Cathey John T 2010 New Hypothesis for Cause of an Epidemic among Native Americans New England 1616 1619 Emerging Infectious Diseases 16 2 281 86 doi 10 3201 eid1602 090276 PMC 2957993 PMID 20113559 Mather Cotton 1855 1702 Magnalia Christi Americana Vol 1 Hartford Connecticut S Andrus amp Son ISBN 9780665448713 LCCN nuc87620072 Martin Calvin 1978 Keepers of the Game Indian Animal Relationships and the Fur Trade Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 0520035194 Matthews Albert 1904 Note on the Indian Sagamore Samoset Publications of the Colonial Society of Massachusetts 6 59 70 Mood Fulmer March 1937 John Winthrop Jr on Indian Corn The New England Quarterly 1 1 121 33 doi 10 2307 360150 JSTOR 360150 Morison Samuel Eliot 1956 The Story of the Old Colony of New Plymouth 1620 1692 New York Knopf LCCN 56008893 Nanepashemet 1993 It Smells Fishy to Me An Argument Supporting the Use of Fish Fertilizer by the Native People of Southern New England In Benes Peter Benes Jane Montague eds Algonkians of New England Past and Present Annual proceedings Dublin Seminar for New England Folklife 1991 Boston Massachusetts Boston University pp 42 50 Nickerson Warren Sears 1994 Carpenter Delores Bird ed Early Encounters Native Americans and Europeans in New England From the Papers of W Sears Nickerson East Lansing Michigan Michigan State University Press ISBN 0870133519 Philbrick Nathaniel 2006 Mayflower A Story of Courage Community and War New York Viking ISBN 0670037605 Pope Peter Edward 2004 Fish into Wine The Newfoundland Plantation in the Seventeenth Century Chapel Hill North Carolina For the Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture Williamsburg Virginia by the University of North Carolina Press ISBN 9781469601175 Prince Thomas 1826 A Chronological History of New England in the Form of Annals New ed Boston Cummings Hilliard amp Co Prowse D W 1895 A History of Newfoundland from the English Colonial and Foreign Records New York Macmillan LCCN 10014021 Pulsipher Jenny Hale 2005 Subjects unto the Same King Indians English and the Contest for Authority in Colonial New England Philadelphia Pennsylvania University of Pennsylvania Press ISBN 0812238761 Quinn D B 1960 Edward Hayes Liverpool Colonial Pioneer PDF Transactions of the Historic Society of Lancashire and Cheshire 111 25 45 Archived from the original PDF on December 21 2016 Retrieved December 14 2016 Rainey Froelich G April 1936 A Compilation of Historical Data Contributing to the Ethnography of Connecticut and Southern New England Indians Bulletin of the Archeological Society of Connecticut 3 3 49 Robbins Maurice July 1956 Indians of the Old Colony Their Relation with and their Contribution to the Settlement of the Area Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society 17 4 59 74 Rostlund Erhardt 1957 The Evidence for the Use of Fish as Fertilizer in Aboriginal North America Journal of Geography 56 5 222 228 Bibcode 1957JGeog 56 222R doi 10 1080 00221345708983142 Ruiz Purificacion Malaga Squanto y el dia de accion de gracias Sociedad Boletin de la Sociedad de Amigos de la Cultura de Velez Malaga Numero 20 21 89 94 Russell Howard S 1969 70 New England Agriculture from Champlain and Others Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society 31 1 2 11 18 Russell Howard S September 19 1975 Letter Indian Corn Cultivation Science 189 4207 944 46 doi 10 1126 science 189 4207 944 a PMID 17789137 S2CID 32151831 Russell Howard S 1980 Indian New England before the Mayflower Hanover New Hampshire University Press of New England ISBN 0874511623 Salisbury Neal 1981 Squanto Last of the Patuxets In Sweet David G Nash Gary B eds Struggle and Survival in Colonial America Berkeley California University of California Press pp 228 45 ISBN 0520041100 Salisbury Neal 1982 Manitou and Providence Indians Europeans and the Making of New England 1500 1643 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0195034546 Salwen Bert 1978 Indians of Southern New England and Long Island Early Period In Trigger Bruce G ed Northeast Handbook of North American Indians Vol 15 Washington D C Smithsonian Institution pp 160 76 ISBN 0160045754 William C Sturtevant general editor Shuffelton Frank March 1976 Indian Devils and Pilgrim Fathers Squanto Hobomok and the English Conception of Indian Religion New England Quarterly 49 1 108 16 doi 10 2307 364560 JSTOR 364560 Simmons William 1986 Spirit of the New England Tribes Indian History and Folklore 1620 1984 Hanover New Hampshire University Press of New England ISBN 0874513707 Snow Dear R Lanphear Kim M Winter 1988 European Contact and Indian Depopulation in the Northeast The Timing of the First Epidemics Ethnohistory 35 1 15 33 doi 10 2307 482431 JSTOR 482431 Sylvester Herbert Milton 1910 Indian Wars of New England Vol 1 Boston W B Clarke Co LCCN 10027624 Tolman Adams 1902 Indian Relics in Concord Publications of the Concord Antiquarian Society 10 Tomlins Christophr L 2010 Freedom Bound Law Labor and Civic Identity in Colonizing English America 1580 1865 Cambridge U K Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521761390 Trumbull J Hammond ed 1859 The Public Records of the Colony of Connecticut May 1678 June 1689 Vol 3 Hartford Connecticut Press of Case Lockwood amp Co Vaughan Alden T 1995 New England Frontier Puritans and Indians 1620 1675 3rd ed Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 080612718X Warden G B September 19 1975 Letter Indian Corn Cultivation Science 189 4207 946 doi 10 1126 science 189 4207 946 JSTOR 1740631 PMID 17789141 Weston Thomas 1906 History of the Town of Middleboro Massachusetts 1669 1905 Boston Houghton Mifflin and Company LCCN 06023056 Williams Herbert Upham 1909 The Epidemic of the Indians of New England 1616 1620 with Remarks on Native American Infections n p a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link This is a reprint of an article by the same name published in Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin 20 224 340 49 November 1909 Williamson William D 1839 History of the State of Maine From its First Discovery A D 1602 to the Separation A D 1820 Inclusive Vol 1 Hallowell Glazier Masters amp Smith Willison George F 1945 Saints and Strangers New York Reynal amp Hitchcock LCCN 45006745 r83 Young Alexander ed 1841 Chronicles of the Pilgrim Fathers of the Colony of Plymouth from 1602 1625 Boston C C Little and J Brown LCCN 01012110 Da Capo published a facsimile reprinting of this volume in 1971 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Squanto Modern History Sourcebook William Bradford from History of Plymouth Plantation c 1650 Treaty with the Indians 1621 Caleb Johnson s MayflowerHistory com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Squanto amp oldid 1224649997, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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