Wampanoag treatyThe Wampanoag treaty was a treaty signed on April 1 [O.S. March 22], 1621[1] between the Wampanoag, led by Massasoit, and the English settlers of Plymouth Colony, led by Governor John Carver. BackgroundBoth the Wampanoag and the Pilgrims had been struggling prior to treaty's signing. Of the 102 passengers on the Mayflower, only 52 would survive past the first winter.[1] Though the Pilgrims had intended to found a permanent settlement, they were all still living aboard the Mayflower or in temporary dwellings. The Wampanoag were heavily weakened by an unknown disease outbreak (possibly smallpox or measles) from 1615-1619 which wiped out up to 90% of local population.[2] The Narragnsett, capitalized on this decimation of the Wampanoag and forced them to pay tribute. Massasoit was initially wary of the new arrivals, as previously Englishmen under John Smith's lieutenant Thomas Hunt had lured 20 Patuxet into slavery. After Massasoit's sachems summoned spirits to drive the settlers away to no effect, he decided to make peace with the settlers. Massasoit, having heard rumors of English power, sought a treaty with the new arrivals against the Narragansett.[3] Signing and termsMassosoit first sent Samoset, an Abenaki prisoner who had learned some English from fishermen, to test the intentions of the English, promising Samoset freedom if he went. Samoset stayed the night with the pilgrims and informed them of the existence of Tisquantum, a Patuxet man who had learned English after being captured by Thomas Hunt. Tisquantum was quickly nicknamed Squanto by William Bradford and would prove an invaluable asset as a translator to the Pilgrims as his English skill far exceeded Samoset's. Massasoit would arrive a week after Samoset with a band of roughly sixty warriors and his brother Quadequina. Carver was initially reluctant to sign a treaty until the two parties agreed to lay down their arms and exchange hostages.[1] Edward Winslow recorded the terms of the treaty in Mourt's Relation as follows[4]
Aftermath and legacyCarver soon fell into a coma and died just weeks after the treaty's signing. The treaty was nearly broken just a year after it was signed when Massasoit demanded Bradford, who had become governor of Plymouth after Carver's death, turn over Squanto to face Wampanoag justice. Bradford was reluctant to turn over the man who assisted so greatly in the colony's survival past the first winter and delayed until the point was rendered moot by Squanto's death in 1622.[5] Having avoided this early hurdle the treaty remained in place for over fifty years, making in the only treaty between Native Americans and European settlers and their descendants to last beyond the lifetime of all signatories.[3] The treaty was further affirmed when a Edward Winslow went to Pokanoket to nurse a sick and blind Massasoit to health. In gratitude Massasoit revealed a plot by the Massachusett to attack both Plymouth and the neighboring Wessagusset colony. This plot would be foiled before it could materialize by Myles Standish and several of Massasoit's men.[6] The treaty would not last long beyond after Massasoit's death in 1661. After the brief reign of Wamsutta as sachem, Massasoit's second son Metacomet would pursue a more hostile police to the colonists, ultimately culminating in King Philip's War. The treaty was commemorated on the reverse side of 2011 edition of the Sacagewea dollar.[7] References
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