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Norridgewock Indian
Chiefs and Leaders
Hopehood. A Norridgewock chief, known among his people
as Wahowa, or Wohawa, who acquired considerable notoriety in E. New England in
the latter part of the 17th century. He was the son of a chief called Robinhood.
Hopehood's career is pronounced by Drake (Ind. Biog., 130, 1832) to have
been one of long and bloody exploits. He first appears as a participant in King
Philip's war, when he made an attack on a house filled with women and children
at Newichawanoc, about the site of Berwick, Me. ; all escaped, however, except
two children and the woman who bravely bar red and defended the door. In 1676 he
was one of the leaders of the E. New England tribes who held consultation with
the English at Taconnet, Me. In 1685 he joined Kankamagus and other sachems in a
letter to Gov. Cranfield of New Hampshire, protesting against the endeavor of
the English to urge the Mohawk to attack them. On Mar. 18, 1690, he joined the
French under Hertel in a massacre at Salmon falls, and in May attacked Fox
Point, N. H., burning several houses, killing 14 persons, and carrying away 6
others. Not long afterward he penetrated the Iroquois country, where some
Canadian Indians, mistaking him for an Iroquois, slew him and several of his
companions. Hopehood was at one time a captive in the hands of the English and
served as a slave for a season in Boston. (C. T. )
Indian Chiefs and Leaders
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Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, Frederick Webb Hodge, 1906
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