Mystic (site of Mason's massacre of Pequots in 1637)
The pleasant
town of Mystic, Connecticut, has a well of darkness in its past.
It was here, in 1637, that one of the ugliest massacres of Indians
by European settlers took place. The Pequot tribe, whose territory
lay east of the Fresh River, were makers of sewan, or wampum, which
tribes farther north and west valued highly. Recognizing this, the
Dutch worked out an arrangement with the Pequots in which they would
trade European goods for wampum, and then trade wampum with other
Indians, particularly the Mohawks, for furs. This continued for
several years, until the English arrived and decided they wanted
a piece of the action. As tensions increased, a series of murders
ensued: Indians killing Indians, Dutch killing Indians, Indians
killing Englishmen. The horrific climax caim on May 26, 1637, when
a contingent of Englishmen under Captain John Mason attacked the
Pequot village, burning it to the ground, and killing as many as
700 Indians.
Seventeenth
century illustration of the New Englanders surrounding the
Pequot village at Mystic.
Pequot village
diarama, from the Mashantucket Peqout Museum.
The tribe-owned Mashantucket
Pequot Museum and Research Center is a working museum dedicated
to Pequot history, including lifesized villages and forts. It
is the largest American Indian museum in the world.