Philip is ultimately killed by one of…
August 1676 CE
Philip is ultimately killed by one of these teams when he is tracked down by friendly Native Americans led by Captains Benjamin Church and Josiah Standish of the Plymouth colony militia at Mt. Hope, Rhode Island.
Shot and killed by an native named John Alderman on August 12, 1676, Philip is beheaded, drawn and quartered (a traditional treatment of criminals in this era).
His head will be displayed in Plymouth for twenty years.
The war is nearly over except for a few attacks in Maine that will last until 1677, but the war in the south largely ends with Metacom's death.
Over six hundred colonists and three thousand natives have died, including several hundred native captives who had been tried and executed or enslaved and sold in Bermuda.
The majority of the dead natives and many of the colonials had died as the result of disease, which is typical of all armies in this era.
Those sent to Bermuda include Metacom's son (and also, according to Bermudian tradition, his wife), who had been captured by Church on August 2.
A sizable number of Bermudians today claim ancestry from these exiles.
Members of the Sachem's extended family are placed for safekeeping among colonists in Rhode Island and eastern Connecticut.
Other survivors join western and northern tribes and refugee communities as captives or tribal members, and some of these refugees will return on occasion to southern New England.