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- Title
Murder on the Saltwater Frontier: The Death of John Oldham.
- Authors
LIPMAN, ANDREW C.
- Abstract
This article considers the larger material and political contexts of the 1636 murder of John Oldham aboard his boat by Narragansett-allied Indians, an event that was one of the causes of the 1636-38 Pequot War. Oldham's slaying illustrates how the contested region between New England and New Netherland was a "saltwater frontier" where the primary arena of cross-cultural exchange was the coastline and its nearshore waters, not the land. Natives and colonists relied on each other's maritime technologies and knowledge. At the same time the tricky logistics of their encounters made this zone uniquely perilous. Oldham's Indian killers were also motivated by an intense trade rivalry between Native powers. A series of events caused them to harbor suspicions of Oldham and inspired them to commit small-scale piracy during his murder. The article concludes that the ensuing Pequot War should be seen as a naval war that turned into terrestrial war, reflecting the English desire to shift the frontier off the water and onto dry land.
- Subjects
MASSACHUSETTS; OLDHAM, John, 1653-1683; MURDER; WATER boundaries; PEQUOT War, 1636-1638; NARRAGANSETT (North American people); NATIVE American commerce; COLONISTS; HISTORY of navigation; ALGONQUIANS (North American peoples); COLONIAL Massachusetts, ca. 1600-1775
- Publication
Early American Studies, An Interdisciplinary Journal, 2011, Vol 9, Issue 2, p268
- ISSN
1543-4273
- Publication type
Article