War of King Philippe In 1675, the Algonquin Indians fiercely opposed Puritan settlers, causing a violent collision attacking the southern part of New England. From this confrontation anger and violence will bring humanity to those without God when the most cruel and bloody war in America's history has taken place, the body is torn apart from Puritan's teachings, suffering and face complete threat of destruction The level of this bright and sharp fact clearly reveals what it brought about. . In the summer of 1676, thousands of people died as violence disappeared and the gap between hatred and torture was revealed. (Lepore xxi) Indian and British men, women and children, and many young villages in New England
1675-1676 - War of King Phillip - Because of the tension of colonial expansionists, the war between King Philippe and the Americans began in New England. Bloody war crashed in the Connecticut river basin in Massachusetts State and Plymouth and Rhode Island colonies, eventually killing 600 British colonists and 3,000 indigenous peoples, including women and children from both sides. August 12, 1676, Rhode Island wetlands king Phillip (Metacomet colonial nickname, leader of Wampanoag) was chased and killed, the war in southern England was concluded. In New Hampshire and Maine, Sark Indian continues to raid the settlement for a year and a half.
1675: 1675 - 1677: The war of King Philippe was named for the Metaphor of the Wampanog group called King Philippe by the British. This war was a battle between colonialists and bloody Indians. During the war of King Phillip, one third of the Caucasian population of the United States was wiped out. This war has proven to be the last battle of indigenous peoples in Massachusetts. The history of invasion in Europe brought about trends such as tuberculosis, cholera, influenza, measles, smallpox etc. The Massachusetts state Indians did not develop immunity to these diseases, resulting in a substantial decline in the population. Exploitation of tax leverage, forced labor, slavery and so on has been part of their history and has influenced Massachusetts state Indians.