The first settlement in New Hampshire, originally named
Pannaway Plantation, was established in 1623, at
Odiorne's Point by a group of fishermen led by
David Thompson. The settlement was abandoned in favor of
Strawbery Banke, which became
Portsmouth. The first settler in present-day Rye was probably
William Berry. Prior to its incorporation in 1726 as a parish of
New Castle, Rye was called "Sandy Beach" and its lands were once parts of New Castle, Portsmouth,
Greenland and
Hampton. In September 1691, a band of Wabanaki Indians attacked Sandy Beach in a raid during
King William's War in what was called the Brackett Lane Massacre. In 1726, the town of New Castle set off a parish for Sandy Beach called "Rye", for
Rye in
Sussex, England, the ancestral lands of the Jenness family who continue to live in the town to this day and even have a beach named after them. The town was incorporated in 1785. In 2013, a researcher pointed out that the town seal showed the parish creation date of 1726 as the incorporation date. Later on in the year, the seal was updated to include the three dates important to Rye, 1623, 1726 and 1785. ==Geography==