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  1. 26 de may. de 2023 · Weetamoo's story takes place during the 150-year tumultuous but largely forgotten years between the Pilgrims landing at Plymouth and the start of the American revolution. During those turbulent years the ever-growing number of English settlers, driven by their insatiable greed, began to elbow their way inland, often using underhanded methods to rob the Native people of their land.

  2. 25 de ene. de 2017 · As Weetamoo and her allies battled the encroaching English colonists, warriors captured a Puritan minister’s wife by the name of Mary Rowlandson. For a brief period, Mary was Weetamoo’s slave. The Captive revolves around the story of these two women from stridently different worlds who are caught up in a fight for survival during King Philip’s War (1675-76).

  3. Weetamoo was the squaw-sachem or warrior-leader of the Pocassets by birthright. Her power and her authority in the larger Wampanoag and Narragan-sett communities came from the status of that birthright, her experience as a ruler, and her familial alliances. During King Philip's War, Weetamoo was married to

  4. Life of Weetamoo, warrior and chief of the Pocasset tribe of north-eastern North America. 1675 - 1676. Weetamoo commands her own troops, defending Native American lands during King Philip's War against the English immigrant invaders. Aug 1676. Weetamoo drowns in a river; her head is taken and placed as a trophy of war by the English colonists.

  5. 162 Weetamoo Trail, Campton, NH 03223 Custom 2022-built home with extraordinary panoramic views of the adjacent White Mountains Indulge in the extraordinary panoramic views of the adjacent White Mountains, right from your doorstep.

  6. 25 de mar. de 2021 · Drawing of Weetamoo (l. c. 1635-1676) from page 48 of Frost's Pictorial History of Indian Wars and Captivities by John Frost, 1873.

  7. Weetamoo (c. 1635–1676), also referred to as Weethao, Weetamoe, Wattimore, Namumpum, and Tatapanunum, was a Pocasset Wampanoag Native American Chief. She was the sunksqua, or female sachem, of Pocasset tribe, which occupied contemporary Tiverton, Rhode Island in 1620. In the Algonquian language of the Indigenous Peoples of the Northeastern United States and Canada, Weetamoo's name means ...