Remove 5: Paquaug River crossing
A likely crossing place is marked on the land by a sign, placed there by the Athol Bicentennial Commission, a stop on the Athol History Trail. How does this sign represent Rowlandson and the women with whom she traveled? What kind of scene does it convey? What does it tell you about this place?
Paquaug was a place that colonists like the trader John Pynchon knew as a Nipmuc village and planting place, the name itself evoking the cleared lands used for horticulture. In August 1676, writing from his trading center of Agawam (Springfield) on the Connecticut River, he noted that he had sent “scouts to discover Paquoag which lies on Millers River above Hadley, who are gone out about 30 and if any corn there to cut it down.”[2] At the same time, he sent soldiers “to cut down the Indians’ corn at Squakeag, etc. which accordingly done and not any Indians seen thereabouts.” This context is important for understanding the motivation of Weetamoo and the women who traveled with her. As John Pynchon knew, places like Paquaug and Sokwakik held the promise of planting, come spring. However, these places, mentioned by Pynchon, were also accessible to colonial scouts. From Paquaug, they moved on, heading north toward a land of corn, which was beyond English settlements and colonial surveillance.
[1] Mary White Rowlandson, The Sovereignty and Goodness of God: With Related Documents, ed. Neal Salisbury (Boston: Bedford Books, 1997), 78-80. Henry Nourse, ed., The Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson (Cambridge: J. Wilson, 1903), 92.
[2] The Pynchon Papers, ed. Carl Bridenbaugh (Boston: Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1982),1:167.
[2] The Pynchon Papers, ed. Carl Bridenbaugh (Boston: Colonial Society of Massachusetts, 1982),1:167.