Assateague Tribe
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The Assateague (meaning: "swifly moving water") were an Algonquian people speaking the Nanticoke language who historically lived on the Atlantic coast side of the Delmarva Peninsula (known during the colonial period as the Eastern Shores of Maryland and
Virginia Virginia, officially the Commonwealth of Virginia, is a state in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern regions of the United States, between the Atlantic Coast and the Appalachian Mountains. The geography and climate of the Commonwealth ar ...
, and the
Lower Counties Delaware Colony in the North American Middle Colonies consisted of land on the west bank of the Delaware River Bay. In the early 17th century the area was inhabited by Lenape and possibly the Assateague tribes of Native Americans. The first Europ ...
of Province of Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania). While there are living people who may have distant heritage from this tribe, the tribe itself no longer exists as a culturally intact tribal community.


Culture

The Indigenous peoples of the Americas, Indigenous Assateague culture was based on the maritime and forest resources of the Chincoteague Bay watershed and, among other things, involved the manufacture and trade of shell beads. Historically, the Assateague practiced excarnation as part of their funerary rites. This involved the eventual storing of ancestors' bones on shelves in a log structure. Periodically, the remains were collected and buried in a common grave or ossuary. Several ossuaries have been discovered on the Eastern Shore of Maryland.


Historical relations with Europeans


Treaty of 1662

In 1662, the English Province of Maryland, colony of Maryland made a treaty with the Assateagues (and the Nanticoke people, Nanticokes) whereby each British colonization of the Americas, colonist given land in the territory of the Assateagues would give the Assateague tribal chief (or "emperor", as he was inaccurately referred to by the colonists) six matchcoats (garments made of a rough blanket or frieze, heavy rough cloth with uncut nap on one side), and one matchcoat for every Fugitive slave, runaway slave the Assateague returned to their enslaver. The treaty further stated that no murders were to be committed by either side, that no English colonist was to enter Assateague territory without a pass, and that the Assateagues were not to trade with Dutch colonization of the Americas, Dutch colonists in Delaware Colony, Delaware, as long as Maryland could supply their necessities. Of several other treaties signed between the colonial government and the Assateagues before the close of the 17th century, one ordered the Assateagues onto five Indian reservation, reservations along the Pocomoke River, and was signed by Amonugus, as Emperor of the "Assateagues". Apparently, based on signatures to a 1678 treaty, the "Emperor of the Assateagues" held a dominant position over the chiefs (or "kings", as subordinate to the "emperor") of the Chincoteague and Pocomoke people, Pocomoke tribes. Sessions of the Maryland General Assembly during this period record numerous complaints by the Assateague against colonists letting their cattle roam Assateague cornfields, breaking Assateague wild animal traps, cutting their timber, and encroaching on their lands. The Assateagues complained in 1686 that several colonists had even built homes in Assateagues' settlements.


Treaty of 1722

In 1722, a peace treaty was signed between the then-leader of the Assateagues, Knosulm (also known as M. Walker); the "King of the Pocomokes", Wassounge (also known as Daniel); and Charles Calvert (governor), Charles Calvert, the List of colonial governors of Maryland, governor of Maryland. This treaty was to last to the "worlds end," and hostilities and damages from former acts would be "buried in perpetual oblivion," with further terms as follows: * Any Indian who killed a colonist was to be brought to the governor as a prisoner. * Because the colonists claimed to be unable to distinguish one Indian from another, no Indian was to enter a colonial settlement with his face painted or carrying a weapon, or even to approach a settlement without laying down his weapons or calling out to identify himself. * The punishment for a colonist killing an Indian that came un-painted, called out, and laid down his arms was death. * If an Indian and a colonists met accidentally in the woods, the former had to immediately lay down his weapons: if he did not, he would considered hostile. * The privilege of crabbing, fowling, hunting and fishing would be granted to each Indian individually by the colonial government. * Any Indian that killed or stole a hog, calf or other domestic animal, or stole any other goods would be punished the same way that a colonist would. * Slavery in the colonial history of the United States, Slaves and Indentured servitude in British America, indentured servants who ran away from their masters and took shelter in Assateague territory were to be returned to the nearest colonial settlement for a reward. * The Indians were not to sign any new peace treaties with an enemy of the governor, nor make war without his consent. * If the Assateagues and Pocomokes killed any Indian subject to the governor's protection, it would be considered as great an offense as killing a colonist. * Foreign Indians coming into the area were to be reported immediately to a prominent colonist or colonial official. For the expected protection the Indians were to receive from the governor, the Assateagues and Pocomokes were to deliver unto the List of Proprietors of Maryland, Proprietor of Maryland two bows and two dozen arrows yearly on 10 October.


Askiminokonson

As part of an attempt by the colonial authorities of Maryland to confine the local Indian population, several peninsular tribes (including the Assateague and Pocomoke from the Atlantic side, the Annamessex and Manokin from the Chesapeake Bay side, and the Nassawaddox from further south), were gathered at a single settlement, referred to Indian Town (or Indiantown) by the colonists and Askiminokonson by the Indians. By 1671, it was the largest Indian settlement in Maryland, and was made part of a Indian reservation, reservation in 1686. Askiminokonson was located on the north side of the Pocomoke River near present-day Snow Hill, Maryland. In 1742, unusual movements by the Indians created concern among the colonists, and investigation revealed that several chiefs had been involved in a plot for a general uprising fomented by a Shawnee chief, Messowan. The Maryland colonial government dissolved the Assateague's "empire", made the title of Emperor merely honorary, and placed each town directly under provincial authority. Much agitation for the permission to emigrate followed, and by the end of the decade a large part of the Assateagues had moved to the Susquehanna River, Susquehanna region and become tributaries to the Iroquois. This group moved slowly northward, and their descendants are now in Ontario, Canada. Of those who stayed in Maryland, one group lived on the Choptank Indian Tribe, Choptank reserve until 1798. Another remnant of the tribe, retaining little of its native culture, survived near the Indian River (Delaware), Indian River in Delaware."The Assateague Indians: What Became of Them"
, by Suzanne Hurley


Notes


References


Assateague People of Delmarva website Ocean City, Maryland, Lifesaving Museum website
{{authority control Indigenous peoples of the Northeastern Woodlands Eastern Algonquian peoples Extinct Native American tribes Nanticoke tribe Native American history of Delaware Native American history of Maryland Native American history of Pennsylvania Native American history of Virginia Native American tribes in Delaware Native American tribes in Maryland Native American tribes in Virginia Algonquian ethnonyms