Massachusett

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Massachusett
Total population
(Enrolled members:)
Regions with significant populations
 United States: Massachusetts
Languages
English, formerly Massachusett language
Religion
Niantagot
Related ethnic groups
Narragansett and Patuxet

The Massachusett are a Native American people who historically lived in areas surrounding Massachusetts Bay, as well as northeast and southern Massachusetts in what is now the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, including present-day Greater Boston. Tribal members spoke the Massachusett language, part of the Algonquian family. The present-day U.S state Massachusetts is named after the tribe.

The name Massachusett means “people of the great hills”, referring to the Blue Hills south of Boston Harbor.[1]

As one of the first groups of indigenous American peoples to encounter English colonists, the Massachusett had a rapid decline in population in the 17th and 18th centuries due to new infectious diseases. Descendants continue to inhabit the Greater Boston area but it is not a federally recognized tribe.

Roots in pre-history

The Massachusett people are most likely descendants of prehistoric Paleo-Indians who lived in eastern North America at the end of the last glaciation 30,000-15,000 years before present (BP). Archeological evidence (spear points, midden mounds) uncovered in Boston indicate habitation in that area between 6,500 and 8,000 years BP. Fishing structures, such as the Boylston Street Fishweir, dating to 5,200 years BP, have been discovered since the late 20th century in what is now Boston's Back Bay neighborhood. A recreation of a fish weir is erected annually on Boston Common in May. These early people lived by seasonal migrations, alternating between inland hunting grounds and winter homes in the fall and winter, to mining their quarries for materials used for weapon and tool making, whaling, coastal fishing and foraging sites in the late spring and summer.

Historical period

Contact with European colonists

The French called Almouchiquois (or Armouchiquois) the people that the English included under the term Massachusetts; and these two names may be etymologically connected. [2]

The Massachusett and other Algonquian tribal groups were almost destroyed by a European-carried plague between 1617 and 1619; an estimated 90 percent of all the coastal populations died. The remaining population was weakened following colonization of the area by English settlers. The tribes were further decimated by a smallpox epidemic in 1633.[3] The death of two Massachusett military leaders, Pecksuit and Wittawamut (and those warriors with them) during an ambush at Wessegusset by Captain Miles Standish of Plymouth Colony in 1623 due to Standish being forewarned by his friend Massasoit of a coming attack, caused the Massachusett to avoid but not end further contact.[4]

Colonial records show that during the early 17th century, the Massachusett fished the shores, whaled at sea, farmed the lands and mined numerous quaries in the blue hills (Massachusett) for slate and other valuable minerals, migrating from longhouses on the coast to wigwam settlements inland. The tribes were introduced to John Eliot, who converted some of them to Christianity, created a written alphabet, and in 1663 with the help of the Massachusett published the first Bible in North America – in the native Massachusett language (Mamusse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God).[5] The tribe was confined by English law to settlement in what were called praying villages (after Eliot requested their establishment of the general court).

In 1675 tribal member John Sassamon, the first Native American to attend Harvard University, was retained by the Pokanoket sachem King Philip to record his will. Sassamon took advantage of Philip's illiteracy to name himself heir to Philip's lands.[6] After the treachery was discovered, Sassamon died under mysterious circumstances. The subsequent murder trial was a catalyst in the King Philip's War, a conflict in which the Massachusett entered an uneasy alliance with the colonists against Philip.[7]

Crispus Attucks, the first casualty during the Boston Massacre at the start of the American Revolutionary War, was majority-minority, of Massachusett descent through his mother and African through his father.[8]

After 1869

In 1869 Massachusetts passed the Indian Enfranchisment Act. They granted the Massachusett citizenship in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts with the right to vote but "terminated" their status as a sovereign nation. This did not conform to the Constitution, as only the federal government could make such decisions in relation to tribal governments.

The praying communities established at Canton (originally Ponkapoag), Natick, and Brockton continued to have communities of people who identified as Massachusett.[9] The tombstone of a noted member of the Natick Ponkapoag community said she was the last of her tribe when she died in 1852 at age 101,[10] but this may have referred to a woman known to be of solely indigenous heritage.[citation needed] European Americans in New England confused appearance and race with cultural identity; they sometimes assumed mixed-race people would no longer identify as Massachusett or Ponkapoag, but communities kept their culture.[citation needed]

21st century

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Descendants of the Praying Indians from Natick have organized as Praying Indian Tribes of Natick and Ponkapoag,[11] currently under the leadership of Rosita Andrews or Caring Hands from Stoughton, Massachusetts, who received her title of chief from her mother. The Praying Indian members live within a radius of 20 miles around Stoughton.[12] According to Caring Hands, in 2011 there were about 50 members of Natick Praying Indians.[13] On 11 August 2012, members of the tribe celebrated a public service in Eliot Church, South Natick, the site of the original church of the Praying Indian town of Natick, for the first time in nearly 300 years.[14]

Descendants of the Neponsett band of Indigenous Massachuset who settled at Ponkapoag are organized as the Massachuset at Ponkapoag Tribe.

Neither the tribe identifying itself as Praying Indian Tribes of Natick and Ponkapoag nor its leader have qualified as descendants of the Indigenous Massachuset at Ponkapoag and have no affiliation with the Massachuset at Ponkapoag Tribe.

See also

References

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  2. http://puffin.creighton.edu/jesuit/relations/relations_01.html
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  4. Philbrick (2006) pp 154-155
  5. A Short History of Boston by Robert J. Allison, p.14
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External links