Villages associated with the Pocomtuc
- Agawam - present-day Agawam, Massachusetts (sometimes associated with the Nipmuc)
- Mayawaug - present-day West Suffield, Connecticut
- Nameroke - present-day Enfield, Connecticut
- Nonotuck - present-day Northampton, Massachusetts
- Norwottuck - present-day Hadley, Massachusetts
- Pachasock - somewhere in present-day Hampden County, Massachusetts
- Pocumtuc - present-day Deerfield, Massachusetts
- Scitico - present-day Enfield, Connecticut (farther east)
- Squawkeag - present-day Northfield, Massachusetts (sometimes associated with the Nipmuc)
- Woronoco - present-day Westfield, Massachusetts
At the close of the war, many of the Pocomtuc, Nipmuc, and other tribes fled to Schaghticoke, on the Hudson River, where they remained until 1754, when most joined and merged into the Abenaki tribes at St.-François-du-Lac, Québec or moved further West. Despite decimation due to intertribal warfare with the Mohawk and smallpox epidemics which greatly reduced their numbers before European contact, even greater reduction in their numbers came with serving as pawns of the power struggle between the Dutch, English, French and their respective Native American allies. Amazingly, small bands remained in Massachusetts as late as the 1800s, but most fled north or lost their tribal identity through intermarriage with other tribes and settlers. Many of the present-day Abenaki of New Hampshire, Vermont, and Canada contain Pocomtuc blood in their veins.
The Pocomtuc tribe counted Chief Wawanotewat, better known as 'Greylock', was a famous warrior who continued to lead bands into Massachusetts even after most had left the state. Mount Greylock, in the Berkshires is named after him.
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Friday March 14, 2008 at 22:15:54 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
Copyright © 2008, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.











