
Scene
from Pequot War - Wikimedia Commons
Name
The
name "Pequot" is thought to mean
"the destroyers" in Algonquin
language.
Diet
The
Pequots were an agricultural community and
cultivated corn, beans, tobacco, and squash.
They also hunted and caught fish and seafood.
Homes
The
Pequots lived in wigwams or medium-sized
longhouses. Wigwams are
small houses, usually eight to ten feet
high, made of wooden frames and covered
with mats. A longhouse, more often associated
with the Iroquois, was a house made of wooden
poles that was designed to house up to 20
families.
Culture
Unlike their Naragansett and Wampanoag neighbors,
the Pequots were a war-like people that
dominated Connecticut until colonization.
They were highly structured with a strong
central authority system that rested with
the tribal council and the grand sachem.
History
The
Pequots were thought to be indigenous to
eastern and central Connecticut. In the
early 1600's, one of the Pequot sachems,
named Uncas, became dissatisfied with the
rule of Sassacus, the Grand Sachem, and
broke off to form his own tribe, which became
the Mohegans. The Mohegans, unlike the Pequots,
would become allies of the colonists. Nevertheless,
the Pequots remained a large tribe and probably
numbered about 16,000, until a deadly epidemic
killed nearly 80 percent of the population
in 1633. Shortly after the epidemic, English
colonization of the Pequot lands moved at
a frantic pace and eventually resulted in
small-scale conflicts and attacks (coordinated
by both the Indians and the English settlers
at Fort Saybrook) that escalated into the
Pequot War. As other local tribes such as
the Naragansett and Mohegan made alliances
with the English, the Pequots lashed out.
Pequot warriors, who had previously attacked
a group of Mattabesic Indians who had tried
to trade with colonists, had begun killing
English settlers who ventured outside of
their stronghold at Fort Saybrook. Connecticut
colonial leaders, together with their Naragansett
allies, soon devised a strategy to combat
the Pequots and massacred the largest Pequot
Village at Misistuck, burning it to the
ground and killing almost 700 Pequots, most
of whom were women and children. The grizzly
scene became known throughout history as
the Massacre at Mystic. 180 Pequot warriors
were subsequently killed when they were
found hiding in a swamp near Fairfield.
Many were captured and sold as slaves. The
Pequots never recovered from the war and
were virtually annihilated.
Today,
the Pequots operate Foxwoods Casino, the
world's largest resort casino, on their
1,800 acre reservation in Connecticut. The
Pequots have used revenues from the casino
to expand their reservation and have built
a cultural museum called the Mashantucket
Pequot Museum and Research Center, which
details the history of the Pequot nation.
Lands
The
Pequots lived in eastern and central Connecticut.