John Sassamon was a member of the
Massachusett tribe, born at the Massachuset, Punkapoag Plantation to Punkapoag parents. Historians believe that he was then raised in the home of
Richard Callicot, where he may have been indentured along with the Indian translator
Cockenoe. By his early teen years, he had been introduced to
Christianity and learned to speak English. He is believed to have met and been mentored by the Christian
missionary John Eliot during this period, and may have known and worked with him for as long as 40 years. Eliot mentioned the death of Sassamon in his diary. By the
Pequot War in 1637, a joint effort by colonists and Native American allies to suppress the
Pequot in present-day
Connecticut, Sassamon was skilled enough with the English language to serve as an interpreter for the colonists. He fought with them alongside Callicot in the service of
Captain John Underhill. Following the war, Sassamon began to teach Eliot the Indian language in exchange for learning English and the Christian way of life. In 1651, Eliot established
Natick as the first
praying town. Praying towns were reserved for Native Americans who had converted to Christianity and were willing to live according to European-style customs in permanent agricultural settlements. Eliot recruited Sassamon as one of two schoolmasters to teach both English and Christianity to the residents. Because of Sassamon's intelligence and ability to speak English, Eliot arranged for Sassamon to take classes at
Harvard College in 1653. This was two years before the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel, in partnership with Harvard, founded a special "
Indian College" there. Sassamon studied at Harvard for a year. He may have studied alongside young Puritan men such as
Increase Mather, Samuel Bradstreet, and John Eliot, Jr. ==Murder==