Colonists settled on Aquidneck Island in 1638 in the region that the
Narragansetts called "Pocasset" (meaning "where the stream widens"), the northern part of
Portsmouth. They engaged
Roger Williams to negotiate the terms of their settlement of the island from the Narragansett sachems
Canonicus and
Miantonomi. These settlers included
William Coddington,
Anne and
William Hutchinson,
Philip Sherman,
William Dyer,
John Coggeshall,
Nicholas Easton,
William Brenton,
John Clarke, and Richard Maxson (Maggsen). In thanks for being allowed to settle Aquidneck Island, the settlers gave the Narragansetts 40 fathoms of white
wampum, 20 hoes, 10 coats, and 5 more fathoms of wampum for the sachems. Canonicus and his nephew Miantonomi signed a deed for it. However, as Roger Williams made clear in a June 1638 letter to
Puritan lawyer
John Winthrop, one of the leading figures in founding the
Massachusetts Bay Colony: "Sir, concerning the islands Prudence and...Aquedenick ...neither of them were sold properly, for a thousand fathom would not have bought either, by strangers. The truth is, not a penny was demanded for either, and what was paid was only gratuity, though I chose, for better assurance and form, to call it sale." These first settlers founded Pocasset, but William Coddington chose
Newport for a settlement the following spring (1639) because of its excellent harbor, and some of the settlers followed him there. The British army occupied Aquidneck Island during the American Revolution from 1776 to 1779. The Continental Army under command of Major General
John Sullivan attempted to drive them out in the
Battle of Rhode Island on August 29, 1778, but without success. ==Schools==