John Eliot and the Praying Indians of Massachusetts Bay (Review)
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Hyde Park Historical Record (Vol
' ' HYDE PARK ' ' HISTORICAL RECORD ^ ^ VOLUME IV : 1904 ^ ^ ISe HYDE PARK HISTORICAL SOCIETY j< * HYDE PARK, MASSACHUSETTS * * HYDE PARK HISTORICAL RECORD Volume IV— 1904 PUBLISHED BY THE HYDE PARK HISTORICAL SOCIETY HYDE PARK, MASS. PRESS OF . THE HYDE PARK GAZETTE . 1904 . OFFICERS FOR J904 President Charles G. Chick Recording Secretary Fred L. Johnson Corresponding Secretary and Librarian Henry B. Carrington, 19 Summer Street, Hyde Park, Mass. Treasurer Henry B. Humphrey Editor William A. Mowry, 17 Riverside Square, Hyde Park, Mass. Curators Amos H. Brainard Frank B. Rich George L. Richardson J. Roland Corthell. George L. Stocking Alfred F. Bridgman Charles F. Jenney Henry B, Carrington {ex ofido) CONTENTS OF VOLUME IV. THEODORE DWIGHT WELD 5-32 IVi'lliam Lloyd Garrison, "J-r., Charles G. Chick, Henry B. Carrington, Mrs. Albert B. Bradley, Mrs. Cordelia A. Pay- son, Wilbur H. Po'vers, Francis W. Darling; Edtvard S. Hathazvay. JOHN ELIOT AND THE INDIAN VILLAGE AT NATICK . 33-48 Erastus Worthington. GOING WEST IN 1820. George L. Richardson .... 49-67 EDITORIAL. William A. Mowry 68 JACK FROST (Poem). William A. Mo-vry 69 A HYDE PARK MEMORIAL, 18SS (with Ode) .... 70-75 Henry B- Carrington. HENRY A. RICH 76, 77 William y. Stuart, Robert Bleakie, Henry S. Bunton. DEDICATION OF CAMP MEIGS (1903) 78-91 Henry B. Carrington, Augustus S. Lovett, BetiJ McKendry. PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY SINCE 1892 . 92-100 Fred L. 'Johnso7i. John B. Bachelder. Henry B- Carrington, Geo. M. Harding, yohn y. E7ineking ..... 94, 95 Gov. F. T. Greenhalge. C. Fred Allen, John H. ONeil . 96 Annual Meeting, 1897. Charles G. -
(King Philip's War), 1675-1676 Dissertation Presented in Partial
Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in The Great Narragansett War (King Philip’s War), 1675-1676 Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Major Jason W. Warren, M.A. Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2011 Dissertation Committee: John F. Guilmartin Jr., Advisor Alan Gallay, Kristen Gremillion Peter Mansoor, Geoffrey Parker Copyright by Jason W. Warren 2011 Abstract King Philip’s War (1675-1676) was one of the bloodiest per capita in American history. Although hostile native groups damaged much of New England, Connecticut emerged unscathed from the conflict. Connecticut’s role has been obscured by historians’ focus on the disasters in the other colonies as well as a misplaced emphasis on “King Philip,” a chief sachem of the Wampanoag groups. Although Philip formed the initial hostile coalition and served as an important leader, he was later overshadowed by other sachems of stronger native groups such as the Narragansetts. Viewing the conflict through the lens of a ‘Great Narragansett War’ brings Connecticut’s role more clearly into focus, and indeed enables a more accurate narrative for the conflict. Connecticut achieved success where other colonies failed by establishing a policy of moderation towards the native groups living within its borders. This relationship set the stage for successful military operations. Local native groups, whether allied or neutral did not assist hostile Indians, denying them the critical intelligence necessary to coordinate attacks on Connecticut towns. The English colonists convinced allied Mohegan, Pequot, and Western Niantic warriors to support their military operations, giving Connecticut forces a decisive advantage in the field. -
The Life and Times of Kateri Tekakwitha
[10][12][13][14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44][45][46][47][48][49][50][51][52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60][61][62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69][70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77][78][79][80][81][82][83][84][11][1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9] [Pg vi]vii]viii]ix]xiv]2]3]4]5]6]7]8]9]10]11]12]13]14]15]16]17]18]19]20]21]22]23]24]25]26]27]28]29]30]31]32]33]34]35]36]37]38]39]40]41]42]43]44]45]46]47]48]49]50]51]52]53]54]55]56]57]58]59]60]61]62]63]64]65]66]67]68]69]70]71]72]73]74]75]76]77]78]79]80]81]82]83]84]85]86]87]88]89]90]91]92]93]94]95]96]97]98]99]100]101]102]103]104]105]106]107]108]109]110]111]112]113]114]115]116]117]118]119]120]121]122]123]124]125]126]127]128]129]130]131]132]133]134]135]136]137]138]139]140]141]142]143]144]145]146]147]148]149]150]151]152]153]154]155]156]157]158]159]160]161]162]163]164]165]166]167]168]169]170]171]172]173]174]175]176]177]178]179]180]181]182]184]185]186]187]188]189]190]191]192]193]194]195]196]197]198]199]200]201]202]203]204]205]206]207]208]209]210]211]212]213]214]215]216]217]218]219]220]221]222]223]224]225]226]227]228]229]230]231]232]233]234]235]236]237]238]239]240]241]242]243]244]245]246]247]248]249]250]251]252]253]254]255]256]257]258]259]260]261]262]263]264]265]266]267]268]269]270]271]272]273]274]275]276]277]278]279]280]281]282]283]284]285]286]287]288]289]290]291]292]293]294]295]296]297]298]299]302]303]304]305]306]307]308]309]310]311]312]313]314] THE LIFE AND TIMES [Pg 183] OF KATERI TEKAKWITHA, 1656-1680. -
Puritan Sermons and Ministerial Writings on Indians During King Philip's War
Arkansas Tech University Online Research Commons @ ATU Faculty Publications - History & Political Science Department of History & Political Science 11-2017 'A Prey to Their Teeth': Puritan Sermons and Ministerial Writings on Indians during King Philip's War Gregory Michna Arkansas Tech University Follow this and additional works at: https://orc.library.atu.edu/faculty_pub_hist Recommended Citation Michna, Gregory, "'A Prey to Their Teeth': Puritan Sermons and Ministerial Writings on Indians during King Philip's War" (2017). Faculty Publications - History & Political Science. 81. https://orc.library.atu.edu/faculty_pub_hist/81 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Department of History & Political Science at Online Research Commons @ ATU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications - History & Political Science by an authorized administrator of Online Research Commons @ ATU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. “A Prey to Their eethT ”: Puritan Sermons and Ministerial Writings on Indians During King Philip’s War Cover Page Footnote Gregory Michna is Assistant Professor of History in the College of Arts and Humanities at Arkansas Tech University, Russellville, Arkansas. This article is adapted from a chapter in my doctoral dissertation, “A Communion of Churches: Indian Christians, English Ministers, and Congregations in New England, 1600-1775” (PhD diss., West Virginia University, Morgantown, 2016). I would like to thank Tyler Boulware, Matt eV ster, Brian Luskey, Joe Hodge, and Ted Andrews for their comments on this article in its original form, as well as Kate Viens and Conrad Wright at the MHS for their comments during my brown bag presentation as a fellow. -
Natives, Missionaries, and Colonial Authority in New England, 1643-1675
Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons History Theses & Dissertations History Spring 2019 Interpreting the Other: Natives, Missionaries, and Colonial Authority In New England, 1643-1675 Violet Galante Old Dominion University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds Part of the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Galante, Violet. "Interpreting the Other: Natives, Missionaries, and Colonial Authority In New England, 1643-1675" (2019). Master of Arts (MA), Thesis, History, Old Dominion University, DOI: 10.25777/ prn6-7k07 https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/history_etds/22 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the History at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in History Theses & Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INTERPRETING THE OTHER: NATIVES, MISSIONARIES, AND COLONIAL AUTHORITY IN NEW ENGLAND, 1643-1675 by Violet Galante B.A. December 2016, Old Dominion University A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Old Dominion University in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of MASTER OF ARTS HISTORY OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY May 2019 Approved by: Jane Merritt (Director) Annette Finley-Croswhite (Member) John Weber (Member) 1 ABSTRACT INTERPRETING THE OTHER: NATIVES, MISSIONARIES, AND COLONIAL AUTHORITY IN NEW ENGLAND, 1643-1675 Violet Galante Old Dominion University, 2019 Director: Dr. Jane Merritt This thesis studies the rise, maintenance, and decline of New England praying towns from 1643-1675. Nestled between the Pequot War and Metacom’s War, the mid-seventeenth century was a period of relative peace between Indians and English settlers. -
Delta Podcast Transcript Introduction Paul Musgrave: Welcome To
Delta Podcast Transcript Introduction Paul Musgrave: Welcome to Final Examination, a podcast that looks at the end of the world. I’m Paul Musgrave, and I’m a professor of political science at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. Over the past semester in the Fall of 2018, four teams of students have researched, reported, and produced stories about how people have dealt with the end of the world right here in Massachusetts. In this episode, Nate Reynolds and Abby McDonough take us to Ponkapoag to answer the question: Why did a civilization of Christian American Indians that coexisted with English Puritans disappear in the eighteenth century? ACT I: CANTON GHOST STORY / EXPOSITION Nate: Most children enjoy hearing ghost stories… But rarely do they enter one themselves. <<music>>1 1 Original composition by Mike Orlando, Greg Fournier, Kathrine Esten, and Deepika Singh. Stephen Turley and Mark Nannery were only twelve years old when they uncovered the secret of a two hundred year-old Indian burial ground beneath their quiet Massachusetts town. These children accidentally shed the first light in centuries on a society once engulfed in war, indoctrinated by its leaders, murdered by its sworn protectors… and forgotten in history… until now. <<bird sounds>>2 The date - September 13, 1969…The place - Canton, Massachusetts.3 A mystery had been brewing in the town for some time. A year earlier, a resident’s dog had sauntered home carrying a human skull in its mouth that the Canton Police attempted to trace to no avail...4Until two young boys stumbled upon the answer on that fateful September day. -
Native Diaspora and New Communities: Algonkian and WÃ
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Department of Anthropology Papers Department of Anthropology 2004 Native Diaspora and New Communities: Algonkian and Wôbanakiak Margaret Bruchac University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/anthro_papers Part of the Anthropology Commons Recommended Citation Bruchac, M. (2004). Native Diaspora and New Communities: Algonkian and Wôbanakiak. Raid on Deerfield: The Many Stories of 1704, Retrieved from https://repository.upenn.edu/anthro_papers/108 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/anthro_papers/108 For more information, please contact [email protected]. Native Diaspora and New Communities: Algonkian and Wôbanakiak Abstract During the 1600s, Algonkian and Wôbanaki peoples in present-day New England and Canada found themselves in what has been called "the maelstrom of change," as Euro-American settlers started flooding into Native homelands. (1) The settlers were preceded by explorers and traders, who had carried not only trade goods but diseases. Population losses from influenza, smallpox, measles and other sicknesses caused a disruption in Native communities. Existing tensions between tribes led some coastal Native groups, such as the Wampanoag, to initially welcome small groups of European settlers and traders, who could provide trade goods, guns, and potential allies. European settlement led to Native political instability when international disputes made their way into local politics. As Native peoples were increasingly caught up in both inter-tribal and international conflicts, and crowded by European settlements, some Native communities began relocating to form new communities in diaspora, such as Kahnawake, La Montagne, Lorette, Odanak, Sault-au-Récollet, and Schaghticoke, and the praying villages at Natick, Wamesit, and elsewhere. -
17 Praying Indians (And Indian Line Farm)
17 Praying Indians (and Indian Line Farm) OK, today, before we get to “Blue Hills History” we need to take a look at the history of the Massachusetts area before, and during, the arrival of the Europeans. This will then let us talk about a specific Blue Hills History event to which we will all be able to more directly relate. So, back in time to when the first Europeans visited the area… Before the Europeans arrived, there were multiple Native American tribes in southern New England. The Wampanoag tribe was in southeastern Massachusetts and part of Rhode Island. The Massachusett tribe inhabited valleys of the Charles and Neponset Rivers including what is now Boston and the suburbs. The Nipmuck tribe lived primarily in central Massachusetts and adjoining Rhode Island and Connecticut. These tribes competed with each other, and sometime fought among themselves. i In the present pandemic situation, we can relate to the first bit of inter-continental history. Captain John Smith mentioned contact with the Native Americans when he explored the coast of New England in 1614. Europe had had many plagues over the years. Not so America, which had been isolated by the Atlantic Ocean. Apparently, some of Captain Smith’s crew were sick, as after their visit there were multiple pandemics among the Native Americans between 1614 and 1617. Because none of the Native Americans had any immunity to this disease or diseases, and of course no idea of germs or how diseases were transmitted, this killed off 75% to 90% of all of the Native Americans. -
France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730
IN EACH OTHER’S ARMS: FRANCE AND THE ST. LAWRENCE MISSION VILLAGES IN WAR AND PEACE, 1630-1730. by JEAN-FRANÇOIS LOZIER A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy. Graduate Department of History University of Toronto © Copyright by Jean-François Lozier (2012) In Each Other’s Arms: France and the St. Lawrence Mission Villages in War and Peace, 1630-1730 Jean-François Lozier Doctor of Philosophy Department of History University of Toronto 2012 Abstract Beginning in the late 1630s, a diversity of Algonquian and Iroquoian peoples established under the auspices of Jesuit and, later, Sulpician missionaries a string of village communities in the St. Lawrence Valley. A diversity of peoples, whom the French lumped under the rubrics of “Algonquins”, “Montagnais”, “Hurons”, “Iroquois”, “Abenakis” and “Loups”, migrated to these villages in the hope of bettering their lives in trying times. This dissertation retraces the formation and the early development of these communities, exploring the entangled influence of armed conflict, diplomacy, kinship, and leadership on migration, community-building, and identity formation. The historiography of the St. Lawrence Valley – the French colonial heartland in North America – has tended to relegate these Aboriginal communities to the margins. Moreover, those scholars who have considered the formation of mission villages have tended to emphasize missionary initiative. Here, these villages are reimagined as a joint creation, the result of intersecting French and Aboriginal desires, needs, and priorities. The significance of these villages as sites of refuge becomes readily apparent, the trajectories of individual communities corresponding with the escalation of conflict or with ii its tense aftermath. -
Confession and Visible Sainthood
SSStttooonnnyyy BBBrrrooooookkk UUUnnniiivvveeerrrsssiiitttyyy The official electronic file of this thesis or dissertation is maintained by the University Libraries on behalf of The Graduate School at Stony Brook University. ©©© AAAllllll RRRiiiggghhhtttsss RRReeessseeerrrvvveeeddd bbbyyy AAAuuuttthhhooorrr... “Then God Brake My Head”: Indian Saints in 17th Century Massachusetts 1646-1660 A Dissertation Presented by David M. Hollis to The Graduate School In Partial fulfillment of the Requirements For the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in History Stony Brook University December 2009 [Type text] Copyright by David M. Hollis 2009 [Type text] The Graduate School David M. Hollis We, the dissertation committee for the above candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree, hereby recommend acceptance of this dissertation. Ned Landsman, PhD., Dissertation Advisor Professor, Department of History Donna J. Rilling, PhD., Chairperson of Defense Associate Professor, Department of History Gary Marker, PhD. Professor, Department of History Andrew Newman, PhD. Assistant Professor, Department of English This dissertation is accepted by the Graduate School Lawrence Martin Dean of the Graduate School ii Abstract of the Dissertation “Then God Brake My Head”: Indian Saints in 17th Century Massachusetts 1646-1660 by David M. Hollis Doctor of Philosophy in History Stony Brook University 2009 This dissertation is about the process of Algonquian conversion to Puritan Christianity in the mid-seventeenth century and the considerable difficulties that stood in the way of that process occurring. It seeks to take seriously the intentions of the missionaries without obscuring that their actions were embedded in a colonial context. At the same time, it is offered as a partial response to treatments of the praying towns in which Eliot and his missionary colleagues are portrayed largely as agents of English imperialism, intent on using the Gospel as a means of subjugation. -
CITY of NEWTON CITY-WIDE ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECONNAISSANCE SURVEY: PUBLIC EDUCATION REPORT Setti D
City of Newton CITY OF NEWTON CITY-WIDE ARCHAEOLOGICAL RECONNAISSANCE SURVEY: PUBLIC EDUCATION REPORT Setti D. Warren, Mayor Newton Department of Planning and Development Newton Community Preservation Committee TABLE OF CONTENTS INTRODUCTION ..................................................... 1 NINETEETH-CENTURY LIFE IN NEWTON.........28 Nineteenth-Century Agricultural Pursuits............................ 28 WHAT IS ARCHAEOLOGY? ..........................................3 The "Garden City"................................................................ 29 Archaeological Signatures of Nineteenth-Century NATIVE AMERICAN NEWTON ............................. 5 Farming ................................................................................ 30 Paleoindian Colonizers..........................................................5 Nineteenth-Century Overland Transportation...................... 32 Archaic and Woodland Period Foragers...............................6 Nineteenth-Century Economy and Industry......................... 34 Late Woodland Farmers......................................................10 Nineteenth-Century Religious Societies .............................. 40 Native Contact with the Europeans.....................................10 Nineteenth-Century Burial Grounds .................................... 40 African-American Heritage in Newton ................................ 43 EUROPEAN SETTLEMENT OF NEWTON........... 12 Nineteenth-Century Population Growth............................... 45 Seventeenth-Century Settlement.........................................12 -
Fall 2012 Volume 11—Number 4
HOPE FOR FIRST NATIO N S Pg. 6 Pg. 4 Indian Ministries of North America, Inc. Fall 2012 Volume 11—Number 4 Founder James A. Hughes Executive Director / President Johnny K. Hughes Vice President Director of Ministries Rodney LaVallie Secretary Peggy Harmann Directors Greg Casto James Herring Doug Payne Chief Anne Richardson Rock Slaughter Tom Swartz Tommy Walker Covenant Prayer Warrior Coordinators Connie Carpenter Angela Ruiz Office Indian Ministries of North America, Inc. Request your copy today P.O. Box 3472 Email: Cleveland, TN 37320 Physical Location [email protected] 911 Keith St. NW Cleveland, Tennessee Spirit Rain - $10.00 Phone: (423)479-3831 Breath of Heaven - $15.00 www.indianministries.org Altar of Praise - $15.00 By: Johnny K. Hughes ith the fall months quickly passing, I find my have become a vital part of the mission for IMNA. W self reflecting back over the last few months and Together we are seeing a Kingdom impact on the youth seeing the hand of God move in mighty ways. Following of America. the hectic summer schedule, we found ourselves leaning The end of October found us on the Pine Ridge heavily on God for needed financial provision, and He Reservation in South Dakota. We traveled there to began to speak to the hearts of many individuals and we deliver a shipment of donated bunk beds to the Wings as saw a miracle in our finances. It is always a financial Eagles Ministries Dream Center. These will be used in challenge going into the last quarter of the year. Our the bunkhouse being constructed in the spring of 2013.