CHRONOLOGY OF JOHN PYNCHON
WP=William Pynchon, JP=John Pynchon
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Ca. 1626
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JP was born at Springfield, Essex, in the Parish of Chelmsford.
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1629
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WP was named an Assistant in the charter of the Massachusetts-Bay Company.
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1630
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JP accompanied his family in the Winthrop fleet; they landed at Dorchester. WP helped to found Roxbury.
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1636
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WP opened the fur trade of the Connecticut Valley with the founding of Agawam (Springfield). JP was probably educated by his father and the Rev. George Moxon in Springfield; he also learned an Algonkian dialect and studied the fur trade and allied mercantile pursuits.
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1645
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JP married Amy, the daughter of George Wyllys of Hartford, governor of Connecticut.
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1648
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On 13 April JP was made a freeman of Massachusetts.
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Ca. 1650
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JP’s daughter Mary was born; sometime later she probably was stricken with poliomyelitis. November, JP was chosen to his first public office, a selectman of Springfield; also town treasurer. Thereafter, until his death in 1703, he held nearly every local office in Springfield.
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1652
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WP retired to England. At the age of 26, JP assumed the management of his father’s property and affairs in New England, quickly winning recognition as “the greatest man in all the west.” On 4 November all of WP’s accounts were closed out. On 27 November JP was appointed one of three comissioners to administer justice at Springfield.
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1653
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April, JP fitted out a ship for Barbados to procure a cargo of sugar. October, JP’s 6 hogsheads of furs were seized at sea by a Dutch privateer. JP was appointed a magistrate and lieutenant of the trainband by the General Court. He advanced the purchase price for the founding of Nonotuck (Northampton).
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1653–1657
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JP traded to the West Indies and shared in Cabbage-Tree Plantation sugar production with several Connecticut gentlemen in Antigua.
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1654
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July–August, JP was in Boston on commercial business. His son Joseph boarded at Cambridge with Goodman Beale while preparing for entrance to Harvard College, from which he graduated in 1664.
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1654–1655
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Madam Amy Pynchon lived as a member of the Winthrop family at New London while undergoing a long course of treatment by John Winthrop, Jr.
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1656
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At the age of 30, JP made his first visit to England, where he resided either in London or Wraysbury, Buckinghamshire, from 10 September 1656 to 3 November 1657. There are no letters from this period.
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1657
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Upon his return from England, JP began to build a brick mansion, the first in the Connecticut Valley. He was appointed captain of the train band, major of the troop of horse, and commander of all military forces in western Massachusetts. From 1657 to 1659 JP was much interested in a graphite or “black-lead” mine at Tantiusque (Sturbridge).
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1659
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On 12 January JP bought land at Northampton for settlers from Hartford; this day, too, he ordered 50,000 bricks burned at Northampton for his new mansion by 12 December. JP was chosen a deputy from Springfield in May. On 4 August JP and William Hathorne (Hawthorne) travelled to Fort Orange to announce to the Dutch the opening of a trading post 15 miles east of Aurania to supply the fort with cattle, but actually to tap the fur trade. This undertaking remained quiescent until 1672, although during 1659 and 1662 JP made several trips to Aurania.
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1659–1660
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JP dispatched a ship on a trading voyage to the West Indies.
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1662
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In April JP made a journey to Ausatinoag (Housatonic?), the record of which is incomplete. On 29 October WP died at Wraysbury. JP was chosen deputy to the General Court for the three towns of the new county of Hampshire.
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1663
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In March the Hampshire County Court heard its first case, JP presiding. JP backed John Crow in a venture to the West Indies. In the autumn, JP was in touch with the Dutch at Fort Orange about relations with the Mohawks. Meanwhile Peleg Sanford of Newport served as JP’s agent in the Caribbean. Ca. October JP sailed for England, where he remained until 30 December 1664, settling his father’s estate (of which he was the principal beneficiary).
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1664
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In August the English seized New Amsterdam, and Stuyvesant surrendered New Netherland, JP being one of the commissioners to receive the capitulation. After making commercial arrangements in England, JP came home to Springfield in December.
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1665
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On 3 May JP was made an Assistant, a position he held until May 1686, when the Massachusetts Charter was rescinded; during this period, he was also a magistrate of the Hampshire County Court.
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1666
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On 25 July JP lost a shipment of beaver pelts when the Dutch took John Plumb’s vessel. The Mohawks destroyed the fort of the Pocumtucks near Deerfield.
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1667
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JP founded Quabaug (Brookfield); he also erected the first sawmill at Springfield.
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1669
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Chickataubut’s attack on the Mohawks, strongly disapproved of by the Massachusetts authorities, resulted in a total defeat of the Massachusetts tribes and the Indian leader’s death. JP was made sergeant-major for western Massachusetts. In the autumn he established his son John, Jr., as a merchant at Boston.
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1671
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JP founded Enfield on the west bank of the Connecticut River. He also negotiated with Connecticut over its boundary with Massachusetts.
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1672
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JP helped to found Squakeag (Northfield).
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1673
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Governor John Leverett and JP projected a new plantation west of Springfield. This year JP gave up all fur-trading activities.
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1673–1674
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On 27 January JP arrested two “North Indians” (Sokoki) for murder; they were executed at Springfield.
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1674
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The Dutch recovered New Netherland, briefly. On 1 July Sir Edmund Andros was commissioned governor of New York.
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1675
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On 20 April JP joined in partnership with Timothy Cooper at Albany, for seven years, supplying trading goods. JP participated prominently in King Philip’s War. On 5 October he marched from Hadley to the relief of Springfield, which was almost burned out. JP suffered a great loss of buildings, mills, and rents from his tenants.
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1676
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JP gave up command of the forces of western Massachusetts, principally for family and personal reasons.
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1677
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On 28 April JP and James Richards of Hartford persuaded the Mohawks to make a covenant of peace with the “North Indians”; at this time the Mohawks referred to Massachusetts as “Pinshon” after JP. This conference at Albany was the first in which the Dutch and English permitted the New Englanders to deal directly with the Iroquois. In August JP began to rebuild his cornmill and sawmill at Stony River. In October the General Court commissioned JP, Lieutenant William Allis, and three other westerners “to endeavor the new modelling the situation of their houses” in the Valley towns “for better defense against Indians.” On 17 November JP borrowed from four men in Hadley in saved pinetree shillings (“New England Money”) £97 for three years, which he sent to Cousin Richard Lord of Hartford to take to Antigua “to improve for promoting the designe of the Plantation and sugar work there.” By this time JP was back in command of the militia.
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1678
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JP erected a log house, the logs being placed vertically, in January.
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1679
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On 2 July Captain William Parker, an officer at Albany, acknowledged himself indebted to JP for merchandise sent from Boston worth £120.
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1680
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On 25 April JP deeded his Boston and New London properties to John, Jr., along with his holdings in Antigua. On 27 April his new lumber trade prospered with a shipment of 8000 feet of boards to Antigua. In August–November JP treated at Albany with the Mohawks for a renewal of the covenant and was successful.
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1682–1689
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JP was involved with Samuel Wyllys and Richard Lord in trade to the West Indies and in Cabbage-Tree Plantation on Antigua.
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1684
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On 5 October the town of Enfield renewed its grant of land at Warehouse Point on the Connecticut, provided that JP rebuild his warehouse within three years.
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1685
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JP completed the building of his warehouse at the Falls of the Connecticut, which testifies to his still being in trade.
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1686
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JP was appointed to Governor Dudley’s Council in May, and in June to the Andros Council, where he sat from December until the overthrow of the Dominion of New England. On 21 July JP and Wait Winthrop were “persuaded” to visit Hartford to encourage Connecticut to ally itself with Massachusetts under Andros.
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1687
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On 31 October Sir Edmund Andros took over the governing of Connecticut; JP attended on the occasion. Andros made JP a colonel.
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1688
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JP erected a dam and built corn- and sawmills at Suffield in February. On 27 July a small party of Canadian Indians killed five friendly natives at Spectacle Pond near Springfield. JP promptly took measures to improve defense against such attacks, but on 6 August the same war party killed six settlers at Northfield. JP sent soldiers there at once.
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1689
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In July JP’s difficulties with the militia officers at Northampton increased. This year JP withdrew from planting in Antigua and from the West Indian trade in general. During August and September JP made a trip with Connecticut agents to give presents to the Mohawks to inspire them and their allies to make war upon the French. “Albany is a dear place,” he reported to Boston. From 1689 to 1696 JP was preoccupied with frontier defense, especially in dealings with Connecticut and the Mohawks. With the Revolution JP reverted to captain.
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1690
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The French and Indians raided Schenectady in January, and Canadian Indians fell on Salmon Falls. JP sent out scouting parties and provided for all sorts of defense measures.
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1691
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A congress of colonies met in New York to concert military action against the French, 1 May. Ca. November 150 Indians from New York settled close to Deerfield for winter hunting, claiming to be friendly. JP’s name was omitted from the list of councillors named in the new Massachusetts charter, although he did receive judicial appointments in Hampshire County and again became a colonel.
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1692
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JP participated in a project to manufacture resin during the next two years. He suffered much from lameness this year. On 12 May JP went to Hartford to ask Connecticut authorities to send men and supply money to fight the French and Indians. On 20 July French Indians attacked Brookfield and for ten days were pursued by JP’s militiamen. On 27 July two hostile Indians escaped from the prison at Springfield.
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1693
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On 2 March JP went to Hartford again to promote an expedition to the eastward. The House of Representatives elected JP, a member, once more to the Council, and annually thereafter until 1703.
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1694
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In September Samuel Sewall, Penn Townsend, and JP went to Albany to meet with the Mohawks. In December JP further strengthened frontier defenses.
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1695
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JP’s activity in military and Indians affair came to an end, as he attained the age of 69.
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1696
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JP petitioned a parsimonious government for payment of various expenses he had made for the colony now four years-and-a-half in arrears. The Court of Oyer and Terminer at Northampton, presided over by JP, convicted four New York Indians for the murder of settlers—his last Indian case.
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1697
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On 18 September JP referred to a recent signal victory over hostile Indians, an event otherwise unknown to history.
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1698
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In a letter of 15 July JP blasted the New York Indians for their recent behavior at Hatfield.
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1699
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Amy Wyllys Pynchon died; she and JP had five children, all of whom married into families of wealth, position, and influence among the gentry of New England.
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1700
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In November the town meeting at Suffield approved a project of JP and John Eliot of Windsor to erect an ironworks.
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1703
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On 17 January JP died. The Rev. Solomon Stoddard of Northampton preached the funeral sermon: Gods Frown in the Death of Usefull Men (Boston, 1703).
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CHRONOLOGY OF INDIAN AFFAIRS IN WESTERN NEW ENGLAND AND NEW YORK
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1628
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The Five Iroquois Nations drove the Mohegans from the Hudson Valley into southern New England.
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1631
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A Connecticut River sagamore invited Bostonians to settle in the valley; the invitation was declined.
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1636
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William Pynchon founded the trading post of Agawam, later Springfield, thereby opening the fur and Indian trades in the Connecticut Valley.
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1642
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The Woodward-Saffery survey of the boundary between Massachusetts and Connecticut was made.
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1651
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Father Druillettes persuaded the Penacooks, Sokoki, and Mahicans to join against the Maquas, or Mohawks.
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1652
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The Dutch at Albany ranked the Pocumtucks as “great Indians.”
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1656+
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The beginning of several years of conflict between the Pocumtucks and their allies with Uncas and the Mohegans. These “commotions” seriously affected the fur trade of John Pynchon.
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1658
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The Commissioners of the United Colonies of New England estimated the number of Pocumtucks at 5000.
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1663
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Mohawk victories in the Connecticut Valley started a major exodus of the Sokoki from Squakeag (Northfield) and the decline of the Pocumtuck.
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1664
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New Netherland became New York; the first English council with the Mohawks was held.
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1666
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The English and the Mohawks were at war with the French and their Canadian Indian allies.
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1669
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The Mohawks attacked the Pocumtuck fort in the valley of the Deerfield River and destroyed it; there was great slaughter on both sides.
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1671
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Peace was made between the River Indians and the Mohawks. On 20 July John Pynchon asked Governor Winthrop of Connecticut to issue a pass for “our Indians” (Pocumtucks) to go to Virginia to seek an alliance from the Susquehannocks against the Senecas and, presumably, the other Iroquois tribes—a mission not previously reported, but of great significance in tribal diplomacy.
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1674
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On 27 January 1673/74 John Pynchon arrested two “North Indians” (Abenaki) for the murder of some English soldiers.
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[1630]–1675
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The River Indians, including the Agawam, were very friendly with the English settlers in the Connecticut Valley.
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1675
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King Philip’s War (for the Valley better known as the Nipmuck War) broke out at Swansea, 20 June. The River Indians joined the Nipmucks in support of Philip. In September Pynchon proposed using friendly Indians against the enemy, but at that time to no avail.
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1676
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On 12 August Philip was slain, and the war soon closed. The Pocumtucks and other River Indians fled to eastern New York and the Hudson Valley. For them Governor Andros established the village of Schaghticoke on the Hoosic River near its junction with the Hudson.
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1677
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On 26 April at the first conference in which the New York authorities permitted the New Englanders to treat directly with the Mohawks, Pynchon and Richards urged the Iroquois tribe to make war upon the Eastern Indians. The natives called the New Englanders “Pinshon” after their principal forest diplomat, who worked out a covenant for preserving friendship. On 19 September forty to fifty River Indians fell on Hatfield, and on Deerfield the next day. About this time, the Mohawks attacked the “Praying Indians” of Natick. Pynchon headed a commission to provide for rearranging the houses in the river towns of Massachusetts to provide a better defense against Indian attacks.
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1680
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Major Pynchon conferred with the Mohawks at Albany about the “Praying Indians,” and on 27 August also renewed the covenant of 1677. On 13 October the Mohawks made peace with the Eastern Indians.
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1683
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The Mohawks sent a present of beaver pelts to Massachusetts; the colony reciprocated with one worth much more in wampum, tobacco, rum, shirts, duffels, and stockings. Major Pynchon spoke very sharply to the Mohawks at Albany, 9 November, about their breaking the covenant of friendship made in 1677.
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1688
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Late in July five friendly Indians were killed at Spectacle Pond near Springfield by other Indians (presumed to be Sokokis from New York.) The French and Canadian Indians ravaged the Maine frontier.
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1689
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Pynchon headed a party sent by Massachusetts, Plymouth, and Connecticut to Albany to persuade the Mohawks and their Iroquois brethren to attack the Eastern Abenaki, August and September; the mission did not succeed. On the outbreak of King William’s War, the Canadian Indians attacked Dover, New Hampshire, on 28 June; on 2 August Massachusetts troops surrendered the fort at Pemaquid to the Abenaki.
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1690
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The French and Indians made a surprise attack on Schenectady, 9 February; in March they destroyed Salmon Falls, New Hampshire. Robert Livingston of New York asked Massachusetts in March for £400 or £500 in presents to the Mohawks to counteract French influence.
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1691
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Major Pynchon reported to Boston that in November about 150 Indians (who formerly lived in the Connecticut Valley) had come from New York to hunt and had settled down near Deerfield, to the alarm of the English colonists. With this incident (lasting more than a year), the Connecticut Valley became an important theater of the war, and Pynchon the chief figure in it.
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1692
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Measures were taken to protect Deerfield. On 8 March Pynchon informed Sir William Phips that the French and their Indian allies had attacked the Mohawk forts, but then had withdrawn to Canada.
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1693
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That summer hostile tribesmen harassed Brookfield.
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1694
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The settlers at Deerfield repulsed an Indian attack. Pynchon was prompt in arranging frontier defense with the authorities at Boston and in winning support from Connecticut.
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1696
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The Hampshire County Court, presided over by Pynchon, fairly tried and convicted four Mohawk and New York Indians of murder.
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1697
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In a letter of 19 September Pynchon mentioned a recent signal triumph of the whites over hostile Indians in a battle not otherwise recorded. “I know not that ever such a like engagement hath been between us and the Indians, who had all advantages against us, yet. . . were beaten out of the field.”
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GENERAL CHRONOLOGY, 1651–1697
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1651
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First Navigation Act.
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1652
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First Anglo-Dutch War, 8 July.
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1654
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Treaty of London, 5 April ended First Dutch War.
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1660
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Restoration of King Charles II. Navigation Act.
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1662
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Erection of Hampshire County, Massachusetts, 7 May.
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1664
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English seized New Amsterdam; New Netherland became New York.
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1665
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Second Anglo-Dutch War, 4 March.
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1666
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France entered war on Dutch side, January.
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1667
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Treaty of Breda, 27 March, ended Second Anglo-Dutch War.
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1672
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Third Anglo-Dutch War, 27 March.
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1673
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Dutch took and held New York, July to February 1674.
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1674
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Treaty of Westminster ended Third Anglo-Dutch War.
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1675
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King Philip’s War began at Swansea, Plymouth Colony, 20 June.
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1676
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Death of King Philip signalled ending of King Philip’s War, 12 August.
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1684
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Massachusetts Charter of 1628 declared forfeited by Crown. Temporary government for Massachusetts under Joseph Dudley. Creation of the Dominion of New England, May; arrival of Governor Andros, December.
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1688
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New commission to Andros enlarged Dominion of New England to include New England, New York, and New Jersey. “Glorious Revolution” in England, 18 December.
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1689
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William and Mary proclaimed joint sovereigns, 13 February. News reached Boston in March; a mob rose at Boston, and overthrew the Dominion’s government in April. Outbreak of King William’s War (War of the League of Augsburg), 12 May.
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1690
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The French and their Indians destroyed Schenectady in January; the next month they attacked and burned Salmon Falls, New Hampshire. Sir William Phips and the New Englanders took Port Royal in Acadia in May; that summer they failed to take Quebec.
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1691
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A colonial congress was held at New York to consider joint action against the French, 1 May. Massachusetts became a limited royal colony under a new charter.
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1697
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King William’s War ended with the Treaty of Ryswick, 30 September. The news reached Boston in December; peace was proclaimed at Quebec in September 1698.
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