Native Blood: The Myth 
of Thanksgiving
Posted by Mike E on November 15, 2009
 
Puritan settlers massacre Pequot people.
by Mike Ely
[Available as podcast.]
It is a deep thing that people still celebrate the survival of the early 
colonists at Plymouth — by giving thanks to the Christian God who supposedly 
protected and championed the European invasion. The real meaning of all that, 
then and now, needs to be continually excavated. The myths and lies that 
surround the past are constantly draped over the horrors and tortures of our 
present.

Every schoolchild in the U.S. has been taught that the Pilgrims of the 
Plymouth Colony invited the local Indians to a major harvest feast after 
surviving their first bitter year in New England. But the real history of 
Thanksgiving is a story of the murder of indigenous people and the theft of 
their land by European colonialists– and of the ruthless ways of capitalism.
* * * * *
In mid-winter 1620 the English ship Mayflower landed on the North American 
coast, delivering 102 exiles. The original Native people of this stretch of 
shoreline had already been killed off. In 1614 a British expedition had landed 
there. When they left they took 24 Indians as slaves and left smallpox behind. 
Three years of plague wiped out between 90 and 96 percent of the inhabitants of 
the coast, destroying most villages completely.

The Europeans landed and built their colony called 
“the Plymouth Plantation” near the deserted ruins of the Indian village of 
Pawtuxet. They ate from abandoned cornfields grown wild. Only one Pawtuxet 
named 
Squanto had survived–he had spent the last years as a slave to the English and 
Spanish in Europe. Squanto spoke the colonists’ language and taught them how to 
plant corn and how to catch fish until the first harvest. Squanto also helped 
the colonists negotiate a peace treaty with the nearby Wampanoag tribe, led by 
the chief Massasoit.

These were very lucky breaks for the colonists. The first Virginia settlement 
had been wiped out before they could establish themselves. Thanks to the good 
will of the Wampanoag, the settlers not only survived their first year but had 
an alliance with the Wampanoags that would give them almost two decades of 
peace.

John Winthrop, a founder of the Massahusetts Bay colony considered this wave 
of illness and death to be a divine miracle. He wrote to a friend in 
England,“But for the natives in these 
parts, God hath so pursued them, as for 300 miles space the greatest part of 
them are swept away by smallpox which still continues among them. So as God 
hath 
thereby cleared our title to this place, those who remain in these parts, being 
in all not 50, have put themselves under our protection.”
The deadly impact of European diseases and the good will of the Wampanoag 
allowed the settlers to survive their first year.

In celebration of their good fortune, the colony’s governor, William 
Bradford, declared a three-day feast of thanksgiving after that first harvest 
of 
1621.
How the Puritans Stole the Land


But 
the peace that produced the Thanksgiving Feast of 1621 meant that the Puritans 
would have 15 years to establish a firm foothold on the coast. Until 1629 there 
were no more than 300 settlers in New England, scattered in small and isolated 
settlements. But their survival inspired a wave of Puritan invasion that soon 
established growing Massachusetts towns north of Plymouth: Boston and Salem. 
For 
10 years, boatloads of new settlers came.

And as the number of Europeans increased, they proved not nearly so generous 
as the Wampanoags.
On arrival, the Puritans and other religious sects discussed “who legally 
owns all this land.” They had to decide this, not just because of Anglo-Saxon 
traditions, but because their particular way of farming was based on 
individual–not communal or tribal–ownership. This debate over land ownership 
reveals that bourgeois “rule of law” does not mean “protect the rights of the 
masses of people.”

Some settlers argued that the land belonged to the Indians. These forces were 
excommunicated and expelled. Massachusetts Governor Winthrop declared the 
Indians had not “subdued” the land, and therefore all uncultivated lands 
should, 
according to English Common Law, be considered “public domain.” This 
meant they belonged to the king. In short, the colonists decided they did not 
need to consult the Indians when they seized new lands, they only had to 
consult 
the representative of the crown (meaning the local governor).

The colonists embraced a line from Psalms 2:8. “Ask of me, and I shall give 
thee, 
the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy 
possession.” Since then, European 
settler states have similarly declared god their real estate agent: from the 
Boers seizing South Africa to the Zionists seizing Palestine.
The European immigrants took land and 
enslaved Indians to help them farm it. By 1637 there were about 2,000 
British settlers. They pushed out from the coast and decided to remove the 
inhabitants.

The Shining City on the Hill
Where did the Plymouth and Massachusetts colonies of Puritan and “separatist” 
pilgrims come from and what were they really all about?
Governor Winthrop, a founder of the Massachusetts colony, said, “We shall be 
as a City upon a Hill, the eyes of all people are upon us.” TheMayflower 
Puritans had been driven out of England as subversives. The 
Puritans saw this religious colony as a model of a social and political order 
that they believed all of Europe should adopt.

The Puritan movement was part of a sweeping revolt within English society 
against the ruling feudal order of wealthy lords. Only a few decades after the 
establishment of Plymouth, the Puritan Revolution came to power in England. 
They 
killed the king, won a civil war, set up a short-lived republic, and brutally 
conquered the neighboring people of Ireland to create a larger national 
market.

The famous Puritan intolerance was part of a determined attempt to challenge 
the decadence and wastefulness of the rich aristocratic landlords of England. 
The Puritans wanted to use the power of state punishment to uproot old and 
still 
dominant ways of thinking and behaving.

The new ideas of the Puritans served the needs of merchant capitalist 
accumulation. The extreme discipline, thrift and modesty the Puritans demanded 
of each other corresponded to a new and emerging form of ownership and 
production. Their so-called “Protestant Ethic” was an early form of 
thecapitalist ethic. From the beginning, the Puritan colonies intended to grow 
through capitalist trade–trading fish and fur with England while they traded 
pots, knives, axes, alcohol and other English goods with the Indians.

The New England were ruled by a government in which only the male heads of 
families had a voice. Women, Indians, slaves, servants, youth were neither 
heard 
nor represented. In the Puritan schoolbooks, the old law “honor thy father and 
thy mother” was interpreted to mean honoring “All our Superiors, whether in 
Family, School, Church, and Commonwealth.” And, the real truth was that the 
colonies were fundamentally controlled by the most powerful merchants.

The Puritan fathers believed they 
were the Chosen People of an infinite god and that this justified anything they 
did. They were Calvinists who believed that the vast majority of humanity was 
predestined to damnation. This meant that while they were firm in fighting for 
their own capitalist right to accumulate and prosper, they were quick to 
oppress 
the masses of people in Ireland, Scotland and North America, once they seized 
the power to set up their new bourgeois order. Those who rejected the narrow 
religious rules of the colonies were often simply expelled “out into the 
wilderness.”

The Massachusetts colony (north of Plymouth) was founded when Puritan 
stockholders had gotten control of an English trading company. The king had 
given this company the right to govern its own internal affairs, and in 1629 
the 
stockholders simply voted to transfer the company to North American 
shores–making this colonyliterally a self-governing company of 
stockholders!

In U.S. schools, students are taught that theMayflower compact of 
Plymouth contained the seeds of “modern democracy” and “rule of law.” But by 
looking at the actual history of the Puritans, we can see that this so-called 
“modern democracy” was (and still is) acapitalist democracy based on 
all kinds of oppression and serving the class interests of the ruling 
capitalists.

In short, the Puritan movement developed as an early revolutionary challenge 
to the old feudal order in England. They were the soul of primitive capitalist 
accumulation. And transferred to the shores of North America, they immediately 
revealed how heartless and oppressive that capitalist soul is.

The Birth of “The American Way of War”


In 
the Connecticut Valley, the powerful Pequot tribe had not entered an alliance 
with the British (as had the Narragansett, the Wampanoag, and the Massachusetts 
peoples). At first they were far from the centers of colonization. Then, in 
1633, the British stole the land where the city of Hartford now sits–land which 
the Pequot had recently conquered from another tribe. That same year two 
British 
slave raiders were killed. The colonists demanded that the Indians who killed 
the slavers be turned over. The Pequot refused.

The Puritan preachers said, fromRomans 13:2, “Whosoever therefore resisteth the 
power, resisteth the ordinance 
of God: and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation.” The 
colonial governments gathered an armed force of 240 under the command of John 
Mason. They were joined by a thousand Narragansett warriors. The historian 
Francis Jennings writes: “Mason proposed to avoid attacking Pequot warriors 
which would have overtaxed his unseasoned, unreliable troops. Battle, as such, 
was not his purpose. Battle is only one of the ways to destroy an enemy’s will 
to fight. Massacre can accomplish the same end with less risk, and Mason had 
determined that massacre would be his objective.”
The colonist army surrounded a fortified Pequot village on the Mystic River. 
At sunrise, as the inhabitants slept, the Puritan soldiers set the village on 
fire.

William Bradford, Governor of Plymouth, wrote: “Those that escaped the fire 
were slain with the sword; some hewed to pieces, others run through with their 
rapiers, so that they were quickly dispatched and very few escaped. It was 
conceived they thus destroyed about 400 at this time. It was a fearful sight to 
see them thus frying in the fire…horrible was the stink and scent thereof, but 
the victory seemed a sweet sacrifice, 
and they gave the prayers thereof to God, who had wrought so wonderfully for 
them.”

Mason himself wrote: “It may be 
demanded…Should not Christians have more mercy and compassion? But…sometimes 
the 
Scripture declareth women and children must perish with their parents…. We had 
sufficient light from the word of God for our proceedings.”
Three hundred and fifty years later the Puritan phrase “a shining city on the 
hill” became a favorite quote of conservative speechwriters.

Discovering the Profits of Slavery
This so-called “Pequot war” was a one-sided murder and slaving expedition. 
Over 180 captives were taken. After consulting the bible again, in Leviticus 
24:44, the colonial authorities found justification to kill most of the Pequot 
men and enslave the captured women and their children. Only 500 Pequot remained 
alive and free. In 1975 the official number of Pequot living in Connecticut was 
21.

Some of the war captives were given to the Narragansett and Massachusetts 
allies of the British. Even before the arrival of Europeans, Native peoples of 
North America had widely practiced taking war captives from other tribes as 
hostages and slaves.

The remaining captives were sold to British plantation colonies in the West 
Indies to be worked to death in a new form of slavery that served the emerging 
capitalist world market. And with that, the merchants of Boston made a historic 
discovery: the profits they made from the sale of human beings virtually paid 
for the cost of seizing them.

One account says that enslaving Indians quickly became a “mania with 
speculators.” These early merchant capitalists of Massachusetts started to make 
genocide pay for itself. The slave trade, first in captured Indians and soon in 
kidnapped Africans, quickly became a backbone of New England merchant 
capitalism.

Thanksgiving in the Manhattan Colony
In 1641 the Dutch governor Kieft of Manhattan offered the first “scalp 
bounty”–his government paid 
money for the scalp of each Indian brought to them. A couple years later, Kieft 
ordered the massacre of the 
Wappingers, a friendly tribe. Eighty were killed and their severed heads were 
kicked like soccer balls down the streets of Manhattan. One captive was 
castrated, skinned alive and forced to eat his own flesh while the Dutch 
governor watched and laughed. Then Kieft hired the notorious Underhill who had 
commanded in the Pequot war to carry out a similar massacre near Stamford, 
Connecticut. The village was set fire, and 500 Indian residents were put to the 
sword.

A day of thanksgiving was proclaimed in the churches of Manhattan. As we will 
see, the European colonists declared Thanksgiving Days to celebrate mass murder 
more often than they did for harvest and friendship.

The Conquest of New England
By the 1670s there were about 30,000 to 40,000 white inhabitants in the 
United New England Colonies–6,000 to 8,000 able to bear arms. With the Pequot 
destroyed, the Massachusetts and Plymouth colonists turned on the Wampanoag, 
the 
tribe that had saved them in 1620 and probably joined them for the original 
Thanksgiving Day.

In 1675 a Christian Wampanoag was killed while spying for the Puritans. The 
Plymouth authorities arrested and executed three Wampanoag without consulting 
the tribal chief, King Philip.

As Mao Tsetung says: “Where there is oppression there is resistance.” The 
Wampanoag went to war.
The Indians applied some military lessons they had learned: they waged a 
guerrilla war which overran isolated European settlements and were often able 
to 
inflict casualties on the Puritan soldiers. The colonists again attacked and 
massacred the main Indian populations.

When this war ended, 600 European men, one-eleventh of the adult men of the 
New England Colonies, had been killed in battle. Hundreds of homes and 13 
settlements had been wiped out. But the colonists won.

In their victory,the settlers 
launched an all-out genocide against the remaining Native people. The 
Massachusetts government offered 20 
shillings bounty for every Indian scalp, and 40 shillings for every prisoner 
who 
could be sold into slavery. Soldiers were allowed to enslave any Indian woman 
or 
child under 14 they could capture. The “Praying Indians” who had 
converted to Christianity and fought on the side of the European troops were 
accused of shooting into the treetops during battles with “hostiles.” They were 
enslaved or killed. Other “peaceful” Indians of Dartmouth and Dover were 
invited 
to negotiate or seek refuge at trading posts–and were sold onto slave ships.

It is not known how many Indians were sold into slavery, but in this 
campaign, 500 enslaved Indians were shipped from Plymouth alone. Of the 12,000 
Indians in the surrounding tribes, probably about half died from battle, 
massacre and starvation.

After King Philip’s War, there were almost no Indians left free in the 
northern British colonies. A colonist wrote from Manhattan’s New York colony: 
“There is now but few Indians upon the island and those few no ways hurtful. It 
is to be admired how strangely they 
have decreased by the hand of God, since the English first settled in these 
parts.”

In Massachusetts, the colonists declared a “day of public thanksgiving” in 
1676, saying, “there now scarce remains a name or family of them [the Indians] 
but are either slain, captivated or fled.”

Fifty-five years after the original Thanksgiving Day, the Puritans had 
destroyed the generous Wampanoag and all other neighboring tribes. The 
Wampanoag 
chief King Philip was beheaded. His head was stuck on a pole in Plymouth, where 
the skull still hung on display 24 years later.

The descendants of these Native peoples are found wherever the Puritan 
merchant capitalists found markets for slaves: the West Indies, the Azures, 
Algiers, Spain and England. The grandson of Massasoit, the Pilgrim’s original 
protector, was sold into slavery in Bermuda.

Runaways and Rebels
But even the destruction of Indian tribal life and the enslavement of 
survivors brought no peace. Indians continued to resist in every available way. 
Their oppressors lived in terror of a revolt. And they searched for ways to end 
the resistance. The historian MacLeod writes: “The first `reservations’ were 
designed for the `wild’ Irish of Ulster in 1609. And the first Indian 
reservation agent in America, Gookin of Massachusetts, like many other American 
immigrants had seen service in Ireland under Cromwell.”

The enslaved Indians refused to work and ran away. The Massachusetts 
government tried to control runaways by marking enslaved Indians: brands were 
burnt into their skin, and symbols were tattooed into their foreheads and 
cheeks.
A Massachusetts law of 1695 gave 
colonists permission to kill Indians at will, declaring it was “lawful for any 
person, whether English or Indian, that shall find any Indians traveling or 
skulking in any of the towns or roads (within specified limits), to command 
them 
under their guard and examination, or to kill them as they may or 
can.”

The northern colonists enacted more and more laws for controlling the people. 
A law in Albany forbade any African or Indian slave from driving a cart within 
the city. Curfews were set up; Africans and Indians were forbidden to have 
evening get-togethers. On Block Island, Indians were given 10 lashes for being 
out after nine o’clock. In 1692 Massachusetts made it a serious crime for any 
white person to marry an African, an Indian or a mulatto. In 1706 they tried to 
stop the importation of Indian slaves from other colonies, fearing a slave 
revolt.

Celebrate?
Looking at this history raises a question: Why should anyone celebrate the 
survival of the earliest Puritans with a Thanksgiving Day? Certainly the Native 
peoples of those times had no reason to celebrate.

The ruling powers of the United States organized people to celebrate 
Thanksgiving Day because it is in their interest. That’s why they created it. 
The first national celebration of Thanksgiving was called for by George 
Washington. And the celebration was made a regular legal holiday later by 
Abraham Lincoln during the civil war (right as he sent troops to suppress the 
Sioux of Minnesota).

Washington and Lincoln were two presidents deeply involved in trying to forge 
a unified bourgeois nation-state out of the European settlers in the United 
States. Andthe Thanksgiving story was a 
useful myth in their efforts at U.S. nation-building. It celebrates the “bounty 
of the American way of life,” while covering up the brutal nature of this 
society.
Available online at mikeely.wordpress. com. Send comments to: m1keely (at) 
yahoo.com
http://mikeely. wordpress. com/2009/ 11/15/native- blood-the- myth-of-thanksgi 
ving-2/
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S1000+ 

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