Captain William Turner of the Massachusetts Militia…
May 1676 CE
Captain William Turner of the Massachusetts Militia and a group of about one hundred and fifty militia volunteers from Hadley, Northampton and Hatfield, Massachusetts, manage on May 18, 1676, to sneak up and attack a large fishing camp of hungry Native Americans at Peskeopscut at a falls on the Connecticut River (now called Turners Falls, Massachusetts).
These Native Americans had been raiding the colonists' towns and fields along the upper Connecticut River.
The surprise is nearly complete and it is claimed that one to two hundred Native Americans were killed.
Many jump in the river to escape and are swept over the falls.
Turner and as many as forty of the militia are killed during the retreat.
Groups
Massachusett people (Amerind tribe)
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Narragansett people (Amerind tribe)
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Pequots (Amerind tribe)
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Wampanoag (Amerind tribe)
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Mohegan people (Amerind tribe)
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Nipmuc (Amerind tribe)
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Podunk (Amerind tribe)
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Nashaway, Nashua or Weshacum people (Amerind tribe)
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Pennacook, Pawtucket, or Merrimack (Amerind tribe)
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New England Confederation (United Colonies of New England)
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