The Wabanaki (Abenaki) portions
of the history of the Northeast Kingdom has been sadly neglected or
overlooked by historians, ethno historians, archaeologists, and local
historical societies. One of these is the background of Philip, Indian
Chief and Philips Grant. It seems ironic that Metallak, Philips
son, and Mali Agate (Molly Orcutt) members of his band, have more notoriety.
Philip:
Philip, called by the English, was
baptized Piel (Abenaki for Peter) or Pierre (French). He was born around
1730 near the Saco River in the vicinity of North Conway NH or Fryeburg
ME and was considered a Pigwacket Abenaki whose family moved north into
the Arosaguntacook, Nulheganook and Amarascoggin Abenaki Band areas
when he was young. At some point he married Molly Missile (Marie Michelle)
a New Hampshire Indian who was famous for her moccasin making. They
had several children the youngest being Metallak born about 1750, on
the upper Adroscoggin River. Between war interruptions (French and Indian
Wars, 1755-1760) the extended family operated a trapping and hunting
circuit through most of what is now northeastern VT, northern NH, northwestern
ME, and the Eastern Townships of Quebec, Canada; including stays at
Odanak where some of the family eventually settled. After the fall of
French Canada in 1760, Philip returned to live a traditional lifestyle
until at least 1788. Henry Tufts description of life among the
Indians from 1772-1775 tells of two large family bands living between
Lake Memphremagog and Lake Umbagog. Old Philip, Mali, Swasson, Susap,
Tomhegan, are all names mentioned in his writings.
The Times:
During the American Revolution (1775-1783)
Philip was the leader of an Indian Band in northern NH that is usually
identified as Cowasuck but in reality was Arosaguntacook, or St. Francis
Indians. This band joined the rebel cause, which was unusual for Abenaki
who tried to stay neutral. The English called Philip the Chief of the
Cowasucks, a typical Euro American blunder that still confuses the historic
record! After the Revolution, when the peace accord was signed in 1783,
the border was drawn along the 45th parallel. This boundary line between
British Canada and Colonial United States cut right through the Abenaki
homeland and territories. The Abenaki werent considered in any
of the agreements even though Abenaki men fought on both sides during
the Revolution. Vermont became the 14th state in 1791 and settlement
pushed up the Connecticut River valley and on into the Memphremagog
and Nulhegan watersheds. The Land companies claimed that no Indians
lived in this area, and that they were just passing through on hunting
trips. Vermont Abenaki descendants are still paying for this one! On
the British Canada side of the border, in 1792, Abenaki lands (taken
over as Crown Wastelands) were opened to settlement by English speaking
Protestants and loyalists, mostly New Englanders. All that the St Francis
Indians retained were their age-old hunting grounds and family band
village sites. Only 8,150 acres were granted to 17 families in Dunham
Township. In contrast, Asa Porter, a colonel in the British army was
granted over 60,000 acres in Brome Township for his services.
Philips Grant:
In 1796 Philip, older and tired, was
living in the Indian Stream Republic area and traveling to Memphremagog
and the central Connecticut River valley. It was on one of these latter
trips that he met up with some Anglo-American land speculators. We do
not know the circumstances of the land sale, but we do know that Philip,
Indian Chief, Abenaki from the St Francis tribe, (the same that inhabited
the Memphremagog region)
sold some 3,000 square miles straddling the
border to four men; Thomas Eames and 3 associates that called themselves
the Eastern Company. The price was a simple promise to keep Philip and
his two wives well fed and clothed for the rest of their lives and allow
all other band members fishing and hunting rights on the land in perpetuity.
The 3,000 square miles included: from Umbagog and Mooselookmeguntic
Lakes in the East (the headwaters of the Megalloway and Androscoggin
Rivers; South to the junction of the Ammonoosuc with the Connecticut;
West to the western shore of Lake Memphremagog up the Clyde and along
the Nulhegan; and North to the junction of the Salmon and St Francis
Rivers. Some of the land had already been colonized by English and Anglo-American
settlers. Sherbrook was begun in 1744 and the first US census of 1790
lists 700 white colonists in the upper Connecticut-Memphremagog region.
This land sale was actually illegal: since the Federal Non-Intercourse
Act of 1791 prohibited any agency other than the US government from
buying Indian lands within the territory claimed by the United States
(as about half of this parcel did.) Also in 1793 the Continental Congress
wrote up a law forbidding private citizens to buy land from the Indians.
The state of NH had a similar law on the books as early as 1719. The
land was of little agricultural use to the purchasers who turned around
and resold it to naïve English settlers at considerable profit.
In 1798, Abenaki chiefs at Odanak sold virtually the same land to the
Bedel Company for $3,100.00. It was this sale that was the basis for
New Hampshires claim to the Indian Stream Territory. Canada at
the same time was claiming it. But, the inhabitants were claiming independence
from both and had formed the Indian Stream Republic with their own government:
a constitution, bill of rights, courts and judges, and a code of laws.
In 1835 the situation became volatile and the Indian Stream War
came to a head when NH decided to send in its militia. It was not until
1840 that the town of Pittsburg was organized by the State of NH, which
included the Indian Stream Republic and that portion of Philips
Grant.
Bea Nelson, Abenaki descendant, is an artist, writer,
and retired educator. She is the Cultural Resource Manager for the Alnobak
Heritage Preservation Center, editor and publisher of Nebesak News,
and works with Historical Societies, and Statewide Agencies as a consultant,
collaborator, and advisor.