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When Metacom, the son of Massasoit, realized that
the Pilgrims were intent on taking all of the Wampanoag lands, he led a unified force of
the Wampanoag, Nipmuc, Narragansett, and Pequot to "push the English back into the
sea." American textbooks today still describe him as a rebel, use such racist terms
as "savage", and glorify the English victory, and never mention the Wampanoag
after 1676. Below are Metacom's words expressing his grievances in 1675. "The
Wampanoag had been the first in doing good to the English and the English were the first
in doing wrong. When the English first came, Massasoit was a great man and the English as
a little child. He constrained other Indians from wronging the English and gave them corn
and showed them how to plant. And was free to do them any good and had let them have one
hundred times more land than now I have for my own people." - Metacom, to James
Easton, 1675
Metacom's Grievances
complete text of Metacoms speech in 1675
"They said they had been the first in doing good to the English, and the English
the first in doing wrong; when the English first came, the king's father was as a great
man, and the English as a little child; he constrained other Indians from wronging the
English, and gave them corn and showed them how to plant, and was free to do them any
good, and had let them have a hundred times more land than now the king had for his own
people. But their king's brother, when he was king, came miserably to die, by being forced
to court, as they judged poisoned.
"And another grievance was, if twenty of their honest Indians testified that an
Englishman had done them wrong, it was nothing; and if but one of their worst Indians
testified against any Indian or their king, when it pleased the English, it was
sufficient.
"Another grievance was, when their kings sold land, the English would say it was
more than agreed to, and a writing must be proof against all of them; and some of their
kings had done wrong to sell so much that they left their people none; and some being
given to drunkenness, the English made them drunk and then cheated them in bargains. Now
their kings were forewarned not to part with land for nothing, in comparison to the value
thereof. Those whom the English had owned for king or queen, they now disinherit and make
another king that would give or sell them those lands; so that now they had no hopes left
to keep any land.
"Another grievance, the English cattle and horses still increased so that when
they removed thirty miles from where the English had anything to do, they could not keep
their corn from being spoiled. They never used to fence, they thought that when the
English bought land of them, they would have kept their cattle upon their own land.
"Another grievance, the English were so eager to sell Indians liquors that most of
the Indians spent all in drunkenness and then ravened upon the sober Indians and they did
believe often did hurt the English cattle, and their kings could not prevent it." |