Nipmuck

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Nipmuck
Total population

500+

Regions with significant populations
Worcester County, Massachusetts, USA
Language(s)
English (formerly spoke an Algonquian language)
Religion(s)
Christianity
Related ethnic groups
other Algonquin peoples[1]

The Nipmuck (also spelled Nipmuc) are a group of Algonquian Indians native to Worcester County, Massachusetts.

Contents

Their name has also been spelled as Nipnet, Neepmuck, Neepnet, Neetmock, Neipnett and Nipmug. The name originated from the Algonquian language word "nipnet" (or something similar) meaning literally "small pond place" and is sometimes translated as "fresh water people." Lake Chaubunagungamaug, with which they have long been associated, may be the source of this name.[2]

The Nipmuck spoke an Algonquian language akin to that of their neighbors. Their language is now extinct. The only known source for the language is Gordon Day's (1975) redaction of Father Mathevet's 17th-century notes on the language of the 'Loup', who are believed to have been either the Nipmuck or else another closely-related tribe in central Massachusetts.

The "L-dialect" spoken by the Nipmuck was closely related to the "N-dialect" of the Massachuset.[3]

The Nipmuck were once more numerous and wide-ranging than they are today. In early times, according to one appraisal:

There never was a Nipmuc tribe as such. Nipmuc is a geographical classification given to the native peoples who lived in central Massachusetts and the adjoining parts of southern New England. They lived in independent bands and villages, some of which at different times were allied with, or subject to, the powerful native confederacies which surrounded them. Massomuck, Monashackotoog, and Quinnebaug were Nipmuck, but they were subject to the Pequot before 1637. In like manner, the Nashaway at one time belonged to the Sokoni and Pennacook, while Squawkeag was originally part of the Pocumtuc.[4]

The 500+ remaining Nipmuck recognized by the Commonwealth of Massachusetts live in and around the Chaubunagungamaug Reservation in Webster and the Hassanamisco Reservation in Grafton. Their territory may once have extended into northern Rhode Island and northeast Connecticut.[5]

Main article: Nipmuck Nation
Congressman John Olver meets with a Nipmuc woman during the tribe's bid for Federal recognition.
Congressman John Olver meets with a Nipmuc woman during the tribe's bid for Federal recognition.

This Indian group has long been recognized by the state of Massachusetts, but in 2004 the Bureau of Indian Affairs decided that this group does not meet four of the seven mandatory requirements for Federal acknowledgment as a "nation".[6]

This specific legal determination prevents the Nipmuck from dealing with the U.S. Government on a "government-to-government" basis.

The decision and was made on the basis of such points as Nipmuc families having long owned their land individually rather than communally and having been legally "detribalized" by the Massachusetts Enfranchisement Act of 1869.[7]

As such, this determination is in no way a defamation of the Nipmuc people past or present and the Nipmuck, like the Wampanoag, continue to have a special status within the Commonwealth.

Coming from the southwest, Paleo Indians settled New England over 10,000 years ago, hunting the animals that inhabited the subarctic environment. During the Archaic Period (8000 BCE–1000 BCE) the climate slowly warmed, bringing new plants and animals as well as changes in human culture and lifestyle.

During this period, the Nipmuck's ancestors were producing stone bowls, making bark, woven and wooden containers, and developed a written language, which remained in use until the historical period. Pesuponcks (ceremonial stone sweat lodges) were used for purification rituals and many of these ancient chambers can still be found near the sites of Nipmuck villages.

During the Woodland Period (1000 BCE–1000 CE) and later, trade and with other peoples brought the "three sisters" (maize, beans, and squash), encouraging an agricultural based society. In time, Nipmuck territory was at the hub of the "Great Path" to all parts of the northeast. [8]

Nipmuck homes were framed of deciduous saplings covered with skins, bark and woven mats. The bow and arrow supplemented the use of spears in hunting and war.

As early as 1630 there is a record of a Nipmuck known as Acquittamaug walking to Boston with his father, each carrying a bushel and a half of corn from Woodstock, Connecticut, to the starving settlers for sale. Just a generation later the colonists were offering bounties on the scalps of Nipmuck men, women, and children.

Regarding the Nipmuck, one historian wrote:

Estimates of the pre-contact population of the Nipmuc are at best confusing, because there is no agreement as to which groups belonged to the Nipmuc. The numbers vary between 3,000 and 10,000 with as many as 40 villages. Some Nipmuc tribes were subject to the Pequot and sometimes have been included as part of the Pequot Confederacy. Freed in 1637 after the destruction of the Pequot by the English, they were classified in later years as Nipmuc. Similar problems exist with members of the Narragansett, Massachusett, Pocumtuc, Western Abenaki, and Pennacook. None of which is important until totals are taken, and several thousand people have not been counted ...or else several times.[9]

In 1644, John Winthrop the Younger, son of the first leader of the Massachusetts Bay Colony, purchased the Tantiusques graphite mine and the surrounding land from the Nipmuck and began the first commercial mining operation on the site.[10]

By the 1850s, much of the Nipmuck peoples had been brought into the fold of what the colonists called "Praying Indians". During King Philip's War large numbers of Nipmuck, including many sachem, were either killed in battle or captured and hanged.

The first really accurate count of the Nipmuc occurred in 1680 following the King Philip's War. A little less than 1,000 Nipmuc survived, and these were confined to praying villages along with the remnants from other tribes. How many Nipmuc escaped to the Abenaki and Mahican and how many were killed during the war is anyone's guess. Within a few years it became impossible to assign tribal membership within the mixed populations at the praying villages.[11]

  • Day, Gordon M. 1975. The Mots Loups of Father Mathevet. Publications in Ethnology, no. 8. Ottawa: National Museum of Man.


  1. ^ See Pritzker, Barry M. A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford University Press, 2000, p. 442, where the Nipmuck are classed with the [Narragansett (tribe)|Narragansett]], and noted to be speakers of an Eastern Algonquian language.
  2. ^ Nipmuc History
  3. ^ Nipmuc History
  4. ^ Nipmuc History
  5. ^ Nipmuc History
  6. ^ Martin Issues Final Determination to Decline Federal Acknowledgment of The Nipmuc Nation
  7. ^ [1] Proposed Finding Against Federal Acknowledgment of the Webster/ Dudley Band of Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck Indians
  8. ^ Landscape Planning Study
  9. ^ Nipmuc History
  10. ^ The Trustees of Reservations
  11. ^ Nipmuc History

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