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SAMUEL
ORCUTT
Golden Hill Indians
The Housatonic
The Wepawaug
Cupheags and Pequannock
Weantinock
Goodyear's Island
Indian Slaves
Indian Remnants
Indian Troubles
New Indian Papers
Wm.Howard Wilcoxson
Stratford
Indians
Trouble
with the Indians
Establishing
Title to the Land
Indian
Deeds and Relics
White Hills Purchase
FORREST MORGAN
Lifestyles, Government, Religion and War Indian Titles and Mohegan Land Troubles Sowheag, Uncas, and Miantonomo Owenoco, the Son of Uncas
THE
HOUSATONIC
CHARD POWERS SMITH
The
Promised Land
Heathen in
the Land
The Lord's
Scouts
The Land
and The Lord
The Next Seven Tribes
ALEXANDER JOHNSTON
Connecticut Indian History
The Pequot War
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Samuel Orcutt- The History of Stratford
Cupheags and Pequannocks
New Indian Papers
The date of this Norwalk Indian
council shows it to have been about fifteen days before the new Haven company
landed at Quinnipiac.
The next testimony is that of Thomas Stanton, who was for many years
the Indian interpreter at Hartford, which
informs is that the Connecticut Colony conquered the Pequots and Pequannocks
at the same time–1637–took hostages of the Pequannock Indians and sold some
of their women into servitude into Massachusetts. He also says the Pequots had conquered the
tribes along the Sound west of Quinnipiac, and made then tributary before the
English came, and states that the Pequannocks engaged with the Pequots, as
their allies, in the fight at Cupheag, and also at the swamp on the western
boundary of Fairfield. The fight said
to be at Cupheag was probably at Pequannock river where after wards a gun was
found as shown by the following record.
“General Court, April, 1639.
Thomas bull informed the court that a musket with two letters, J.W.,
was taken up at Pequannocke in pursuit of the Pequatts, which was conceived
to be John Woods who was killed at the River’s mouth. It was ordered for the present {that} the
musket should be delivered to john Woods friends until other appear.
It has been generally maintained that at the time the English came
here these Indians were tributary to the Mohawks, which has been an error
according to this paper.
Mr. Stanton also says “only one house or the karkise of one we found
in Milford
without inhabitants.” This was the
last week in March, 1637, two weeks before the New Haven
and the Milford companies arrived in what is
now Connecticut
territory. The question arises, who
built this frame of a house at Milford in, or
before 1638, before any of the Milford
people came there?
Another paper was given by Lieut. Thomas wheeler, one of the first
settlers at Fairfield, with his father as he
himself informs, and as the records show, from which place he removed about
1657 to Derby,
where the Indians gave him land, as heretofore stated. Mr. Wheeler says, the Pequannock sachem,
whose name was Queriheag, being chief sagamore, when the English first came,
had his residence on the west side of Uncaway river, and that it was the home
and inheritance of his predecessors from generation to generation, giving us
some idea of the importance and antiquity of the tribe. Hence it appears that the Pequannock
Indians possessed the territory from what is now the Pequannock river to
Sasqua swamp.
These Indians were numerous as appears from the many names attached to
deeds, and as we are informed by Squire Isaac Sherman, that twenty years
later, when some of them had removed farther north, there were one hundred
wigwams occupied by them at Golden Hill.
This on a medium estimate would give from five to eight hundred
persons when the English first came here, and they were all Pequannock
Indians, as shown by the names attached to Fairfield Indian deeds.
Another testimony is that of john Minor, one of the early settlers and
prominent men of Stratford, for many years an
interpreter between the English and Indians and he was also town clerk of Stratford. His statement was taken for the particular
purpose of disproving the claims of one Captain Beebe, in 1662, but it also
shows that the Indians declared, at the time, that the land was given to Mr.
Hopkins and Mr. Haynes twenty-four years previous, as stated by Rev. John
Higginson. In this paper, also, Mr.
Minor states incidentally, that there was then a “contagion” among the
Indians, in consequence of which they were not permitted to go into the
church at Fairfield,
where the Court held its proceedings, and he also reveals the efforts made by
unprincipled men to turn the Indians from truth and right for selfish
purposes.
The decision of the Court was rendered in 1659, and Golden Hill
reservation was then laid out.
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THE HISTORY OF CONNECTICUT
BENJAMIN TRUMBULL
The Perfect Savages
Government
Language
Religion
Marriage
Wampum
Red Ochre
New Haven Colony
ALEXANDER JOHNSTON
Connecticut Indian History
The Pequot War
SOUTHPORT SWAMP
Great Swamp Fight
Incident at Mill River
Colonial History of Pequot Swamp
GUIDE TO PUTNAM MEMORIAL CAMP
COLONIAL INDIAN ARCHIVES
Stratford Colonial Land Deeds
Fairfield Colonial Land Deeds
Derby Colonial
Land Deeds
THE HISTORY OF GUILFORD
Hon. Ralph D.
Smith
A HISTORY OF THE TOWNS
OF
HADDAM AND EAST HADDAM
David D. Fields
EARLY NEW HAVEN
Sarah Day Woodward
Winthrop’s Journal
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