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Mattabesset was a region and settlement once occupied by the Wangunk, a historical
Native American tribe In the United States, an American Indian tribe, Native American tribe, Alaska Native village, Indigenous tribe, or Tribal nation may be any current or historical Tribe (Native American)#Other uses, tribe, band, or nation of Native Americans in ...
, along the
Connecticut River The Connecticut River is the longest river in the New England region of the United States, flowing roughly southward for through four states. It rises 300 yards (270 m) south of the U.S. border with Quebec, Canada, and discharges into Long Isl ...
. The Mattabesset River reaches the Connecticut River near
Middletown, Connecticut Middletown is a city in Middlesex County, Connecticut, United States. Located along the Connecticut River, in the central part of the state, 16 miles (25.749504 km) south of Hartford, Connecticut, Hartford. Middletown is the largest city in the L ...
. European settler colonists established Middletown on the part of the region on the west side of the river, and a succession of settlements on the east side of the river, including Chatham and Middle Haddam, became East Hampton, Connecticut.


Name

Romanizations vary widely, including Mattabesec, Mattabeseck, Mattabessett, Mattabesset, and Mattabéeset. However, it is widely known to be pronounced “Matta-bess-ic” despite usually being spelled “mattabesset”


History

This region was occupied by Wangunk, an Algonquian language-speaking Indigenous people of the Northeastern Woodlands. Dutch colonizers initially visited the region in 1614.Salwen 173 At the time of English incursions into the area, the local sachem, or Native political leader, was Sowheag, also known as Sequin. After conflict with settlers, he moved from the village of Pyquaug, later known as Weathersfield, Connecticut, to Mattabesett. Nineteenth-century historian John Warner Barber wrote:
The lands in this township were obtained from the Indians in connection with the lands in Middletown. But a reservation, laid out partly at Indian hill, and partly a little east of the Chatham meeting house, was held by them till about 1767; when, having dwindled to small number, they sold their right, and united with the Farmington Indians. These Indians have been sometimes called Wongonks or Wongoms, but the reservation was for the heirs of the Sowheag and Mattabessett Indians, and they were doubtless of the same tribe with the Indians on the west side of the river. A little clan inhabited, or frequented, the region about Pocotopogue pond, and had a place of rendezvous on the principal island which that encloses. These were also, probably, a part of the Mattabessett Indians.Barber 507
In 1650, the General Court of Connecticut sent researchers to the Mattabesett region, who concluded that Middletown and Chatham could support 15 families. Sowheag apparently had ceded some of the land to Governor John Haynes. Connecticut established three reservations for the Wangunk people in Middletown and Chatham. The Wangunk occupied one in the Newfield neighborhood of Middletown through 1713. In Chatham, one was established for a man named Sawsean and his descendants. The third, 300 acres, was established for Sowheag, the sachem of Mattabesett, and the Native peoples of Mattabesett. In a 1761 survey of Indigenous peoples in Connecticut, local Native peoples still resided at "Mattabéeset (at Wongunck, opposite Middletown)."Conkey, Boissevian, and Goodard 188 Archaeologist Bert Salwen writes, "Names like Nipmuck, Pocumtuck, and Mattabesec sometimes appear in the literature as designations for large 'tribes' or 'confederacies' ( Speck 1928a: pl. 20; Swanton 1952), but this usage does not seem to fit the seventeenth-century situation. At best, some of these names may reflect linguistic or cultural homogeneity, but the scarcity of evidence makes even linguistic identification difficult in most cases (Day 1962, 1969)." Both Salwen and Ives Goddard contest the idea of a "great
Delaware Delaware ( ) is a U.S. state, state in the Mid-Atlantic (United States), Mid-Atlantic and South Atlantic states, South Atlantic regions of the United States. It borders Maryland to its south and west, Pennsylvania to its north, New Jersey ...
-speaking Wappinger-Mattabesec confederacy stretching from the Hudson to the Connecticut" rivers.


See also

* Mattabesset River * Mattabesett Trail


Notes


References

* * * * {{authority control Algonquian ethnonyms Connecticut Colony Former populated places in Connecticut Native American history of Connecticut