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Pequot
War
Connecticut
was originally settled by Dutch fur traders in 1614.
They sailed up the Connecticut River and built a
fort near present-day Hartford.
The first
English settlers arrived in Connecticut in 1633
under the leadership of Reverend Thomas Hooker.
They were Puritans from the Massachusetts Bay Colony.
After their arrival, several colonies were established
including the Colony of Connecticut, Old Saybrooke,
Windsor, Hartford, and New Haven. Hartford quickly
became an important center of government and trade.
Much
of land settled by the colonists was purchased from
the Mohegan Indians. The Pequot tribe, however,
wanted the land. Soon, violence erupted between
settlers and the Pequot Indians in 1637. In what
came to be known as the Pequot War, The Pequots
were systematically massacred by not only the settlers,
but by Mohegan and Naragansett Indians that had
previously warred against them. Pequot lands were
subsequently divided among the settlers and other
tribes. After the Pequot War, Thomas Hooker led
in the drafting of the Fundamental Orders of Connecticut
in 1639. The document was a plan for government
and is sometimes called America's first Constitution.
John Haynes was then chosen as Connecticut's first
governor. Finally, in 1662, Connecticut was issued
a royal charter, which gave the colony a legal basis
and approval from the King.
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