Posted on 07/13/2010 11:17:16 AM PDT by Pharmboy
MYSTIC, Conn. - Artifacts of a battle between an American Indian tribe and English settlers, a confrontation that helped shape early American history, have sat for years beneath manicured lawns and children's swing sets in a Connecticut neighborhood.
A project to map the battlefields of the Pequot War is bringing those musket balls, gunflints and arrowheads into the sunlight for the first time in centuries. It's also giving researchers insight into the combatants and the land on which they fought, particularly the Mystic hilltop where at least 400 Pequot Indians died in a 1637 massacre by English settlers.
Historians say the attack was a turning point in English warfare with native tribes. It nearly wiped out the powerful Pequots and showed other tribes that the colonists wouldn't hesitate to use methods that some consider genocide. snip..
The researchers have already found remnants of English metal uniform buttons, bandoliers and other items that might help mark where settlers marched, camped before the attack and retreated afterward. The artifacts are being cataloged at the museum and will be kept and displayed there.
(Excerpt) Read more at dispatch.com ...
I hope they don’t find any lead musket balls. If they do, they will have to declare the area a hazardous waste dump, just like my shooting club in Massholechusetts.
Thanks for that link...fills in much information.
Interesting link that you posted.
” The five to seven year old from the Fay Tolton site in South Dakota may have provided trophies in two different raids. The presence on the cranium of a characteristic scalping lesion with some bone remodelling indicates that the child survived an initial scalping event by at least two weeks before being killed in yet another raid. Obviously there was no scalp left on this child to take as a trophy, but both hands appear to have been removed by breaking the radii and ulnae toward their distal ends, and these hands were probably kept as trophies, along with the head of another individual from the site who was quite obviously decapitated (Hollimon & Owsley 1994).”
Whigs weren’t popular in North America for another 3 decades.
The other side of this battle showed the Native people the necessity of banding together to resist European expansion, leading eventually to Metacomet’s War (otherwise known as King Philip’s War) in 1675 - 1676. To this date it was the bloodiest war fought on American soil since first European contact.
You may be interested in the pdf of “The Rise Of The Republic Of The United States,” by Richard Frothingham, 1872. Just google it.
Our Constitution was not a flash in the pan, but the end point of almost two centuries of self government.
I'll say...just sort of forgetting thst the Pequot war was started by the combined tribes, via surprise attacks, with the stated aim of killing ALL the whites in America. But, hey ! What's a little revisionist history to the kids !
There must be two or three of them left who could petition the US Gubmint to build them a casino so they could live happily ever after.
It’s called Foxwoods...
I done some readin’ on this a long time ago.
The Narragansett and Mohegans {SP?] were allied with the colonists, and loaded for bear against the troublesome Pequots....revenge for the predations of the Pequots on those tribes.
The colonists were horrified by the brutality of the allied Indian tribes: having subdued the Pequots, the colonists could only watch as the executions started. Written accounts exist of how sickened many of the colonists became at the slaughter. And, IIRC, the remainder of the captured Pequots were sold into slavery by those colonist-allied Indian tribes to other Indians. I recall no mention of colonists being involved in the traffic.
No doubt you are correct. During the French and Indian war the French could not always keep their Indian allies controlled after they won battles and slaughtered the defeated English and colonists.
none of today’s academia dwells on Indian atrocities yet here in Middle Tn I see evidence of it frequently in markers from back in the day when history was more honest and factual
And thanks for the thread!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.