The American Thanksgiving: The Ugly
Truth
“some innocent blood cryes at
Qunnihticut” ~Roger Williams
Jamestown VA was settled in 1607, and
the English started bringing African slaves into Jamestown in 1619.
The European colonies in New England were new at the time, the
original settlements having been founded in the 1620s. By 1636, the
Dutch had fortified their trading post, and the English had built a
trading fort at Saybrook. English Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay
and Plymouth colonies settled at the then four recently established
river towns of Windsor (1632,) Wethersfield (1633,), Hartford (1635)
and Springfield (1636).
This was a time before the American,
Haiti, and French Revolutions, a time before the Enlightenment Era,
and the scientific revolution. It was a time before table knives were
invented. It was a time of exploration, scurvy, smallpox, malaria,
cholera, exploitation, colonizing, and Beaver pelts.
Wopigwooit and Tatobem's main village
was the Mystick River Fort in Groton,CT. Both Wopigwooit and Tatobem
were born at that Pequot Mystic River Fort. The grand sachem
Wopigwooit died in 1631, and then Tatobem, the next grand Pequot
sachem was assassinated in 1634 by a Dutch trader.
The personal rivalry between Sassacus
and his son-in-law Uncas happened because both of them had been
sub-sachems, and both had expected to succeed Tatobem as the head
chief of the Pequot. Rather than uniting to destroy the new English
trading post on the Connecticut, the Pequot split into pro-Dutch and
pro-English factions. Political divisions between the Pequot and
Mohegan widened as they aligned with different trade sources—the
Mohegan with the English, and the Pequot with the Dutch. Sassacus
traded with the Dutch, and Uncas developed alliances with the
English.
Uncas broke away from the Pequot, and
led his followers west of the Thames River and settled at Shantok,
the ancestral land of his Father's. Other Pequot and Mattabesic soon
joined him. They adopted the tribes original name “Mohegan”,
meaning “Wolf People”. Even though Uncas broke away from the
Pequot, the Pequot tribe still numbered around 3 thousand.
We've seen many False Flags thruout
history; Hitler and the Reichstag; the Spanish-American War, and the
lie about the bombing of the USS Maine; Mexican-American War and
Polk's lie about the Mexican invasion; the Vietnam War and the lie
about the incident at the Gulf of Tonkin; and the Iraq War, and the
lie about the Weapons of Mass Destruction; all of these wars were
based on lies.
The Pequot War was no different.
Shortly after Tatobem, the chief of
the Pequot was assassinated by Jacob Jacques Elekens, the Western
Niantic Indians, a tributary tribe of the Pequot, which means they
were responsible to the Pequot, but weren't the Pequot themselves,
the Western Niantics killed John Stone and his crew in May 1634 on
the Connecticut River because John Stone tried to kidnap the Western
Niantics, enslave them, and then sell them as slaves.
Eventually, the English turn the murder
of John Stone against the Pequot even though the English themselves
didn't even like John Stone.
John Stone was a scurrilous English
smuggler, a privateer, aka, a pirate. A fk'n pirate. And slave
trader. John Stone was a goddamned slave trading pirate, who went
from the Caribbean, West Indies, back to the east coast colonies,
Jamestown, selling slaves.
John Stone was banished from Boston for
lewd and immoral conduct, drunkenness and adultery, and for piracy.
John Stone tried to commadeer, ie steal, a Plymouth ship, failed,
then still needing to make money, John Stone stopped at the mouth of
the Connecticut River on the way to Virginia and captured some
Western Niantic women and children to sell as slaves in Jamestown.
Those indians, the western niantics,
rebelled, and killed John Stone and all nine Englishmen aboard.
While John Stone deserved to die, the
English blamed the Pequot for it, even though they didn't do it.
Pequot Chief Sassacus tried to smooth
over relations in an effort to prevent further hositilites. Sassacus
negotiated a peace settlement with the Massachusetts Bay colony. The
English, however, insisted that the Pequot deliver up the Western
Niantic warriors responsible for the goddamned criminal ship-stealing
slave trading pirate John Stone.
Sassacus refused to do.
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“O daughter of Babylon, doomed to be
destroyed, blessed shall he be who repays you with what you have done
to us! Blessed shall he be who takes your babies and dashes them
against the rock!”
Psalm 137:8-9
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In the summer of 1636, members of a
Narragansett tributary tribe killed Captain John Oldham, a Boston
trader. John Oldman was killed when the Indians of Block Island
killed him. The Indians of Block Island were allies of the Eastern
Niantic, who were in turn allies of the Narragansett.
Richard Mather, in a sermon delivered
in Boston, denounced the Pequot as the "accursed seeds of
Canaan," in effect turning the confrontation in Connecticut into
a "holy war" of the Puritans against the forces of
darkness.
Again, the Pequot get the blame for a
murder that the Indians on Block Island committed, who were Eastern
Niantic and Narragansett allies. But for the English, the Pequot, who
allied with the Dutch for many years, were a convenient scapegoat.
Massachusetts, without bothering to
consult the colonists in Connecticut, sent 90 men under the command
of John Endecott (Endicott) of Boston to Block Island in August with
orders to kill every man and take the women and children prisoners.
Captain Endicott believes he is working God's will against the
savages.
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“nd we took all his cities at that
time—there was not a city that we did not take from them—sixty
cities, the whole region of Argob, the kingdom of Og in Bashan. All
these were cities fortified with high walls, gates, and bars, besides
very many unwalled villages. And we devoted them to destruction, as
we did to Sihon the king of Heshbon, devoting to destruction every
city, men, women, and children.”
Deuteronomy 3:4-6
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After a brief Indian resistance on
Block Island, the Indians disappear. Endicott spends two days burning
their empty villages, shooting stray dogs, and destroying Indian food
supplies. The English soldiers managed to kill 14 Niantic Indians and
an undetermined number of dogs before they escaped into the woods.
They also burned the village and all of their crops.
Endicott then loaded his men back into
the boats and sailed over to Fort Saybrook to add some additional
soldiers for the second part of his mission - a visit to the Pequot
village at the mouth of the Thames river to demand 1,000 fathoms of
wampum for the death of Oldham and several Pequot children as
hostages. The talks break down and violence erupts. Endicott's men
proceed in rampant destruction and looting.
The English blamed the Pequots for
murders that a Narragansett tributary and Western Niantics executed,
and John Stone, who was a goddamned slave trad'n pirate, who tried to
steal another Englishman's ship... so he was a criminal, who gives a
goddamned fuck about John Stone? The English tried to make hay out of
it, turn a molehill into a mountain, and eventually, the Pequot were
sick of the English's violent lying bullshit.
So the Pequot besieged Fort Saybrook
the following fall and winter, and attacked the Wethersfield
settlement. The English then declare war on the Pequots.
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The Mystic River Massacre:
The English and the Dutch were getting
their asses kicked by the Pequot throughout the majority of the
Pequot War. “For the first eight months of the Pequot War, the
Pequot never lost a battle to the English,” “Tactically, the
Pequot were superior, even without firearms. The English could not
figure them out. Up until the Mystic Massacre, the Pequot had won
every engagement.”
The turning point of the Pequot War was
the Massacre at Mystic Fort, the principal Pequot village located on
the Mystic River.
John Mason figured that it was easier
to attacking a sleeping town of women children and the elderly
instead of engaging the warriors face-to-face.
In the last hours of moonlight, May 26,
1637, John Mason and 90 English Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay
Colony and Connecticut Colony and Plymouth Colony, some Dutch
mercenaries, Narragansett allies under Miantonimo?, along with Uncas,
the first of the Mohegans, with seventy Mohegan warriors sailed down
the Connecticut river to Saybrook, then to Narragansett Bay and were
going to attack the Pequots from the eastward.
John Mason's 400 fight'n men surrounded
a fortified Pequot village inside a palisade at a place called
Missituck (Mystic) before the break of dawn on May 26, 1637.
John Mason went to the northeast end of
the palisade, and (John?) Underhill to the southwest.
In the village, the Pequot women,
elderly, and children sleep. Suddenly, a dog barks. The awakened
Pequots shout “Owanux! Owanux!” (which means: “Englishmen!
Englishmen!”) and mount a valiant defense.
John Mason said: “We must burn them,
and immediately stepping into a wigwam where he had been before,
brought out a firebrand, and putting it into the matts with which
they were covered, set the wigwams on fire”
Within minutes, Mistick Fort was
engulfed in fire, fanned by a stiff northeast wind.
John Underhill described the scene and
his participation: "Captaine Mason entring into a Wigwam,
brought out a fire-brand, after hee had wounded many in the house,
then hee set fire on the West-side where he entred, my selfe set fire
on the South end with a traine of Powder, the fires of both meeting
in the center of the Fort blazed most terribly, and burnt all in the
space of halfe an houre;many couragious fellowes were unwilling to
come out, and fought most desperately through the Palisadoes, so as
they were scorched and burnt with the very flame, and were deprived
of their armes, in regard the fire burnt their very bowstrings, and
so perished valiantly : mercy they did deserve for their valour,
could we have had opportunitie to have bestowed it; many were burnt
in the Fort, both men, women, and children, others forced out, and
came in troopes to the Indians, twentie, and thirtie at a time, which
our souldiers received and entertained with the point of the sword;
downe fell men, women, and children, those that scaped us, fell into
the hands of the Indians, that were in the reere of us; it is
reported by themselves, that there were about foure hundred soules in
this Fort, and not above five of them escaped out of our hands.”
The English retreated and encircled the
fort to block all exits from Mystic Fort, to prevent anyone huddling
inside the longhouses or dozens of huts from escaping, while clubbing
or firing into the fort at anyone who attempted to escape. The Pequot
elderly, women, and children were trapped inside. Those who tried
climbing over the palisade were shot; anyone who succeeded in getting
over was killed by the Narragansett or Mohegan forces. The Mohegan
and Narragansett formed an outer ring preventing further escape of
Pequot who slipped through the English line.
Within an hour, the village is burned
and 700 Pequot are killed.
Two Englishmen were killed, and 20 to
40 were wounded.
Besides Sassacus's 150 Pequot warriors,
the Mystic Massacre nearly exterminates the Pequot entirely, which
was a war aim for the English in the Pequot War. Only seven survived
to be taken prisoner, while another seven escaped to the woods.
Mohegan and Narragansetts Indians were
appalled by what the English Protestant Pilgrims were willing to do,
with them killing so many innocent people, especially children, so
left the battlefield, and returned home.
Captain John Underhill, one of the
English commanders, documents the Mystic Massacre in his journal,
Newes from America :
“Down fell men, women, and
children. Those that 'scaped us, fell into the hands of the Indians
that were in the rear of us. Not above five of them 'scaped out of
our hands. Our Indians came us and greatly admired the manner of
Englishmen's fight, but cried "Mach it, mach it!" - that
is, "It is naught, it is naught, because it is too furious, and
slays too many men." Great and doleful was the bloody sight to
the view of young soldiers that never had been in war, to see so many
souls lie gasping on the ground, so thick, in some places, that you
could hardly pass along.”
Justifying his savage conduct later,
Mason declared that the attack against the Pequot was the act of a
God who "laughed his Enemies and the Enemies of his People to
scorn making [the Pequot] as a fiery Oven... Thus did the Lord judge
among the Heathen, filling [Mystic] with dead Bodies."
William Bradford, in his famous History
of the Plymouth Plantation, celebrated the Pequot massacre:
“Those that scraped the fire were
slaine with the sword; some hewed to peeces, others rune throw with
their rapiers, so as they were quickly dispatchte, and very few
escapted. It was conceived they thus destroyed about 400 at this
time. It was a fearful sight to see them thus frying in the fyer, and
the streams of blood quenching the same, and horrible was the stincke
and sente there of, but the victory seemed a sweete sacrifice, and
they gave the prayers thereof to God, who had wrought so wonderfully
for them, thus to inclose their enemise in their hands, and give them
so speedy a victory over so proud and insulting an enimie.”
Winthrop's journal entry for this day
is:
A day of thanksgiving kept in all
the churches for our victories against the Pequots, and for the
success of the assembly; but by reason of this latter, some of Boston
would not be present at the public exercises. The captains and
soldiers who had been in the late service were feasted, and after the
sermon the magistrates and elders accompanied them to the door of the
house where they dined.
The Journal of John Winthrop 1630 - 1649. Abridged edition. Richard S. Dunn & Laetitia Yeandle, ed. p. 130 - 131.
The Journal of John Winthrop 1630 - 1649. Abridged edition. Richard S. Dunn & Laetitia Yeandle, ed. p. 130 - 131.
A second Pequot Village was attacked,
massacred and destroyed on June 5, 1637 near present day Stonington
and a third Pequot Village was attacked, massacred and destroyed on
July 28, 1637 near present day Fairfield. Total numbers of Mohegan,
River Indian and Narragansett casualties are unknown, although one
account identified forty Native casualties and another described
several Narragansett killed by the English who mistook them for
Pequot.
The battle cuts the heart from the
Pequot people and scatters them across what is now southern New
England, Long Island, and Upstate New York. Over the next few months,
remaining resistors are either tracked down and killed or enslaved.
The name "Pequot" is outlawed by the English.
The Puritan justification for the
action is simply stated by Captain Underhill:
It may be demanded, Why should you
be so furious? Should not Christians have more mercy and compassion?
Sometimes the Scripture declareth women and children must perish with
their parents. Sometimes the case alters, but we will not dispute it
now. We had sufficient light from the word of God for our
proceedings.
The English get Sassacus and a party of
thirty-forty men on the run. Sassacus and his few remaining warriors
run into the Iroquois Mohawks in present-day New York, but the
Mohawks instead kills Sassacus and his 30 warriors, sending their
scalps to Hartford, as a symbolic offering of Mohawk friendship with
the Connecticut Colony.
John Winthrop, the first elected
official as an America-governor of the Massachusetts Bay Colony,
issued an official Thanksgiving Declartion on behalf of Hartford and
the entire Connecticut Colony:
“The 12th of the 8th m. was ordered
to bee kept a day of publicke thanksgiving to God for his great
m'cies in subdewing the Pecoits, bringing the soldiers in safety, the
successe of the conference, & good news from Germany.” “The
good news from Germany” probably have to do with some recent
Protestant military victories in the Thirty Years War. Ferdinand the
2nd had also died earlier in 1637.
And then Americans celebrated
Thanksgivings after many native American massacres. It became a
tradition that Americans still celebrate today.
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Samaria shall bear her guilt, because
she has rebelled against her God; they shall fall by the sword; their
little ones shall be dashed in pieces, and their pregnant women
ripped open.
Hosea 13:16
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The Treaty of Hartford dictates the
terms of the English victory. The colonists outlaw the name Pequot.
The 20-30 Pequot prisoners were put to
death.
Then the Puritan Pilgrims got involved
in the slave trade. The remaining captives, consisting of about
eighty women and children, were divided. Some were given to the
soldiers. Thirty were given to the Narraganset and forty-eight were
sent to Massachusetts. A few Pequot were enslaved and shipped to
Bermuda or the West Indies, or were forced to become household slaves
in English households in Connecticut and Massachusetts Bay.
“Ask of me and I shall give thee the
heather for thine inheritance and the uttermost parts of the earth
for thy possession.”
~Psalms 2:8
These are the same Puritan Pilgrims who
hated Christmas, the festivals, the parties, the merriment, the
Christmas tree, and the taking off of work, so they outlawed
Christmas, and fined anybody celebrating it 5 shillings.
The Puritan Pilgrims also hung 20
mostly women they considered to be witches in the Salem,
Massachusetts Witch trials.
John Winthrop would fuck himself over
historically when he banished Anne Hutchinson from the Massachusetts
Bay Colony. Anne Hutchinson is very similar to Joan of Arc, in that,
she out-Christianed them all.
Then, of course, Metacomet's head was
put a pike. Metacomet was Chief Massasoit's 2nd son, and
became the chief of the Wampanoags in 1662. Chief Massasoit was the
chief of the Wampanoags in 1621 when the supposed Thanksgiving Feast
happened. 55 years later, the English and the Wampanoags would be at
war, and eventually Metacomet, Chief Massasoit's son, aka King
Philip, the new chief of the Wampanoags, was shot and killed on
August 12, 1676. Hunted by a group of rangers led by Captain Benjamin
Church, he was fatally shot by a praying Indian named John Alderman,
on August 12, 1676, in the Miery Swamp nearMount Hope in Bristol,
Rhode Island. But he wasn't just shot and killed. After his death,
his wife and nine-year-old son were captured and sold as slaves in
Bermuda. Philip's head was mounted on a pike at the entrance to Fort
Plymouth, where it remained for more than two decades. His body was
cut into quarters and hung in trees. John Alderman was given
Metacomet's right hand as a reward.
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