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first of the many wars between whites and Indians was fought in 1637 betweenthe
Pequots and New England settlers. The Pequots were a warlike tribe centered along
the Thames River in southeastern Connecticut. By 1630, under their chief, Sassacus,
they had pushed west to the Connecticut R. There they had numerous quarrels with
colonists, culminating in the murder by the Pequots of a trader, John Oldham,
on July 20, 1636. On Aug. 24 Gov. John Endicott of Massachusetts Bay Colony organized
a military force to punish the Indians, and on May 26, 1637, the first battle
of the Pequot War took place when the New Englanders, under John Mason and John
Underhill, attacked the Pequot stronghold near present-day New Haven, Conn. The
Indian forts were burned and about 500 men, women, and children were killed. The
survivors fled in sall groups. One group, led by Sassacus, was caught near presentday
Fairfield, Conn., on July 28, and nearly all were killed or captured. The captives
were made slaves by the colonists or were sold in the West Indies. Sassacus and
the few who escaped with him were put to death by Mohawk Indians. The few remaining
Pequots were scattered among other southern New England tribes. |