. Sowams; with ancient records of Sowams and parts adjacent--illustrated . 0 }J7/^fA Af^rA- rff/f/./fff/f/// ////\ /,/,/\ ?^——. _«— ;-?»? .«>jM»«irjaB;>jri|tinairfMikiirarii ,rlv—^-^^^-^-a- . - .~ .- 1 SOWAMS, ALIAS HARRINGTON From part of map of Vinland showing occupation of Northmen, in New England. Copied from a Londonmap, 1842. By Joshua Tolmin Smith. F. R. S. No. Antiq. largest Indian village, as it was established to carry on barter with theIndians. In Millers history of The Wampanoag Indians, it is statedthat the trading post was supposed to have been located on the


. Sowams; with ancient records of Sowams and parts adjacent--illustrated . 0 }J7/^fA Af^rA- rff/f/./fff/f/// ////\ /,/,/\ ?^——. _«— ;-?»? .«>jM»«irjaB;>jri|tinairfMikiirarii ,rlv—^-^^^-^-a- . - .~ .- 1 SOWAMS, ALIAS HARRINGTON From part of map of Vinland showing occupation of Northmen, in New England. Copied from a Londonmap, 1842. By Joshua Tolmin Smith. F. R. S. No. Antiq. largest Indian village, as it was established to carry on barter with theIndians. In Millers history of The Wampanoag Indians, it is statedthat the trading post was supposed to have been located on the Harringtonside of the Sowams River, on the land known as Phebes Neck. Thistrading post or house, as it is called at Sowamsett, as related in WinthropsJournal, was the place to which Myles Standish and his men came in1632. Massassoit had fled to the post for protection from a threatenedattack of the Narragansetts, who could easily make raid on the Indiansat Sowams, by a water approach in canoes across the bay from Warwickor by land from the upper end


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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectwampanoagindians