- M****asoit
Sachem (/ˌmæsəˈsɔɪ(ɪ)t/ M****-ə-SOYT, -SOY-it) or
Ousamequin (c. 1581 – 1661) was the
sachem or
leader of the
Wampanoag confederacy. M****asoit...
- M****asoit (
Ousamequin). However,
English claim to the land
relied entirely on
misinterpretations of
Native leadership,
which viewed Ousamequin as the Native...
-
speech on Cole's Hill in Plymouth, M****achusetts next to a
statue of
Ousamequin,
where he
described Native American perspectives on the
Thanksgiving celebrations...
-
Bradford referred to the
Pokanoket leader Ousamequin as "their
great Sachem,
called M****asoit".
Ousamequin was
succeeded as
Great Leader of the Pokanoket...
- (1937–2016), an
early leader of this group,
identified as
being a
descendant of
Ousamequin (Wampanoag, c. 1581–1661), more
commonly known as M****asoit. The group...
-
provided out of the
goodness of
their hearts. In truth,
Wampanoag leader Ousamequin was the one to
initiate contact with the
settlers in
March 1621, after...
- M****asoit (or
Ousamequin Sachem).
Nathaniel Peck, Joseph's son,
settled on part of this land in
Barrington which he
called Ousamequin Farm. This property...
-
Pilgrims and M****asoit, the
Grand Sachem of the
Wampanoag (original name
Ousamequin or "Yellow Feather"). As such, he was
instrumental in the
friendship treaty...
- and Westport—in a
treaty between the Wampanoag,
represented by
Chief Ousamequin (M****asoit) and his son Wamsutta, and John Winslow,
William Bradford,...
- States, with an
average wind
speed of 14.3 mph (23.0 km/h). In 1649,
Ousamequin (M****asoit) sold the
surrounding Wampanoag land—then
known as Saughtucket—to...