America 250: Stories of America

Stockbridge Mohicans

In early spring, Stockbridge Mohicans set up camp in sugar bushes. For them, sap harvesting is more than a step of maple sugaring. It honors the spring and the maple trees. Much like this custom, the Mohicans have influenced both local and national history. And as their tradition survives, the Stockbridge Mohicans remain active to this day.

Hundreds of years before European settlement, this tribe occupied the modern-day Upper Housatonic Valley. They lived in villages consisting of wigwams and longhouses. Women minded children, tended to their gardens, and gathered berries. Men hunted, fished, and/or fought in battle. They also taught their history to Mohican children.

European arrival in the early seventeenth century disrupted the Mohicans’ way of life. Along with trade goods, Europeans brought devastating diseases such as smallpox. In 1734, missionary John Sergeant introduced Christianity to the tribe. Many felt compelled to adopt the religion. They saw the Europeans’ material and military successes as proof of divine favor. Yet others felt wary of their cruelty against Africans and other American Indians. Still, Mohican leaders adopted the religion. They settled in Stockbridge, which became incorporated as a praying town in 1739.

The Europeans organized Stockbridge under their ideas of property. The town had an English-style schoolhouse, a church, and a town meetinghouse. Other Christianized American Indians settled here alongside the Mohicans and Europeans. The town’s government also became organized under English customs. The Mohicans protested this for it interfered with their traditions. Yet the government ignored them. Meanwhile, settlers and squatters continued occupying Mohican lands, including present-day Salisbury and Sharon, Massachusetts.

The Stockbridge Mohicans grew increasingly wary of their white neighbors. Still, they allied with the Patriots during the American Revolution. Stockbridge leader Solomon Wa-haun-wan-wau-meet pledged loyalty to the Americans and said his people would “never be at peace” with the British as long as they were in conflict with America.

Historian Bryan Rindfleisch believes that local pressure and optimism encouraged this alliance. The Mohicans may have hoped to earn the settlers’ respect. They served as formidable fighters, scouts, and diplomats during the war. They served in several battles and campaigns. Yet while these men fought for the Patriots, their families suffered at home and their pleas to the Patriots for aid went unheeded.

White settlers continued encroaching on the Mohicans’ land. By 1783, the praying town was entirely white-owned. The Mohicans contacted their Iroquois allies, who welcomed them with open arms. Yet the state of New York pushed them out to Wisconsin by 1829. Still, these people remember and care for their ancestral home. In May of 2023, tribal leaders considered purchasing 351 acres of Stockbridge property. As such, they continue to shape American history to this day.

More inspiring ‘American Stories’ from the Upper Housatonic Valley National Heritage Area are at: housatonicheritage.org/american-stories.

The America 250: Stories of America project aims to present 250 captivating stories from across the United States, showcased through our diverse National Heritage Areas. As America celebrates its 250th anniversary, we hope these narratives provide a deeper understanding of the events that have shaped our nation and highlight how the lives of ordinary individuals have often influenced the course of history.