17th century ), is located in
Leominster, Massachusetts. It was one of the many Nashaway lands seized from the Indians to pay off their trading debts. The first reports of the peoples of Massachusetts' interior were scant. The subdivisions had their own
sachems (leaders) and functioned independently of each other. Although they shared a similar
L-dialect and other common customs, very little evidence is shown of any confederation except for the various skirmishes with English colonists that ultimately led to
King Philip's War. The bands made alliances and were possibly confederated with the
Pennacook. In 1643 Nashaway leader
Sholan deeded a large tract of land to the early settlers who formed the town of
Lancaster, Massachusetts (Nashaway Plantation), which was followed by further deeds in Sterling by his nephew
George Tahanto in 1701. The tribes of the interior posed a problem for
John Eliot, as the tribes were too far to visit and the area was still very much a frontier region. At the time of the first visits by John Prescott, the minister appointed to the tribe by the colony, power had been passed from Sachem Nashawhonan (Sholan) to Nanomocomuck (
Monoco), a Pennacook chieftain descended from
Passaconaway. Court records indicate that this sachem was charged for debts incurred for goods bought on credit and the high prices charged to them for the colonists' goods. This ultimately led to the loss of land and tensions that resulted in King Philip's War. In 1674
Daniel Gookin, superintendent of the Praying Indians, sent
Peter Jethro, a "grave and pious Indian" to work as a missionary minister in Nashaway (
Lancaster) and Weshakim (
Sterling). The fate of the Nashaway is not known. The remnants of the tribe fled the area and merged with other tribes, such as the Pennacook or the Nipmuc proper, intermarrying. The Nashaway tribe is now extinct, although their descendants live among the Native Americans. Many of the Nashaway died while exiled on
Deer Island in Boston Harbor. Their descendants can be found among the
Abenaki of Canada or the
Schaghticoke of
Connecticut and
New York and other tribes. ==Legacy==