York, Raid on
1692 CE
The Raid on York (also known as the Candlemas Massacre) takes place on January 24, 1692[ during King William's War, when Chief Madockawando and Father Louis-Pierre Thury lead between two hundred to three hundred natives into the town of York (at that time in the District of Maine and part of the Province of Massachusetts Bay, now in the state of Maine), killing about one hundred of the English settlers and burning down buildings, taking another estimated eighty villagers hostage.
The villagers are forced to walk to Canada, New France, where they were ransomed by Capt. John Alden Jr. of Boston (son of John Alden and Priscilla Mullins of the Plymouth Colony).
One of those taken Captive is a young Jeremiah Moulton, who will later gain notoriety during the Father Rale's War.
Capt. Floyd writes that "the houses are all burned and rifled except the half dozen or thereabout"...later in the same letter he adds: "there is about seventeen or eighteen houses burned".
Forty-eight people are buried by Capt. Floyd, and the remaining number were young children whose names never appeared on the existing town records.
Among those killed is Reverend Shubael Dummer, the Congregational church minister; Dummer is shot at his own front door, while Dummer's wife, Lydia and their son, are carried away captive where "through snows and hardships among those dragons of the desert she also quickly died"; nothing further was heard of the boy.
The Indians set fire to all undefended houses on the north side of the York River, the principal route for trade and around which the town had grown.
After the settlement is reduced to ashes, however, it will be rebuilt on higher ground at what is today York Village.
Capt. John Flood, who had come with the militia from Portsmouth, finds on his arrival that "the greatest part of the whole town was burned and robbed," with nearly fifty killed and another one hundred captured.
He reports that Rev. Dummer was "barbarously murthered, stript naked, cut and mangled by these sons of Beliall."
Today the event is commemorated annually in York, with historical re-enactments and lectures, events presented by the Old York Historical Society and sponsored in part by the Maine Humanities Council.
There is a memorial plaque in York on a large stone where, according to the plaque, Abenaki Indians left their snowshoes before creeping into York and attacking the settlers.
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