Monoco
{{Short description|Nashaway sacham}}
{{Distinguish|Monaco}}
Monoco (died 1676) was a 17th-century Nashaway sachem (chief), known among the New England Puritans as One-eyed John.
After decades of peaceful coexistence, tensions arose between settlers and natives. The Nashaway attacked the neighboring English settlement in the Lancaster Raid of Lancaster, Massachusetts, in August 1675 and again in February 1676 with Sagamore Sam as part of the more general native-settler conflict known as King Philip's War.{{cite book |last1=Safford |first1=Marion Fuller |title=The Story of Colonial Lancaster (Massachusetts) |date=1937 |publisher=The Tuttle Publishing Co. |location=Rutland, Vermont |url=https://ia601009.us.archive.org/31/items/storyofcoloniall00saff/storyofcoloniall00saff.pdf |access-date=19 January 2025}} During the latter action, Monoco kidnapped a villager, Mary Rowlandson, and took her and her children with him and his party for many weeks.{{cite book|last=Bourne|first=Russell|date=1990|title=The Red King's Rebellion: Racial Politics in New England, 1675-1678|publisher=Atheneum Publishers|pages=163 ff}} Rowlandson later wrote and published what became a best-selling narrative about her captivity with the Indians and release, A Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson.Rowlandson, Mary (1682), The Sovereignty of Queens and Goodness of God: Being a Narrative of the Captivity and Restoration of Mrs. Mary Rowlandson.
On March 13, 1676, Monoco raided Groton, Massachusetts. He took control of a garrison house in the center of town and proceeded to parley with a Captain James Parker, threatening to burn "Chelmsford, Concord, Watertown, Cambridge, Charlestown, Roxbury, Boston, adding at last in his dialect: "What me will - me do."{{Cite book |last=Green |first=Samuel Abbott |title=Groton During the Indian Wars |publisher=University Press |year=1883 |isbn=1298423635 |location=Cambridge, MA |pages=32}} He then burned the town to the ground, forcing its inhabitants to flee to Concord.
In September 1676 Monoco was captured in Dover, New Hampshire and executed on the Boston Common in Boston, Massachusetts when his associate Tantamous' son, Peter Jethro intentionally (or unintentionally) turned in his fellow Native Americans to be executed and enslaved through negotiations with Richard Waldron.Lisa Brooks, Our Beloved Kin (Yale University Press, 2018) "Peter Jethro and the Capture of Monoco," https://ourbelovedkin.com/awikhigan/peter-jethro
References
{{Reflist}}
Further reading
- Lepore, Jill, The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity, New York: Alfred A. Knopf & Co., 1998
Category:17th-century Native American leaders
Category:Native American history of Massachusetts
Category:Native American people from Massachusetts
Category:People from colonial Massachusetts
{{NorthAm-native-bio-stub}}