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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Machapunga
Machapungo
Total population
230
Regions with significant populations
Eastern North Carolina
Languages
Carolina Algonquian language
Religion
Indigenous religion
Related ethnic groups
other North Carolina Algonquians

The Machapunga were a small Algonquian language–speaking Native American tribe from coastal northeastern North Carolina.[1] They were part of the Secotan people.[2] They were a group from the Powhatan Confederacy who migrated from present-day Virginia.

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Transcription

Name

Anthropologist John Reed Swanton wrote that Machapunga meant "bad dust" or "much dirt" in their Algonquian language.[1] They were also called the Mattamuskeet Indians.

Territory

The Machapunga lived in what is now Hyde County, North Carolina. Their lands may have extended into present-day Beaufort, North Carolina, as well as Washington, Tyrrell, and Dare counties.[1] The Machapunga lived in the Pungo River area.[citation needed]

Their primary village was Mattamuskeet, likely located on the shore of Mattamuskeet Lake in present-day Hyde County.[1]

History

Early 20th-century ethnographer Frank Speck believed that the historical Machapunga and other Algonquian tribes in North Carolina had probably been earlier connected to the larger population based in coastal Virginia. He believed the tribes in North Carolina were part of an early and large Algonquian migration south after European contact. He noted the presence of Algonquian-speaking tribes on the Northeast coast and in eastern and central Canada.[3]

16th century

When the British founded their colonist on Roanoke Island that lasted from 1586 to 1685, displaced Secotan people moved in with the Machapunga.[1]

17th century

In 1600, ethnographer James Mooney estimated there were 1,200 Machapunga and related tribes.[1]

John Squires (Machapunga, 1676-1724) served as one of the tribe's chief. His mother was Ethelia, married to an Englishman named Jonathan Squires. Ethelia's father was the chief of the Nanticoke in Dorchester County Maryland, but her mother was Machapunga, thus having made John one of the Chiefs of the Machapunga mainly due to him speaking English. John owned and operated a trading post, with another Indian named Long Tom off of the Old Indian Trail on the Chesapeake Bay. They were summoned many times by the English Colonists to interpret for them and helped settle many differences between the Colonists and the Indians. John's parents, Jonathan and Ethelia, continued to reside on the Nanticoke land in Dorchester County, Maryland. [citation needed]

John Mackey (Machapunga, 1674- 1729) served as the tribes main chief where as John Squires was sent to translate and be held in position strictly to over see communication with the colonists, John Mackey and Joseph Russell Mackey are documented on the 1724 land petition as kings of the Mattamuskeet. Their descendants still live in Hyde county today and many are active tribe members.

18th century

By 1701, they consolidated into a single village.[1] In 1701, English explorer John Lawson wrote that the tribe had about 100 members.[1]

In 1711 they participated in the Tuscarora War against the colonists. By 1715, the remaining members of the Coree, who lived to the south, had been merged into the Machapunga and lived together with them in Mattamuskeet.

A small group of Machapunga still resided in North Carolina in 1761, with only 7 to 8 warriors.[1] Then missionary Rev. Alexander Stewart wrote that he had baptized seven "Attamuskeet, Hatteras, and Roanoke" adults and children. In 1763, he baptized 21 more Native people from that region.[1]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Swanton, The Indian Tribes of North America, 81.
  2. ^ Kupperman, Karen Ordahl (2007). Roanoke: The Abandoned Colony. Plymouth, UK: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. p. 73. ISBN 9780742552630.
  3. ^ Frank G. Speck, "REMNANTS OF THE MACHAPUNGA INDIANS OF NORTH CAROLINA", American Anthropologist 18 (1916): pp. 271–276, Carolina Algonkian Project, Rootsweb, permission by American Anthropologist, accessed Apr 22, 2010.

References

External links

This page was last edited on 8 April 2024, at 18:19
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