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Excerpt - "Siege of Brookfield"The following is a excellent excerpt of West Brookfield in "King Philip's War" A special thanks to Eric Schultz for all his help
The book is both an in-depth History of a brutal war and a guide to the sites where the battles and ambushes took place. "Excerpted from King Philip's War: The History and Legacy of America's Forgotten Conflict," c 1999 by Eric B. Schultz and Michael J. Tougias. Reprinted with permission of the publisher, The Countryman Press./W.W. Norton and Co., Inc. To order, call 800-245-4151."
Siege
of Brookfield, When Captain Thomas
Wheeler and his remaining men fled the ambush at New Braintree, they sought
safety at the English settlement of Quabaug, now the Foster Hill area
of West Brookfield. Quabaug had been settled in 1660 by men from Ipswich,
Massachusetts At the time of King Philip's War, it was an isolated farming
settlement of barely twenty homes. Its closest neighbor was Springfield,
a day's journey to the west. Douglas Leach suggest that "indeed,
scarcely a town in all of Massachusetts could claim the dubious distinction
of being more isolated than Brookfield." The surprise return of Wheeler
and his exhausted troopers from their disastrous meeting with the Nipmuc
alerted the settlers at Quabaug to danger. The frightened inhabitants
abandoned their homes and fled to the house of Sergeant John Ayres. (Ayres
had accompanied Wheeler and Hutchinson on their mission to parley with
the Nipmuc, and for his efforts was lying dead at the New Braintree ambush
site.) In all, eighty people gathered in this one home and prepared to
defend themselves against the Nipmuc assault. Henry Young and Ephraim
Curtis immediately set out on horseback for Marlboro but soon met hostile
Nipmuc. They fled back to the garrison and shortly thereafter the assault
began. The August 1675 siege of Brookfield would last almost three days and become one of the most dramatic military engagements of the war. Upon their arrival at Quabaug, the Nipmuc warriors under Muttawmp immediately set fire to all of the structures except the fortified garrison. For forty-eight hours they surrounded the building and, in William Hubbard's account, assaulted the poor
handful of helpless people, both night and day pouring in shot The English in the Ayres garrison responded as best they could, but the scene must have been chaotic and terrifying. Henry Young ventured too close to a window and was mortally wounded. A son of Sergeant William Pritchard attempted to secure desperately needed supplies from a nearby building, perhaps his own residence on the first lot east of Ayers' garrison, but was captured and killed. For intimidation, the Nipmuc mounted Pritchard's head on a pole. (Sergeant Pritchard himself had been killed at Wheeler's Surprise). Thomas Wilson, one of the earliest English settlers at Quabaug, was shot through the jaw while attempting to secure water from a well not far from the garrison. Amidst this death and destruction there was also life, however, as two sets of twins were reported born during the siege. The English were surrounded but not completely helpless. They returned fire and continually thwarted Nipmuc attempts to set the garrison aflame. Reports of eighty Nipmuc killed were undoubtedly inflated, but Muttawmp and his warriors did not go without loss. Indeed, Ephraim Curtis was able to find enough weakness in the siege line to crawl past the Nipmuc on August 3 and make his way by foot the thirty miles to Marlboro. Major Simon Willard and his forty-eight troopers were conducting operations west of Lancaster and arrived first at Quabaug. Willard, who at seventy years of age was the chief military officer of Middlesex County, had heard reports of the Nipmuc attack from people traveling along the Bay Path. He and his men rode the thirty-five or forty miles to Brookfield and arrived after nightfall on August 3, where they charged past the Nipmuc sentries, whose warning shots went unnoticed. Increase Mather wrote:
Willard's party rode almost to the door of the Ayers garrison before they were spotted. With their arrival, the Nipmuc fired the remaining buildings and broke off the siege. Soon after, colonial reinforcements arrived, swelling the ranks of men under Willard to 350 English plus the Mohegan that had pursued Philip so successfully at Nipsachuck. Willard would stay for several weeks to direct military activity in the area, but the residents had little reason and little hope of real security, so the settlement at Quabaug was abandoned. The landmarks related to the original Quabaug Plantation settlement are well marked along the north side of Foster Hill Road in present-day West Brookfield. Much of the site today is a large, open field. Traveling west, the first marker (set in a stone wall near a more modern home) designates the Ayres garrison, followed by a more elaborate memorial to John Ayres and a small stone marking the well at which Major Wilson was shot. Further west, still on the north side of Foster Hill Road, is a stone indicating the location of the first meetinghouse, burned in 1675, and a second built in 1717. The plantation's burial ground, dated 1660-1780, is designated to the northeast of the meetinghouse location. The precise site of the Ayres garrison was apparently in some dispute in the early nineteenth century. In 1843 Joseph Foot noted:
Source: King Philip's War: The History and Legacy of America's Forgotten Conflict," by Eric B. Schultz and Michael J. Tougias. |
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Copyright © 2001 West Brookfield
Historical Commission |