Northampton massacre 1755
18th century massacre in colonial Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
18th century massacre in colonial Pennsylvania From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In December 1755, the Northampton massacre was a series of attacks on people in Northampton County, Pennsylvania. These attacks terrified the population, who then demanded military protection from the Pennsylvania government. On 10 and 11 December, a party of Native American warriors (estimates range from 200 to only 5) attacked the Hoeth family farm and killed Frederick Hoeth and his wife, and took three of their children captive.[1]: 226 They also set fire to Daniel Brodhead's Plantation, and attacked and burned about a dozen farms in the area.[2] The Moravian mission at Dansbury was also destroyed.[3][4]: 450 [5]: 138 [6]: 244
Northampton massacre 1755 | |
---|---|
Part of the French and Indian War | |
Location | Northampton County, Pennsylvania |
Coordinates | 40°45′0″N 75°18′36″W |
Date | 10 and 11 December 1755 |
Attack type | Mass murder |
Deaths | 78-89 killed |
Victims | European settlers |
Assailants | Lenape warriors from Minisink |
In one account of the attacks, 78 people were listed killed and about 45 buildings destroyed.[7] Other sources reported up to 89 dead.[8]
These attacks led the provincial government to put Benjamin Franklin in charge of designing a defensive chain of stockade forts and blockhouses to protect European settlements in central and eastern Pennsylvania.[9] This defensive line offered some protection for settlers during the French and Indian War.[5]
Relations between European settlers and the Lenape Indians, and with the Minisink, a phratry of the Lenape, had deteriorated following the 1737 Walking Purchase, in which the government of the Province of Pennsylvania brokered an agreement which allowed them to take possession of lands along the northern Delaware River that the Lenape considered to be theirs.[8] There is some evidence that this was a deliberate deception on the part of the Pennsylvania government.[10] Most of the Lenape were forced to relocate into western Pennsylvania.[11]
On 24 November 1755, tensions rose in Northampton County after settlers in the neighboring Province of New Jersey detained a group of 15 Minisink Indians, including three men and a dozen women and children, and brought them to the jail at Easton. The reasons for detaining them are unclear, but the people of Easton were concerned that this act would provoke violence from the Indians, and the next day the prisoners were transferred to another prison in New Jersey.[5]: 230
On 11 December 1755, the Moravian bishop August Gottlieb Spangenberg wrote to Timothy Horsfield, a justice of the peace from Bethlehem,[12] who forwarded his letters to Governor Robert Hunter Morris. Spangenberg described an assault on several farms in the area, by a band of 200 Native American warriors, who had killed a number of settlers and destroyed about a dozen farms. A number of settlers died when they were trapped inside burning buildings. Over 300 people fled to Bethlehem and Easton.[5]: 138 [13]: 973–74
On 25 December, the Pennsylvania Gazette published a letter from the Pennsylvania Commissioners, describing some of the attacks and reporting a plan to build forts and blockhouses in the area to protect the populace:
In an account of the attacks from the Union Iron Works in Jersey, dated 20 December, 78 people are listed killed and about 45 buildings destroyed.[7]: 569–572 Other sources report as many as 89 dead.[8]
The Hoeth farm on Pohopoco Creek (then known as Heads [Hoeth's] Creek)[15]: 148 was attacked and only two settlers survived.[16]: 313 Michael Hoeth (referred to in some documents as Michael Hute) gave a deposition on 12 December to Judge William Parsons, in which he described the attack on the Hoeth farm:
On 18 December, the Pennsylvania Gazette published the deposition of George Caspar Heiss before Timothy Horsfield. Heiss, a smith, was one of two survivors of the attack on the Hoeth farm, during which Heiss's wife was killed and his house burned. He fought with the warriors, then escaped with Michael Hoeth (Hute).[7]: 569
Frederick Hoeth's daughter Mariana was captured with two of her sisters and taken to Tioga, Pennsylvania. She escaped in 1760 and wrote an account of the attack:
The Dansbury Moravian Mission was established on land donated by Daniel Brodhead II, after he and his wife converted to the Moravian faith.[18] In 1744, Moravian missionary James Burnside built a small log cabin and named it the Dansbury Mission (after "Dan" Brodhead). In 1753, Brodhead built a parsonage and a chapel,[19]: 161–62 with a cemetery nearby, which can still be seen today. A school was opened in late 1753. Brodhead died in June 1755 and his oldest son Daniel Brodhead III took over the Brodhead plantation and the family home, known as Dansbury Manor.[20] In the massacre of December 11, the mission was burned and a few surviving residents took shelter with the Brodhead family.[8]
The plantation of Daniel Brodhead in present-day East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania was attacked and a barn and barracks burned, but Brodhead and his family succeeded in fighting off the Indians.[1]: 221 Daniel Brodhead and his four brothers, Charles, Garret, John and Luke, along with his 12-year-old sister, Ann, fired at the attackers through windows of the Dansbury Manor.[3][8]
In a deposition on 12 December, several settlers testified that "they saw the Barn of the Said Broadhead's on fire about nine of the Clock in the morning, which continued Burning till they left the House, being about 4 [in the] afternoon, and that they heard shooting and crying at Broadhead's House almost the whole Day, and that when they left McMichael's House the Dwelling House of said Broadhead was yet unburnt, being, as they supposed, defended by the People within it."[5]: 277–78 In a deposition published in the Gazette on 18 December, Henry Cole testified before Judge Anderson that he saw a war party of about a hundred Native American warriors attacking the Brodhead plantation, and after climbing a nearby hill, he saw several buildings, including his own home, in flames.[7]: 569 On 25 December, James Hamilton wrote to Governor Morris: "Broadhead's [home] was stoutly defended by his sons and others, till the Indians thought fit to retire without being able to take it, or set it on fire, tho' they frequently attempted it. It is thought several of them were killed in the attacks."[5]: 277–78
In response to these attacks, which occurred within a month of the Great Cove massacre and the Gnadenhütten massacre, the Pennsylvania provincial government decided to construct a chain of forts across the western frontier, running from the New Jersey border, southwest to the Maryland border. Fort Hamilton in Stroudsburg and Fort Depuy near Smithfield Township were built in December and Fort Norris, Fort Allen and Fort Franklin were built in early 1756.[9] Settlers also built and manned several secondary posts, blockhouses and fortified homesteads in the area.[5]: 138
In June 1756, warriors attacked Brodhead's plantation again and destroyed it.[1]: 225
Marie Le Roy and Barbara Leininger reported that, during their captivity, before their escape on 16 March 1759, they met three sisters "from the Blue Mountains, Mary, Caroline and Catherine Hoeth."[6]: 244 [21]: 418 Mary (Mariana) Hoeth eventually escaped with her infant son and returned to Bethlehem.[22]: 155 Her captivity narrative was published in The Monroe Democrat on 31 October 1896.[17]: 19–23
A historical marker in Stroudsburg commemorates the Dansbury Moravian mission. It was erected in 1947 by the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission and stands near the mission's cemetery.[23][24]
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