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Biography
- King Philip
Who was King Philip?
Metacom, King Philip as the
colonists called him, became leader of the Wampanoag Confederacy in 1662,
was the second son of Chief Massasoit, and was known as Metacomet and
Philip of Pokanoket.
When the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth in 1620, it was Massasoit's territory
they invaded. Massasoit's principle residence was with the Pokanoket at
Sowams in Rhode Island, but he was Grand Sachem of the whole Wampanoag
Confederacy and had as many as 31 sub tribes under him.
Metacom/King Philip was born c.
1638, either in Massachusetts or Rhode Island, probably in Sowans, Rhode
Island and lived at Mount Hope. He married an Indian woman named
Wootonekanuske. She was born in Pocasset, Massachusetts. A son of Philip,
a daughter of Philip, a child of Philip, and Lucy, another daughter, were
born to this couple. No one knows how many children King Philip and
Wootonekanuske had or what happened to them. A child of Philip was buried
on April 1, 1671, at Mount Hope. His wife and son, age 9, were captured
during the war and sold into slavery in the West Indies as were hundreds
of other Indians. His daughter Lucy had escaped by canoe to Canada.
There was no likeness of Philip that survived, therefore, we do not know
what he looked like. What has become known is more general ethnic
information about the Algonquians, such as the men were taller than the
English; contemporary accounts picture them as lithe of limb, "the men
fairer than the women".
Philip's character also is not
known. Descriptions of Philip's character often reflected the bias
of the times more than the life of a real, flesh and blood man struggling
to adapt to his rapidly changing world. What was
written by the Puritans had a strong bias against Philip, as their fear
and dislike colored their writings. Others considered him to be a proud
strategic leader. Metacom's dignity and unbending spirit both impressed
and frightened the settlers, and he became a symbol of the Indian menace
that could not be controlled.
Metacom, upon Massasoit's death in 1661 and that of his elder brother
Wamsutta (Alexander) the following year in 1662, became chief of the
Wampanoag Confederacy as Wamsutta was laid to rest. As he was growing up,
Metacom had witnessed the mounting colonial injustices against his own
people and the ravaging effects of the whites' diseases. At the age of 24,
Metacom had seen his brother Wamsutta, first in succession to Massasoit,
die at the hands of the colonists, if not intentionally poisoned as the
Indians believed, at least from disease contracted when Wamsutta was
summoned before colonist officials for questioning. Alexander died on his
way home to Sowams as his fever intensified. The body of the young Sachem
was carried the rest of the way on the shoulders of his men, grim evidence
of the dangers of undertaking any action against Plymouth.
Philip the embittered and
younger brother who arrived at stage center at a critical time in New
England's Settler-Native relations, found it increasingly difficult to
keep the pledge of peace, primarily because of the ever-widening sale of
Indian land to the English and the humiliations to which he and his people
were continually subjected. The pressure on the young Sachem to remain
steadfast in the face of English demands must have been extraordinary. The
next years were filled with uneasiness and rumors.
Events finally came to a head
when three Wampanoag were brought to Plymouth to stand trial for the
murder of John Sassamon, who had been close to Philip but was dismissed
from Philip's service because of distrust. On June 8, 1675, Plymouth
executed Tobias and Mattashunannamo for the killing of the Indian, John
Sassamon. Sassamon was no ordinary individual, but a highly symbolic rival
of the Wampanoag sachem Philip. The execution of Philip's people set in
motion a war which, by June 1675, neither side could halt. That Wampanoags
could be tried in Plymouth for Sassamon's death is crucial, for it raised
issues of land and Philip's rule. To Philip
and his people the trial that had taken place was a flagrant miscarriage
of justice and further proof that maintaining an amicable, respectful
relationship between the natives and the English was impossible.
Massachusetts Bay sent emissaries to mollify Philip.
Rhode Island invited the Pokanoket to come to Providence and see if
somehow wrongs could be righted. Despite his profound doubts that mere
words would now do much good, Philip accepted the invitation, journeying
to Rhode Island with forty warriors and counselors. It was here that
Philip's complaints about English justice poured forth. At the same time
he reviewed with bitterness the history of the Pokanoket-Pilgrim
relations and ended with a remarkable statement about his own attitude:
My elder brother became Sachem, he was seized and confined and thereby
thrown into illness and died. Soon after I became Sachem they disarmed all
my people, their land was taken. But a small part of the dominion of my
ancestors remains. I am determined not to live until I have no country.
Philip's works still seem tremendously powerful: he could not go on
until his country was no more. Neither he himself nor his warriors would
let him do that.
The weeks prior to King Philip's
War were an ominous time for English and Indians as both sides anticipated
war. The war came on June 24, 1675. The Wampanoag attacked English
settlers at Swansea in Plymouth, beginning King Philip's War. This war
became one of the costliest confrontations in colonial history. It is
believed that more than half of the 90 settlements in the region had been
attacked and a dozen destroyed. Whole Indian villages were massacred and
tribes decimated.
When the Indian alliance began
to disintegrate and food became scarce in August of 1676, King Philip,
with most of his relatives killed and his wife and son taken captive,
returned to his ancestral home at Mount Hope. He was betrayed by Alderman,
a Wampanoag informer and killed in a final battle. He was beheaded and his
head displayed on a pole for 25 years at Plymouth. He was about 38 years
old.
Washington Irving in the early nineteenth century
penned Philip of Pokanoket. His description of Philip: "He
was a patriot attached to his native soil, a prince true to his subjects
and indignant of their wrongs, a soldier, daring in battle, firm in
adversity, and ready to perish in the cause he had espoused. He was proud
of heart and had an untamable love of natural liberty".
Aftermath of War - Members of the Wampanoag, Nipmuc and
Narragansett tribes were gathered and sold into slavery. Those who escaped
fled from tribe to tribe as each in turn was destroyed.
Sources: Some electronic sources and the books: "King Philip's War, The History and
Legacy of America's forgotten Conflict", Eric B. Schultz and Michael J.
Tougias, "King Philip's War, Civil War in New England 1675-1676", James D.
Drake and "The Red King's Rebellion", Russell Bourne.
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