American History
Related: About this forumOn this day, March 31, 1676 Zoeth "Zoar" Howland died, a casualty of King Philip's War
Zoeth was a brother of Mayflower Pilgrim John Howland. He was basically banished from Plymouth Colony for criticizing mainstream faiths while supporting Quakers, and moved to Rhode Island and converted to the Quaker Faith. He was apparently an important member of the community, though I can no longer find reference to him as political leader of Rhode Island.
He popped up on my screen because his daughter married into one of my ancestors' family tree. If you trace genealogy to colonial America, you can bet you're related to a whole lot of people.
https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Howland-93
https://ancestors.familysearch.org/en/LJKW-RPX/zoeth-howland-1635-1676
https://famouskin.com/famous-kin-menu.php?name=21645+zoeth+howland
http://www.tivertonhistorical.org/tiverton-stories/the-spirit-of-sin-and-flesh-brook/
Howlands life was also not without strife. Howland had moved to Dartmouth from Plymouth, where his religious beliefs led to persecution from Puritan clergy, including time spent in the stocks. He was born in Duxbury in 1631, and settled in Dartmouth as early as 1662. He took the oath of fidelity in Duxbury in 1657, and probably about this time converted to Quakerism with his father, and held meetings at his house, for which he was fined. The following deposition of Samuel Hunt will show the esteem in which he held the Puritan clergy and their teachings: About a fortnight before the date heerof, being att the house of Zoeth Howland, hee said hee would not goe to meeting to hear lyes, and that the diuill could teach as good a sermon as the minnisters; and that a 2cond time being att the house of the said Zoeth Howland, and his brother, John Hunt, and Tho Delano being with him, hee questioned with the said Zoeth Howland whether hee would not goe to the meeting, because the minnesters taught lyes, and that the diuill could teach as good a sermon as the minnesters; and hee said hee denied it not. Alsoe, Tho Delano questioned him whether the minnesters taught lyes; and hee said yes, and lett him looke in the Scriptures and hee should find it soe. For this utterance he was arraigned at the next term of the court in March of 1657-8, for speaking opprobiously of the minnesters of Gods Word, and was given the humiliating sentence to sitt in the stockes for the space of an houre, or during the pleasure of the Court; which accordingly was pformed, and soe released.
https://rhodetour.org/items/show/105
By late summer of 1676, King Philips War was nearly over. Metacom had been shot and killed in August, and the English commander ordered his body cut into pieces. The Pocasset Indian who killed him received one of Metacoms hands as a reward. His head was carried back to Plymouth and mounted on a palisade of the towns fort, along with the proudly exhibited dismembered heads of other heathen malefactors. Metacoms head remained on display for twenty years, a clear message that the colonists had staked their claim on this land.
Only one of the men involved in Howlands murder was ever identified in court records. Manasses, alternatively written as Molasses, was turned over to colonial authorities and sold as a slave.
Many Natives Americans who survived the war were sold into slavery. Colonial authorities shipped more than 1,000 Natives to labor on Caribbean sugar plantations. Of a total Native population of about 20,000, at least 2,000 had died as a result of battle, another 3,000 died of sickness and starvation, and thousands fled the region. The total Native population declined by 60 to 80 percent as a result of the war. Plymouth Colony lost about 8 percent of its men, compared to losses of 4 to 5 percent of American men during the Civil War.
The unnamed brook where Howlands body was found became known as Sinning Flesh Brook. Did this refer to the sinful killing of a pious Englishman? Or did some people consider Howland a sinful man for going against Puritanical teachings? Perhaps you can ask Zoeth Howland yourself. Some say his spirit still flits along the hiking trails that crisscross what is now called Sin and Flesh Brook.
Scrivener7
(52,756 posts)On the one hand, following his conscience and becoming a Quaker was an act of extreme bravery. They were still killing and banishing Quakers in those years.
On the other, King Philip's war was an incredibly shameful act by the English. I say that as someone who also had at least one English ancestor killed in the fighting.
That RhodeTour link is awesome! Thank you.
Have a great day.
appalachiablue
(42,911 posts)In 1637, Bernhard writes, Massachusetts sent at least 80 Pequot War captives to Bermuda. Many were purchased by St. Davids colonists, and even more Native prisoners were sent to Bermuda at the end of King Philips War in the 1670s.
As the years passed, these and other Indians on St. Davids formed families, sometimes mixing races, but still preserving stories of their ancient Indian origins, if not their tribal cultures, to pass down through generations into the 20th century, Bernhard wrote.
https://www.voanews.com/a/usa_northernmost-bermuda-islanders-celebrate-native-american-connection/6201548.html
bucolic_frolic
(47,016 posts)'history is written by the winners.'
Tom Kitten
(7,371 posts)Very interesting story!
I'm originally from New England, born in Boston. We moved out west when I was five, though, and don't feel much connection to there anymore.
My mom was from Taunton. Taunton was one of the epicenters of King Phillip's War. Her aunt, (my great aunt) was into the genealogy thing and traced our family tree back to four people who came on the Mayflower and John Howland was one of them. That was 13 generation's ago I think.
It amazes me that her family basically stayed in one smallish town for almost 350 years. I'm so sorry to hear about my great×13 or so uncle! But it cheers me up knowing he defied the Puritans. My mom's family were all Congregationalists. Don't know if that means much of anything
A funny story that ties into your remark about "you never know..." I once had a showing of my drawings at an art gallery in Portland. It was fairly new and run by a couple who were new arrivals from Boston. So we became friendly. One day, the wife and I were talking about Boston and the Mayflower came up and she said one of her ancestors was on it and I said "who?" and she said "John Howl and". We laughed when I said "me too" and from then on we would greet each other with " Hi cousin".
bucolic_frolic
(47,016 posts)we share an ancestor - the father of John and Zoeth. At least that's what I think the genealogy is saying. 14th cousins twice removed? Dunno.