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Program Descriptions: one | two | three | four | five


Episode One

In March of 1621, in what is now southeastern Massachusetts, Osamequin, the leading sachem of the Wampanoag, sat down to negotiate with a ragged group of English colonists. Hungry, dirty, and sick, the pale-skinned foreigners were struggling to stay alive; they were in desperate need of Native help.

King Philip Osamequin faced problems of his own. His people had lately been decimated by unexplained sickness, leaving them vulnerable to the rival Narragansett to the west. The Wampanoag sachem calculated that a tactical alliance with the foreigners would provide a way to protect his people and hold his Native enemies at bay. He agreed to give the English the help they needed.

A half-century later, as a brutal war flared between the English colonists and a confederation of New England Indians, the wisdom of Osamequin's diplomatic gamble seemed less clear. Five decades of English immigration, mistreatment, lethal epidemics, and widespread environmental degradation had brought the Indians and their way of life to the brink of disaster. Led by Metacom, Osamequin's son, the Wampanoag and their Native allies fought back against the English, nearly pushing them into the sea.

The Wampanoag had been the first in doing good to the English and the English were the first in doing wrong. When the English first came, Massasoit was a great man and the English as a little child. He constrained other Indians from wronging the English and gave them corn and showed them how to plant. And was free to do them any good and had let them have one hundred times more land than now I have for my own people.  --Metacom

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