|
The Bethel Courier
Special Edition -
August 3, 1981
Well-Known
Indians of the Bethel Area
by Catherine Newell
Note on Indian Names:
The names which have come down to
us
identifying certain Indians are usually corruptions of the French
Christian
names received at baptism in Canada. There are, for example, many
Indians
named Peol, or Pierre, and Susup, or Joseph. Mollyockett, really
comes from the Christian name Marie Agathe (Mary Agatha) which Bethel's
best-known Indian received at the time of her baptism by the French
missionaries. The difficulty the Indians had in pronouncing the
letter "r" led to an "l"
sound, resulting in "Maliagat" or "Mollyockett," more familiar to
English-speaking people.
MOLLYOCKETT:
The best-known Indian from Bethel's past is certainly Mollyockett, who
was
a familiar figure in the area from the first years of white settlement
until
her death in Andover in 1816. She was a noted authority on Indian
healing
arts, crafts and survival skills, and frequently shared her knowledge
with
her many white friends. Mollyockett was born in the early 1740's,
in
Saco, and is believed to have spent her early years in the Fryeburg
area,
the tribal area of the Pequakets, her tribe. She almost certainly
was
one of a group of Pequaket family members who were sheltered by the
English,
first in Scarborough and then in Plymouth, Mass., during a colonial war
in
1749, the male members of the group having sided with the
English.
She was at the St. Francis Mission in Canada at the time of
Roger's
Raid in 1759, and told of saving herself by hiding in the bushes. She
was
married in Canada; her daughter being baptized at the Mission in
1764.
By 1766, her first husband dead, Mollyockett was living in Fryeburg,
with
Sabattis, with whom she had three children. The family was
friendly
with many of the early settlers of Fryeburg. This period in
Mollyockett's
life came to an end about 1770, when Sabattis' first wife arrived from
Canada,
and the two women physically fought to settle claim to his
affections.
Mollyockett lost the prolonged battle, witnessed by Sabattis, lounging
on
a woodpile, and several settlers. She left and soon after joined
a
group of Indians in Bethel, led by Capt. Swassin. This group was
visited
in 1772 by Henry Tufts, whose 1804 published account relates his
healing
by Mollyockett. Mollyockett's remaining years were spent
travelling
throughout the Androscoggin Valley, from northern N.H. and Vermont to
Paris
and Poland. She made frequent trips to Canada, visiting her
children,
one of whom was a chief in Canada. Many stories about Mollyockett
were
recorded by white settlers, and involve her healing powers, her simple
religious
faith, her determined insistence on her rights as an original
proprietor
of Bethel, and her generosity in sharing her skills and friendship with
the
settlers.
Mollyockett was probably in the Bethel area at the time of the
Indian Raid
, and it may have been at this time that she travelled through the
woods
to warn a Captain Clark of Boston that his life was in danger.
She
arrived too late to save two of Clark's friends from Tomhegan, but did
warn
Clark, who held himself forever in Mollyockett's debt for the
alert.
METALLAK:
Metallak is most associated with the area of Northern New Hampshire
near
Lake Umbagog, and, like Mollyockett, remained in this area long after
white
settlement. He also developed strong friendships with whites and
a
reputation similar to that of Mollyockett. Lt. Sega identified
Metallak
as being at the St. Francis Mission, when the raiding party and
captives
arrived there after the Sudbury Canada incident, indicating that
Metallak
was known to residents of Bethel before 1781. Metallak served as
a
guide to many prominent figures during the latter part of his life,
including
Governor Lincoln of Maine, and Hon. Moses Mason of Bethel for whom
Metallak
drew a map of the Magalloway River on birch bark. The moose
antlers
on display in the Moses Mason Museum came from Metallak, as did the
materials
which Dr. Mason transformed into the unique moose-horn chair also in
the
museum collection.
Metallak traveled and camped throughout the region, with
members
of his family, and it was his group of Indians that brought Mollyockett
to Andover at the time of her final illness in 1816. Metallak
lived until
the late 1840's, spending his last days, infirm and blind, in
Stewartstown, N.H.
TOMHEGAN:
The full name of the villain in the Indian Raid saga was Tumtumhegan,
who
was the regional chief of the area, centered at Lake Umbagog, including
the
upper Androscoggin Valley. Tomhegan differed from most of the
area
Indians in siding with the British rather than the Americans in the
Revolution.
He led the attack on Sudbury Canada in 1781 and is identified with
other
similar episodes. Early sources link his motives with his Tory
loyalties,
and a "deep hatred" toward the settlers, to which certainly must be
added
the disputed claim to the tribal lands above Rumford Falls, threatened
settlement.
Tomhegan's attack on Col. Clark, a Boston trader and a favorite with
other
area Indians, was thwarted by Mollyockett's warning.
In his Incidents in White Mountain History, Willey
describes Tomhegan's death, without giving any details as to
circumstances, date, or place. "He was tied upon a horse, with spurs on
his heels, in such
a manner that the spurs continually goaded the animal. When the
horse
was set at liberty, he ran furiously through an orchard, and the craggy
limbs
of the trees tore him to pieces."
SABATTIS:
Sabattis is most strongly identified with the Fryeburg area. He
sympathized
with the American forces in the Revolution, and accompanied Arnold's
March
to Quebec. He also led the rescue party from Fryeburg to Bethel
at
the time of the Indian Raid. He was friendly with many settlers
and
visited Bethel in intervals until 1800. He was particularly
friendly
with the James Swan family, whom he and Mollyockett had known in
Fryeburg,
and who later relocated to Bethel. Sabattis had a fondness for
rum
and apparently after indulging, attempted to wring Mr. Swan's
neck. Swan soundly trounced him and Sabattis ever after
considered him a friend to be treated to such delicacies as choice bits
of moose.
CAPTAIN SWASSIN:
Swassin, also known as Swanson or Swarson, was the head of the small
Indian
group living in the Bethel area when Henry Tufts stayed with them in
1772-75.
Swassin joined the American Revolutionary forces and was presented with
a
sword in recognition of his service. True
identifies Swassin as a Pequaket.
MOLLY SUSUP:
Mollyockett's daughter, Molly Susup, was a child during the 1770's and
lived
with her mother in the Bethel area, attending school and playing with
the
children of the settlers. She was noted for her athletic prowess,
and
could outwrestle the schoolboys. Her later romance with the then-
elderly
Captain Swasin was a source of worry and embarrassment to her mother,
who
would not allow their marriage despite the birth of a child, Molly
Peol,
to Molly Susup. Molly Susup later married and left the area.
CAPTAIN PHILIPS:
Another Revolutionary War veteran, Captain Philips was mentioned by
Henry
Tufts, and identified by N. T. True as a Pequaket,
and Mollyockett was recorded as living with his group of
Indians in Andover in 1788.
LEWEY:
This Indian, renowned for his physical strength, called himself by the
rank
of sergeant, possibly for service in a colonial war.
Other Indians who visited Bethel frequently enough to be known
to
settlers by name included: PEOL, BLACK SUSUP, SANLOO, ASSABEEL,
QUALLIMOSIT, and PASEEL, a son of Sabattis and his first wife.
Sources on the 1781 Indian
Raid on Sudbury Canada:
Bennett, Randall H., "New England's Last Indian Raid," New
England Galaxy, Summer, 1978, pp. 45-54.
Segar, Nathaniel, Brief Narrative of the Captivity and
Sufferings of Lt. Nathan'l Segar; Paris, Maine, 1825.
True, Dr. Nathaniel T., "History of Bethel"
printed serially in The Bethel Courier, 1859-1861.
Willey, Benjamin, Incidents in White
Mountain History; Boston, Mass.,
1856.
Woodrow, Arthur D., Story of Metallak with the Life of
David
Robbins, The Story of Molly Ockett, The Adventures of Lieut. Segar, and
The
Killing of The Last Moose; Rumford, Maine, 1928.
|