2015
DOI: 10.1353/eam.2015.0011
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Locating Kickemuit: Springs, Stone Memorials, and Contested Placemaking in the Northeastern Borderlands

Abstract: Water surrounded Algonquian peoples of the Northeast, and they highly valued it for sustenance, medicine, travel, spirituality, and other purposes. When English settlers in Plymouth Colony and surroundings areas attempted to claim territorial rights in the seventeenth century, they also sought water sources, including freshwater springs, to support colonization projects. Native/colonial tensions escalated in mid-century, and when the indigenous uprising known as King Philip’s War broke out in 1675, a place cal… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…Delucia argues these conflicts persisted because of "dubiously legal land deeds and territorial erosion; religious pressures to convert from traditional ways to Protestant Christianity; an English court system that rendered justice asymmetrically for Natives and Englishmen; undermining tribal sovereignty by colonial authorities." 46 Moreover, the commitment to upholding treaty obligation ran up against increasing settlement in what is presently Maine and later Atlantic Canada. This led to armed retaliation by Wabanaki warriors.…”
Section: A British Engagement On the Atlantic Coastmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Delucia argues these conflicts persisted because of "dubiously legal land deeds and territorial erosion; religious pressures to convert from traditional ways to Protestant Christianity; an English court system that rendered justice asymmetrically for Natives and Englishmen; undermining tribal sovereignty by colonial authorities." 46 Moreover, the commitment to upholding treaty obligation ran up against increasing settlement in what is presently Maine and later Atlantic Canada. This led to armed retaliation by Wabanaki warriors.…”
Section: A British Engagement On the Atlantic Coastmentioning
confidence: 99%