Wenepoykin

Wenepoykin (1616–1684) also known as Winnepurkett, Sagamore George, George No Nose, and George Rumney Marsh was a Native American leader who was the Sachem of the Naumkeag people when English began to settle in the area.

Wenepoykin
Pawtucket leader
Preceded byMontowampate / Wonohaquaham
Succeeded byNone
Personal details
Born1616
DiedSeptember 1684
Natick, Massachusetts
Spouse(s)Ahawayet
ParentsNanepashemet and "Squaw Sachem"
Known forPawtucket Sachem
Nickname(s)Sagamore George
George No Nose
George Rumney Marsh

Early life

Wenepoykin was born in 1616. He was the youngest son of Nanepashemet and the Squaw Sachem of Mistick. He was 13 years old when the English began settling in the area. By that time he was sachem of Naumkeag (although he may have received assistance from an older family member until he came of age).[1] His brothers, Montowampate and Wonohaquaham, died during the 1633 smallpox epidemic, and he became Sachem of Lynn, Massachusetts and Chelsea, Massachusetts (which also included the present-day towns of Reading, North Reading, Lynnfield, Saugus, Swampscott, Nahant, Wakefield, Marblehead, Revere, and Winthrop, as well as Deer Island).[1][2] Although he survived the epidemic, Wenepoykin was disfigured from smallpox, which resulted in the nickname George No Nose. Following his mother's death, he became sachem of all of the area in Massachusetts north and east of the Charles River.[1] On April 1, 1652 he sold Nahant to Nicholas Davison of Charlestown for "twenty pounds sterling dew many yeer".[3]

King Philip's War and later years

Wenepoykin's relationship with the English was turbulent. In 1651 petitioned the Massachusetts General Court for return of his "just title" to the lands of his brother, Wonohaquaham. His petition was denied and his lawsuits over land claims were unsuccessful as well. He joined Metacomet in King Philip's War.[4] He was the only member of his family to fight with the Native Americans, as his relatives were known to have sided with the English.[5] He was taken prisoner in 1676 and sold into slavery in Barbados.[4] In 1684, due to the intercession of John Eliot, Wenepoykin was reunited with family in Natick, Massachusetts.[6] He died in September 1684.[1] After King Philip's War Natick pastor Daniel Takawombait invoked "George's homecoming the course of remembering Native lineages around Naumkeag (Salem), in order to attest to postwar Native landholdings,"[7] and in his deposition Tookumwombait stated that "Sagamore George when he came from Barbados he lived Sometime and dyed at the house of James Rumley Marsh," ""[8][9] and "he left all this land belonging to him unto his kinsman James Rumley Marsh."[10]

Family

Wenepoykin married Ahawayet, the daughter of Ponquanum, a sub-sachem who lived on Nahant.[5] They had one son (Poquanum) and three daughters (Pentagunsk or Cicely, Wattaquattinusk or Sarah, and Pentagoonaquah or Susanna). His family lived in the Lynn area until the time of King Philip's War, when the settled near Pawtucket Falls in Wameset (present day Chelmsford, Massachusetts). Following Wenepoykin's death, the people of Marblehead, Salem, and Lynn were able to obtain deeds for their towns from his heirs. They also relinquished their claim to Deer Island to the city of Boston.[1]

References

  1. Lewis, Alonzo; Newhall, James R. (1865). The History of Lynn. John L. Shorey. p. 40.
  2. Nicastro, Dom (October 13, 2011). "Saugus Round Hill park approved". Saugus Advertiser.
  3. Lewis, Alonzo (1844). The History of Lynn. Samuel N. Dickinson. p. 146.
  4. Russell, Frank (2018). An Early History of Malden. History Press. ISBN 9781467139410.
  5. "Wenepoykin". Menotomy Journal.
  6. Weatherall, Helen (2008). 60 Hikes Within 60 Miles. Menasha Ridge Press. ISBN 9780897328005.
  7. Algonquian Diasporas, p. 318 (footnote 108)
  8. Bulletin of the Massachusetts Archaeological Society, Vol. 77, No. 1 p. 28 https://vc.bridgew.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1201&context=bmas
  9. Perley, Sidney (editor) 1912 The Indian Land Titles of Essex County Massachusetts. Essex Book and Print Club, Salem, MA.p 10 (1912)
  10. Deloraine Pendre Corey, The History of Malden, Massachusetts, 1633-1785 p. 49
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