Genealogy of Patty Rose
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| Notes for Robert STANTON | ||||||||||
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - son of Thomas STANTON and Ann LORD (daughter of Dr. Thomas Lord and Dorothy Bird) - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ROBERT, s. of the first Thomas his youngest but one, b. 1653; the ch. mem. of 1677, was the youthful soldier, 1676, to wh. the Ind. capt. prince Nanunteno* made reproachf,. ansr. as Hubbard tells. He d. 25 Oct. 1724, aged 70, had Robert. But other ch. bef. and aft. he had, as he m. 12 Sept. 1677, Joanna Gardner, and issue were Joann, Lucy, Ann, Mary, Thomas, Lucy, again, and Gardner. [ref 20] *see notes below - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Robert was educated to teach the gospel to the Indians 1675/6 King Philip's war, Capt. George Dennison company buried Wequetequock Burying Ground, Stonington - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Nanunteno, also called "Canonchet," was the "fierce for battle" son of Miantenomi, was the last sachem of the Narranansetts. He commanded the Indians at the 1675 Great Swamp Fight. This battle exterminated the Narragansetts as a nation. He was captured near the Blackstone river, after the war, and executed for the crime of defending his country and refusing to surrender the territories of his ancestors by a treaty of peace. The coolness, fortitude, and heroism of his fall stands without a parallel in ancient or modern times. Helpless and captive, he was still the proud and unconquered chief; and when young Robert Stanton, an interpreter, and among the first of the English to come up, began to question him, he turned away haughtily, saying, "You much child, no understand matters of war; let your brother* or your chief come, him I will answer." Even Mr. Hubbard was struck by his noble bearing and heroism, and in his "Postscript," written after the first part of his history was printed, compares him to one of the old Romans, Attilius Regulus, since he would not accept of his own life upon compliance with the English. He was offered life, upon the condition that he would treat for the submission of his subjects; his untamed spirit indignantly rejected the ignominious proposition. When the sentence was announced to him that then he must die, he said, "I like it well, that I shall die before my heart grows soft, or that I have said anything unworthy of myself." After the Great Swamp Fight and death of Canonchet, about 3,000 Narragansett women, children, and old people were left defenseless without food or shelter. Ruthlessly hunted down, it can be assumed that many of them succumbed to either starvation or deliberate massacre. Hundreds of captured native women and children were shipped as slaves to the West Indies, 500 from Plymouth alone during 1676. The warriors were almost always executed. How many Narragansett were able to avoid this and find refuge among the Abenaki, Mahican, and Iroquois is unknown. From a pre-war population of 5,000, only 500 Narragansett survived the war to sign a peace treaty with the English in 1682. The Eastern Niantic had remained neutral throughout the war, and the Narragansett received permission to join them on their small reservation near Charleston, Rhode Island. *Robert's brother, Capt. John - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | ||||||||||
| Notes for Joanna GARDNER | ||||||||||
| - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Joanna, b. 25th Jan. 1657; m. 12th Sept. 1677, Robert Stanton, of Stonington, Conn. [ref 18:3-587] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Joanna Stanton, 25 Jan. 1657 [ref 20] - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Joanna Gardiner baptism 25 Nov* 1656-7 Roxbury Suffolk /d Tho [ref 76] *11th month = Jan? - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1689 called Joanna Stanton in father's will - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - | ||||||||||
| Last Modified 4 May 2004 | Created 4 Jan 2005 |