Identity
In the era following King Philip's War (1675–1678), Native American communities were often names by the locations in which they lived.Conkey, Boissevan, and Goddard, pg. 187 While this community primarily included Massachusett people, it also members of neighboring Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands, who collectively were called Natick Indians.Translation
Praying towns
Puritan colonists established Praying Towns in New England from 1646 to 1675. These served as refuges to Christian Native Americans, whose communities had been ravaged by infectious disease, warfare, and encroachment by white settlers.Life at Natick
Lawsuits and land disputes
The truce between the colonies of Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth and local Native peoples was frequently tested. The submission of the local chiefs to the respective colonial governments and adoption of Christianity allowed the Indians to seek redress in the colonial judiciary and removed one of the prejudices against them. The Praying Indians of Natick were brought to court several times by groups of colonists from Dedham, Massachusetts that claimed some of the land, but with Eliot's assistance, most of these attempts failed. Most of the time, however, the Indians failed, as some of the Indian interpreters and chiefs ceded lands to curry favor from the colonists to maintain special privileges, such as the Nipmuc John Wampas, who betrayed the Nipmuc and Massachusett people by selling land to the settlers to which he had no claim, but these sales were upheld in later court challenges. The Pawtucket sachemKing Philip's War
The outbreak of King Philip's War from 1675 until 1676 was disastrous for both the Indians and the English colonists, with enormous bloodshed and destruction on both sides. The Massachusett, all of whom had become Praying Indians confined to Praying towns, remained neutral during the war but suffered heavy casualties. The Praying Indians were attacked in their fields and harassed by neighboring colonists who had become overwhelmed with panic, hysteria, and anti-Indian sentiment. The Praying towns were also targets of Metacomet's forces, raided for supplies and persuading or using force, bringing some of the Praying Indians to join. To appease the colonists, the Praying Indians accepted confinement to the Praying towns, curfews, increased colonial supervision, and surrendered their weapons.Late Colonial Period (1676–1776)
Aftermath of King Philip's War (1676–1681)
King Philip's War disrupted Indian life in New England. The Praying Indian survivors of internment, any Indians lucky enough to have been pardoned and any survivors regrouped at Natick, where they divided up among their pre-existing tribal groupings and pressed for a return to their lands. By 1681, the Indians were allowed to return to their respective homes but continued to face harassment, retaliatory attacks, local killings, and abuse to their lands and property by neighboring colonists. The Indian missions were considered a failure. Natick absorbed many of the surrounding tribes. Okommakamesit was sold by the colonial authorities in 1685, as the colonial judiciary upheld forged deeds of questionable and sales, forcing most of the Nipmuc and Pawtucket of the community to settle in Natick. Wonalancet (c.1619—1697), a Pennacook sachem or leader, joined his nephew in Natick. Disease, outmigration, and loss of land shrunk many of the former Indian communities below carrying capacity, and most young people often left for Natick to seek land, spouses, and employment. Most of the young Nipmuc had left Nashoba for Natick for these reasons. The autonomy of the Indians was eroded by the dismantling of their lands. Natick was able to retain its local leadership, with the Natick elite serving the administrative roles of the community and holding the positions of the Indian church with daily affairs conducted in the Massachusett language. This continued until 1721, when record-keeping switched to English, and Oliver Peabody, a monolingual English-speaker, became the minister of the Indian church. Peabody used his position to encourage the Indians to sell land, in part so as to increase the amount of white settlers living in the Indian enclave. By the 1750s, Natick had ceased to be an Indian town, as it was more a messy patchwork of Indian common lands and white-owned property in between, and the town's governance and church had switched to English and was dominated by white colonists, although a few Indians continued to serve the church.Guardianship of the Indians
Instead of being absorbed into the general affairs of a town which was now dominated by white colonists, the colonial government appointed a commissioner to oversee the Natick in 1743. Originally, the commissioner was charged to manage the timber resources, as most of the forests of New England had been felled to make way for farm and pasture, making the timber on Indian lands a valuable commodity. Very quickly, the guardian of Natick came to control the exchange of land,Conkey, Boissevan, and Goddard, pg. 180 and any funds set up by the sale of Indian products, but mainly land. As the guardians assumed more power and were rarely supervised, many instances of questionable land sales by the guardians and embezzlement of funds have been recorded. The appointment of the guardians reduced the Indians to colonial wards, as they were no longer able to directly address the courts, vote in town elections, and removed the power of the Indian chiefs.Order Accepting the Report in Regard to the Timber and Land of Natick Indians and Appointing a Committee Thereon., Province of Massachusetts. Session Laws § 257. Land was the Indians' only commodity, which their guardians often sold to pay for treatments for the sick, care of orphans, and debts incurred by Indians, but Indians were also the victims of unfair credit schemes that often forced the land out of their hands.The French and Indian Wars and the American Revolutionary War
The French in Canada and their Abenaki allies raided settlements of the Massachusetts Colony. The English colonists enlisted the help of the men of the Indian communities to fight in engagements such as King William's War (1689–1699), Queen Anne's War (1704–1713), Dummer's War (1722–1724),American Independence (1776) to present
Post-independence and 19th century
Intermarriage
Intermarriage, which occurred some in the mid-18th century, accelerated in the 19th century as Indian men were lost to war and remote economic activities, such as whaling. With Native women far outnumbering Native men, many Native women married Black men, since Black people in colonial New England suffered an inverse gender imbalance as few Black women were present. The children were born free, since while slavery was not abolished in Massachusetts until 1787, with laws at the time passing the status of slave through the mother. In addition, the children were readily accepted into the Indian community due to the local matrilineal and matrilocal cultures. Intermarriage with White men also occurred despite colonial anti-miscegenation laws, especially those of lesser means or banished from their communities. Although most Indian men returned to the Indian communities to settle and marry, long times at sea or between work in the whaling port cities, many Indian men also increasingly married and settled with women of other tribes or brought home Black spouses as they were segregated in "colored" sections of communities.Decline
Most of the remaining lands set aside "in perpetuity" for the Native peoples had been sold to non-Natives, leaving a messy patchwork of a few remaining common lands, individual allotments, leased lands, and numerous white proprietors situated inbetween Indian households. The Natick, whose lands were the first Praying towns created by Eliot and the General Court, were able to hold onto their communal lands until the early 19th century. The last of the common lands of Natick were sold sometime after the death of Hannah Dexter in 1821, but most of the common lands had already been sold off by 1750. The last dozen acres owned in common by the Ponkapoag was sold by the guardians in 1828, although a small area of land was not sold until 1840 but the Natick Indians had already been evicted and prohibited from its use. In both cases the land was sold for medical costs for the very elderly and ill. The end of tribal land did not remove the restrictions of the guardians even if it was the original purpose to have stewards of the land on the Native peoples' "behalf." As wards of the colonial and later state government, the Indians were restricted from voting in local elections or seeking redress through the courts on their own. Some of the Indians were supported by annuities established from the funds generated by land sales or initiated by the guardians for their support. The guardians, however, no longer had to maintain the rigorous lists of people associated with the land, which long had been used to segregate the Indians from the non-Indians especially as rates of intermarriage had increased.Earle, J. M. (1861). pp. (supplementary list) XLI-XLVII, LXI-LXII. The end of the Praying towns did not end Indian presence in these regions, although the records of the Native peoples in New England become scant as the guardians focused their attentions on the few Indians under their supervision. Although a few Natick remained in the community as private landholders, many of the Natick moved westward seeking spouses and possible chance of land with the Chaubunagungamaug who would have a reservation until 1887.Censuses: Earle Report
The Commonwealth of Massachusetts ordered reports on the condition of the Indians, mainly for the purposes of keeping track of the expenses and check up on the guardians, who more or less operated autonomously with little oversight from the General Court. The first was Denny Report of 1848, which was a very preliminary look. The report only made no effort to determine the number of Natick. A year later, a more detailed report was released, which came to be known as the Briggs Report of 1849, which again does not list any Natick. The most detailed, and last, of the reports conducted by John Milton Earle was started in 1859 and published in 1861, includes even more information, such as surnames, location, and profession. Earle writes, "Of all the tribes which held reservations, and were placed under guardianship by the States, the Natick Tribe is nearest extinct. ... ly two families remain, and one of these is descended equally from the Naticks and theNotes
External links
References
* * * {{cite book , last1=Bacon , first1=Oliver N. , title=A History of Natick, from Its First Settlement in 1651 to the Present Time , date=1856 , publisher=Damrell & Moore , location=Boston , isbn=9781313453882 , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=RCUWAAAAYAAJ Assimilation of indigenous peoples of North America Massachusett Natick, Massachusetts Native American Christianity Native American history of Massachusetts