While we know our northern friends may not feel it, in the South, Spring is
here. So we thought we'd share a few of our gardening sites appropriate
for this time of the year. Along with gardening, there's grilling, and getting
ready to diet so that you can fit back into that bathing suit this summer!
Nauset. An Algonquian tribe formerly
living in Massachusetts, on that part of Cape Cod east of Bass river,
forming a part of or being under control of the Wampanoag.
A writer (Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc., 1st
s., VIII, 159, 1802) says: "The Indians in the county of Barnstable
were a distinct people, but they were subject in some respects to the
chief sachem of the Wampanoags."
They probably came in contact with the whites at an
early date, as the cape was frequently visited by navigators. From this
tribe Hunt in 1614 carried off 7 natives and sold theta into slavery with
20 Indians of Patuxet. Champlain had an encounter with the Nauset
immediately before returning to Europe. They seem to have escaped the
great pestilence which prevailed along the New England coast in 1617.
Although disposed to attack the colonists at their first meeting, they
because their fast friends, and with few exceptions remained faithful to
them through King Philip's war, even in some instances lending assistance.
Most of them had been Christianized before this war broke out.
Their estimated population in 1621 was 500, but this is
probably below their real strength at that time, as they seem to have
numbered as many 80 nears afterward. About 1710, by which time they were
all organized into churches, they lost a great many by fever. In 1764 they
had decreased to 106, living mainly at Potanumaquut, but in 1802 only 4
were said to remain. Their principal village, Nauset, was near the present
Eastham. Although their location indicates that fish furnished their chief
sustenance, the Nauset were evidently cultivators of the soil, as supplies
of corn and beans were obtained from them by tho famishing Plymouth
colonists in 1622.
The following villages were probably Nauset: