Kim Toney (Nipmuc) – “Land Dispossession After King Philips War”
Monday, September 22, Noon. Tomaquag Lunch & Learn: Kim Toney (Nipmuc) – “Land Dispossession After King Philips War”, Free on-line, registration required.
Monday, September 22, Noon. Tomaquag Lunch & Learn: Kim Toney (Nipmuc) – “Land Dispossession After King Philips War”, Free on-line, registration required.
Join with Episcopalians across the Commonwealth to learn about colonial America’s bloodiest conflict, a story many of us know very little about. Pokanoket Tribal Historian Don Strong Turtle Brown, Jr. will introduce us to how early skirmishes and clashes in culture from the Native peoples’ earliest contacts with Europeans led eventually to Metacoment’s Rebellion, commonly […]
This is a Service of Holy Listening, on zoom, to gather in a virtual circle to receive the gift of story from several Native voices, each bringing a unique perspective to their experience of Deer Island, Metacomet’s Rebellion/King Philip’s War, and their meaning and relevance today. Information you provide when registering will be shared with […]
Episcopalians in the Commonwealth will mark the beginning of the 350th anniversary of Metacomet’s Rebellion (King Philip's War) with a sacred journey on Monday, October 13, to Deer Island, MA – the internment site where hundreds of Native people died from exposure and starvation in the winter of 1675 - 1676. This spiritual experience of […]
Brad Lopes is a citizen of the Aquinnah Wôpanâak Tribe. He serves as the Education & Outreach Coordinator for the ACC and Program Manager for the Native American Teacher Retention Initiative (NATRI) with the Mashpee Wampanoag Education Department. As a certified educator in Wabanaki homelands (grades 5–12), Brad provides professional development on teaching Indigenous studies […]
Join us for a virtual discussion of The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity by Jill Lepore. Copies of the book will be available at the Bacon Free Library. For details on how to attend this virtual meeting via Zoom, please contact director@natickhistoricalsociety.org The Zoom link to the discussion will […]
In recognition of the 350th anniversary of King Philip’s War (2025-2026), the Old Colony History Museum (OCHM) continues the story of the complicated conflict from the perspective of the local native peoples. King Philip’s loyal ally, Weetamoo, was one of the “best-documented female leaders of the colonial period.” Dr. Gina M. Martino, Associate Professor of History […]
Join the Coventry Public Library for a special presentation on the history of King Philip's War with Marilyn Harris, a researcher and docent at Smith's Castle in North Kingstown. To many today, the names "Metacom," "Narragansett," and "The Great Swamp" are merely markers on highway signs or names on a map. But in 1675, they […]
In 1675, war broke out in Rhode Island when Native people fired on a handful of colonists, killing a young English man. Or so goes the story. If you're one of the relatively few people in the US who have heard of King Phillip's War, this is probably all you know. Or perhaps your Massachusetts […]
Is King Philip’s War really part of the past? Four Indigenous speakers tell us that it’s still deeply present. People who are not Indigenous often think of Metacom’s Resistance – more commonly known as King Philip’s War – if they know of it - as part of a distant past. If we have read children’s […]