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Home Up Crusty Job Tyler Early Mendon, MA. Salem Witchcraft Trials
EARLY MENDON &
KING PHILIP'S WAR
This
unpublished manuscript, was written & read by Rev, Carlton Staples before the
Mendon Historical Society, Mendon, Ma. three years before his death in 1901. The
original is 8 pages long, although very interesting is here shortened, hopefully
without losing too much on the life and times of the first 12 years in Mendon,
Ma.
EARLY MENDON & KING PHILIP'S WAR by
Rev. Carlton Staples:
(abridged for this writing, by APP -- also writings in parenthesis added by me
for further explanation or update on the written article).
Let us turn back the pages of history to consider an event which ushered in the
most distressing and bloody war New England has ever seen. It is commonly called
King Philip's War which began in the Mass. colony with the attack on Mendon July
14, 1675. The place had been settled about 12 years and probably contained 20 or
25 families.
Mendon was then a lonely settlement in a dense wilderness as yet almost
untouched by the woodsman axe, with only a horse and cart path connecting it
with the civilized world. It is difficult to conceive of the loneliness and
hardship, the suffering involved on such an existence. The houses were probably
all built of unhewn logs, though there is a mention of a saw pit where boards
were made by hand. They had a Blacksmith, a carpenter, a weaver, and a minister,
among them , but no Doctor, lawyer or schoolmaster until many years afterwards.
Domestic animals, oxen, cows, sheep, hogs and horses soon became common and
added largely to their means of substance and comfort.
Their food must have been wild game. meat, corn, and rye, beans, berries and
nuts and of these at first of a scanty supply; their clothing of the coarsest
kind of spun and woven in their own homes. Their Books, the Bible, Pilgrims
Progress and the New England Primer. Their Amusement was husking and quilting
bees. Their holidays Thanksgiving and Sunday Meetings which constituted their
principal social life. (the Puritans objected to Christmas and in 1647 by an act
of Parliament the observance of both Christmas and Easter were abolished and
also condemned by the New England Puritans.)
Let's look for a moment at the location of some of the families. On the Medfield
Road (now Hartford Ave., East, Hopedale, Ma.) we find Benjamin Albee on Mill
River where he built a corn mill; Before this the settlers carried their grain
to be ground at Marlboro or Medfield both 15 miles away. Coming towards the
village the next settler was John Rockwood. Thence crossing Muddy Brook 20 rods
above the present bridge we come to the cabin of Matthias Puffer, whose farm
included a part of the Samuel ALDRICH place bounded on the northeast by the rock
just beyond the cemetery under which gushes a copious spring.
Below Puffer's on what is now the Providence Road, there were probably no
inhabitants. But coming toward the village we pass the cabin of Ferdinando
Thayer who wrote his name with two small f's instead of a capital letter, and
who, tradition says, was a renowned wrestler.
Top
Further up we pass the houses of the Lovetts and near the old Burying ground
that of Warfield, afterwards the first school master/ then the ALDRICH families,
George & Joseph, Abraham Staples and Joseph Whites (where the aforementioned Saw
mill was) which brings us to the corner above the Public Library where the
Meeting House stood. a humble structure twenty feet square, the roof of which
came to an 8 ft. square over the center. (today the Meeting House grounds are
called Founder's Park and has a monument dedicated to the first settlers; George
Aldrich's name is 2nd on the monument, with Ferdinando Thayer 1st; also the
Library, mentioned above has been for the past 76 years the Mendon Historical
Museum: -- 1997)
Up
the North Road (now North Ave.) were probably a dozen other dwellings, ending
with that of the contumacious old rebel Job
Tyler, who wouldn't come to work on the
Minister's house which the town was building for Rev. Joseph Emerson (Mendon's
1st Minister). And when the selectman sent the constable to warn him, he said,
"If they had more to say to him than he had to them, they might come where he
was," an audacious speech which they hreatened to report to the court and also
his miscarriages on the Lord's Day.
Returning to our brief survey to the meeting house, we enter what is called the
Country Road (now Route 16) leading to Nipmuc Great Pond and south meadows--
probably those near wig-wam hill, where the settlers went for hay. On this road
at the Dr. Metcalf Place we find the House of John THOMPSON and further on, that
of Walter COOK, near Mr. Adams house and above Mr. Winter and Probably Deacon
Jones, the pioneer of what is now Hopedale (was Milford).
Continuing on this road to the pond we find there Col. William Crowne, the town
clerk, the most notable man in the settlement, excepting the Minister. Probably
he had been with Cromwell's army where he won military renown. He received from
Parliament the province of Nova Scotia which he was never to get possession of.
His son John Crowne, was a ribald poet and a boon companion of King Charles II
and associated with his dissolute court. Col. Crowne's was the last house on
this road; it stood in what is called on the records, FORTFIELD: indicating that
there was some kind of fortification in the vicinity.
In
addition to the homes and roads already mentioned there were what is known as
the Back Lane and Birch Alley, laid out originally as a road eight rods wide. On
this were the houses of John Harber. Mr. Emerson, John WOODLAND, and Deacon
Moore at the Welcome Staples’ place. Doubtless there were others within the
principle families living here in 1675, and located mainly on this road, leading
from Medfield North to Marlborough over a distance of 2 1/2 miles, the houses
widely separated and precluding much social intercourse between the people,
Evidently they were men of public spirit and strong religious convictions.
They laid out this portion of the town a generous scale with the expectations of
its growth and importance, In these 12 years since the settlement began, they
had built a Meeting House, a parsonage, and maintained a Minister for most of
the time, paying him 40 lbs. a year, one half in county produce. When we recall
how few were in numbers, and how straightened their means ... how much larger
the value of money was then, than it is now,
we partially comprehend the hard constant self denial which these facts show
must have filled up their life. They had founded a town, a church here, forming
a community of sturdy, intelligent Christian men & women, loving liberty, and
walking humbly with God.
Top
From this hasty glance at the conditions of Mendon, two and one half centuries
ago, let us look at the tribes of Indians around them inhabiting South Eastern,
Central and Western Mass. or what are now the counties of Plymouth, Bristol,
Worcester and a portion of R.I. There were the Wampanoag and the Nipmucks. The
former occupied the country along the Taunton River and northern shores of
Narragannsett Bay and about the Pawtucket River. The home of the Chief was at
Mount Hope, a high ridge of land opposite Fall River, on the bay of the same
name.
Up
to the time early in July of 1675, Philip and his Wampanoags were the only
Indians engaged in atrocities or that had shown any disaffection towards the
English or disposition to break the peaceful relations.
But let us turn to the Nipmucks who inhabited very sparsely indeed, southern and
Central Mass. They had always been friendly and peaceful with the settlers.
There is no record of any instance, I believe, of any atrocity committed by
these Indians and the English.
There was a much kindly intercourse between the natives and the settlers in
mutual trade and helpfulness. The second minister here, Grindal Rawson, learned
their language and used to preach to them on Sunday afternoons. Some were known
as praying or Christian Indians.. At least one of these Christian Indians was
living in Mendon in 1667, known as Caleb.
Therefore we can hardly conceive, of the consternation caused by the sudden
outbreak of a war among the Nipmucks in the awful tragedy that occurred here
14th July 1675; it is surprising that scarcely anything should be found
regarding an event which made as indelible impression on the history of Mendon,
the beginning of a war that caused the entire destruction of the town. NOT A
WORD, I believe, exists in the town records even mentioning, the massacre or the
war, among the contemporaneous writings. President Increase Mather of Harvard in
his brief History barely speaks of the five or seven slain in Mendon on that
day.
Fortunately we are able to identify three of the victims and point to where they
lived. We have even have a suggestion of what a few were doing when dispatched
by the Indian tomahawk. (Mrs. Rachael (Farnsworth) Puffer and her son, a lad of
11 or 12 yrs. John Rockwood Jr. another lad of abt. 12 yrs. whom were probably
out picking berries in the swamp along Muddy Brook when the Indians fell upon
them and put them to their death. These three were the only ones positively
identified, through petitions sent to the General Court. A Monument now stands
near this site for those slain that fatal day. History of the area tells us,
that John Albee, Richard Post (husband of Mary
Tyler) John Garnsey, Joseph Stevens the Blacksmith, were some of the
other settlers killed that day.)
A
woeful scene it must have been, when their mangled bodies were found and brought
to the homes from which they went out of, full of hope and happiness. No word of
consolation or prayer, no hymn of faith and hope was heard as they were carried
to their last resting place, we know not where… Funeral services were not
tolerated by the Puritans at this time and unknown here until years afterwards.
They regarded them as savoring of popery and prelacy. The English of the
Catholic church, the prayer book and the cross, objects well- nigh as offensive
to the Puritans as Satan himself. They embodied in his mind about everything
ungodly and Satanic.
Top
He
had crossed the sea and made his home in the wilderness with the wild beast and
savages, to escape their power and influence. He would neither listen to or
permit such popish or prelatic ceremonies where he was able to prevent them.
Think of what it meant for the families in Mendon, exposed to more attack, far
from immediate assistance, not very capable of defense. It was a time of awful
darkness. The hearty men qualled at the prospects when they thought of their
wives and children, and what they had provided for sickness, for old age and
helplessness, laying at the mercy of the savages. Think of the terrors and
consternation, when news of the awful tragedy ran like wild fire from house to
house, through the town. We may very well believe there was little sleep for
many nights following that bloody day. Horrid dreams alarmed "the curtained
sleeper" the fancied sounds of warhoops, or the light of blazing homes, the
shrieks of the their fleeing neighbors. A pall of anxiety and fear hung over the
town in the expectation of a renewal of attack. An express was sent to Medfield
giving alarm, and Rev. Emerson went to Boston to ask for military protection. It
was readily granted and Capt. Henchman was dispatched with a military company to
secure and save the place. The court has issued a decree forbidding the
inhabitants to leave the settlement on pain of forfeiting all their rights in
the lands they had subdued from the wilderness. But many soon gave up their
homes and went to towns below. The remainder of the people finally gathered in
two of the largest houses. A considerable force was kept here to maintain this
frontier town. The deprivation and suffering became so severe that people could
not endure it, and they gradually stole away. The troops were withdrawn six
months after the first attack, the place was abandoned, In the words of Cotton
Mather, "Another candle of the Lord extinguished"
Early the following year, 1676, the Indians burned the remaining buildings and
for the tolls and sacrifices of twelve (12) Years little was left but charred
logs and ashes. The attack on Mendon was led, it supposed by the Nipmuck chief
Matoonas.
The deed of the original Mendon, eight square miles, embraces what are now
Mendon, Uxbridge, Milford, Blackstone, Hopedale, Bellingham, Northbridge and
Upton (Millville, & Whitinsville). (Mendon is now called MOTHER MENDON because
of her many children and grandchildren :) ]
The Memorial Stone made of rough unhewn slate fittingly symbolizes the massive
enduring character of the men and women who subdued the wilderness, conquered
the savage and laid the foundation of the town in love of liberty and the
service of God:
Inscription reads:
Near this spot
The wife and son of Matthias Puffer.
the son of John Rockwood
and
other inhabitants of Mendon were killed
by Nipmuck Indians
14 July 1675
The beginning of King Phillip's War in the colony of Mass.
THE
END:
This manuscript was shortened, but nothing was left out concerning Mendon, or
any of its settlers. .. A few paragraphs were changed or omitted for brevity,
but I believe without taking away from the
original text written by Rev. Carlton Staples. 1901:
Contributed by: Alice Palladini
alicep@ultranet.com
The documents are direct quotes and should not be taken and
used as one's own work without identifying the source.

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