#185 King Philip’s War 5: Enter the Narragansetts
The History of the Americans
Jack Henneman
4.9 • 632 Ratings
🗓️ 8 June 2025
⏱️ 43 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Maps of New England during King Philip’s War
It is the fall of 1675, and “King Philip’s War” rages on. The English colonies of Massachusetts Bay, Plymouth, and Connecticut have been at war with the Wampanoag nation and its powerful allies, the Nipmucs, since late June. The Indians are beating the English everywhere, in part because the English cannot easily distinguish friendly and neutral Indians from enemies.
The still neutral Narragansetts were the most powerful nation in the region. Massachusetts Bay and Plymouth did not, however, believe that the Narragansetts were in fact neutral, in part because some of their young fighters had gone rogue and joined with Nipmucs and also because the Narragansetts would not turn over Wampanoag refugees who had taken shelter in their lands. Paranoic fear of the Narragansetts would lead the New English to the most catastrophic diplomatic and military blunder in the history of European settlement up to that time. This is that story.
And don’t miss the “trees of death”!
Errata: In this episode I describe a possible friendly fire incident late in the Great Swamp Fight in which a group of Indians emerged outside the fort and colonial militia fired upon them. A sergeant had yelled out that they were friendlies, but after hesitating Benjamin Church concluded that they weren’t and had his men shoot at them, during which exchange Church himself was wounded. I speculated that Church might have been correct, insofar as I had not read that there were Indian allies along with the thousand or so English involved in that campaign against the Narragansetts. Within a day of posting the episode, however, I read in James Drake’s excellent book from 1999, King Philip’s War: Civil War in New England, 1675-1676, that in there were, in fact, 150 Mohegans and Pequots there with the Connecticut Regiment. It still isn’t certain that Church was wrong and the sergeant was correct, but the presence of those friendlies with Connecticut’s soldiers obviously tips the balance against Church’s judgment.
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Matthew J. Tuininga, The Wars of the Lord: The Puritan Conquest of America’s First People
Nathaniel Philbrick, Mayflower: Voyage, Community, War
Thomas Church, The History of Philip’s War: Commonly Called the Great Indian War, of 1675 and 1676
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Welcome to the History of the Americans podcast, episode 185. |
| 0:11.3 | I'm your host, Jack Heneman, and I'm recording this episode on June 6, 2025, in a secure undisclosed location in Princeton, New Jersey. We are telling the history of |
| 0:24.3 | the lands now encompassed by the United States from the beginning without intentional presentism. |
| 0:32.0 | Before we get to the history fun, I'm again putting a little energy behind organizing meetups as I travel around for other reasons. |
| 0:40.7 | Rather than reading the details and such into a regular episode where they will then linger out of time for listeners who come along months or years later, |
| 0:52.5 | I'm going to put announcements in the episode notes of new episodes, |
| 0:56.5 | which I will then delete once the meetup is itself history. I will also mention them on |
| 1:03.2 | X slash Twitter on the Facebook page for the podcast and on the blog page on the podcast website, so there are lots of ways |
| 1:13.1 | to hear about them in advance. |
| 1:15.9 | We are back again with King Phillips War, now in the fall and winter of 1675. |
| 1:23.2 | More than a month of actual time and our actual lives has elapsed since I put out the last episode in the King Phillips War saga, |
| 1:32.1 | because I was traveling around Europe for most of May and couldn't schlep around everything I needed to write and record. |
| 1:39.1 | These things happen in the Do It One Self podcast game. |
| 1:44.1 | That said, as awesome as King Phillips War is. |
| 1:48.7 | I don't want to be talking about it all summer. |
| 1:51.4 | There's too much else interesting to get to in the last quarter of the 17th century. |
| 1:56.8 | So I'm going to pick up the pace a little bit. |
| 1:59.7 | Never fear. |
| 2:03.2 | This will still be, nearly as I can tell, |
| 2:07.9 | the most detailed telling of King Philip's War available as a podcast. |
| 2:14.8 | At the end of the last episode, we'd reached September 1675. |
| 2:23.3 | Nipmunks were the most powerful allies of Mediqam and Aswampanoags, and they and other smaller groups were attacking settlements of Massachusetts Bay Colony between the Connecticut River and Boston. |
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