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History
Of Native American Indians On Long Island
First of Three Articles By Howard
During the
Early settlement of the Colonies, the Dutch and the English were the prominent
settlers of Long Island. Unlike the Pilgrims which first settled our country,
these two nationalities were not simply content to live with the Native American
tribes of the region. While some did, greed soon over took the White man
and he began to see that the Native Americans were not capable of governing
so rich and fertile a land. Whether it be due to the religious practices;
the intelligence, or the lack of a civilized nature, these settlers decided
that only THEY should be the masters of this new land.
To achieve this stature, the
settlers would employ other warring tribes to eradicate the people inhabiting
the lands they wanted. Mind you this was only after they realized that some
would not be moved or bought out. By the winter of 1643, things really got
bad for both sides when reports that an elderly wheelwright was killed on
Manhattan Island in what is now Westchester county. Naturally these reports
said that the elderly chap was killed by and Indian. A gentleman by the name
of William Keift , the Dutch official in charge at New Amsterdam at the time,
ordered the Indians living near where the murder took place to hand over
the killer. They refused. Keift was told the Indian who killed the old man
"had only avenged the death of his Uncle, who had been slain over one and
twenty years by the Dutch."
This did not settle well with Keift who
met with an official council called the Twelve. They concluded that if this
murderer was NOT brought to justice, war would be inevitable. This lit the
proverbial fuse of distrust and a Dutch ensign was sent out with a detail
of 80 men to find the village. But the ensign got lost in the dark, could
not find the village and turned back.
Several weeks later, large groups of
Indians from the north began to move south towards New Amsterdam, most likely
to attack traditional Indian enemies in the south to collect wampum. The
Dutch saw this as a move to foment war against both the Dutch and the English
along the southern New England coastline and the east end of Long Island.
(Sounds a bit like what the government did 1973 with the Native Americans
at Wounded Knee with the Lakota Sioux) With the move of said Native Americans,
other tribes near Manhattan Island sought the protection of Keift and the
settlers. Keift by this time was paranoid and not in a charitable mood concerning
Native Americans. Hence on 25 Feb 1643, he and Dutch soldiers attacked the
refugee encampment killing 80 Indians and taking 30 prisoners. A book titled
"A History of the City of Brooklyn" published in 1867 describes atrocities
to men, women, and children that would rival even some of the worst hack
and slash movies on the market today. It said the Indians were remorselessly
butchered.
This slaughter by the Dutch seems to
have inspired other attacks. The Dutch living at the western end of Long
Island asked Keift for permission to attack their Indian neighbors, but he
refused fearing they might be hard to conquer. But attacks on Long Island
did occur and panicked Dutch farmers fled west seeking the protective shelter
of New Amsterdam. To help quell this unrest, the Dutch invited a group of
Long Island Indians to New Amsterdam to conduct a peace treaty. But that
treaty would not last for long.
For a few months after the Dutch summoned
the Native American leaders to New Amsterdam, there was a peace across the
region. But by the fall of 1643, the killing began anew. Panicky settlers
fled to the safety of New Amsterdam and sought help from Keift. He and his
advisors reached out for help from English communities in Connecticut. While
the English could offer no troops, they did allow for the raising of mercenaries
to head up the task. Enter one John Underhill, a man with a reputation.
Underhill was basically an "Indian Killer"
by his own account, He and his men killed 1000 Pequots- men, women and children
and torched their villages. He was heralded as the savior of the Europeans
from extinction. While the Native Americans feared and hated him, the settlers
hailed him as a hero. This would change Long Island history forever. Underhill's
claim to a bloody piece of Long Island history began in April of 1644, when
it was recorded that seven savages were accused of killing pigs in a settlement
called Hempstead were arrested. (Later it was discovered that English themselves
had done it) Keift sent in Underhill along with 15 or 16 men to the settlement.
Upon arriving, three of the savages were killed outright. Then they took
the other four with them on a sailing boat, two of whom were towed along
by a rope around their necks till they were drowned. The remaining two were
detained at the fort in New Amsterdam. They were kept for a time until Keift
tired of feeding them and looking after them, at which time he turned them
over to the soldiers to do with as they pleased. Suffice it to say
the
atrocities that ensued
were simply that, atrocities. While Keift, stood
laughing heartily at the "fun". It seems this was great sport to the soldiers.
I will not go into detail about what was done, for it makes my heart sad
as a human being to even think on how cruel people can be, then and now.
To continue on, the bloodbath on Long
Island continued to escalate when Underhill and his troops attacked a PEACEFUL
community of Native Americans on what is believed as modern day Massapequa.
After the shooting stopped and the smoke cleared, they had killed 120 Indians.
The exact location of this massacre is disputed. Although a famed archaeologist
Ralph Solecki states that the evidence strongly suggests it occurred at a
site in Massapequa called Fort Neck. Confirmation would have come in 1935
when the bones of some 24 people were dug up during an excavation of the
site.
After the battle of Fort Neck, with the
weather being cold and the wind coming from the northwest, Captain Underhill
and his men collected the bodies of the slain Indians and tossed them in
a heap on the brow of the hill, then sat down and had their breakfast. I
gather from records, they were never buried. Underhill's rampage went on
to a place in Westchester, where he killed the Indians of that area and torched
the fort they lived in. The body count was in excess of 180. Underhill was
honored with statues, obelisks and markers as a great pioneer for European
settlers, while the dead he left behind
had nothing. While there was
a marker
to indicate the site of the massacre at one point in time
it
was stolen for some reason and never replaced. The grounds of the site are
said to have a reddish tinge, indicative of the slain natives of that time.
Now, in 1907 a HUGE obelisk was erected
by the Underhill Society of America, a genealogical group, on Factory Pond
Road, in Mill Neck. The monument features four plaques on its base showing
Underhill reading to natives who are kneeling worshipfully at his feet. On
the cover of the book Underhill is reading can be seen the words
."Love
one Another" |
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