When European colonists began in the 17th century to settle in the middle reaches of the
Connecticut River valley (where it flows through the present state of
Massachusetts), the area was inhabited by the
Algonquian-speaking Pocomtuc nation. In the early 1660s, the Pocomtuc were shattered as a nation due to conflict with the aggressive
Mohawk, the easternmost of the
Five Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy, who were located west of Albany in the Mohawk Valley and raided into New England. They also had suffered population losses due to high mortality from the new, chronic
infectious disease carried by traders and colonists, to which Native Americans had no acquired
immunity. In 1665, English colonists from the Massachusetts settlement of
Dedham were
given a grant in the Connecticut Valley area, and acquired land titles of uncertain legality from a variety of Pocomtuc Indians. They established a village in the early 1670s, at first called "Pocumtuck", but later, "Deerfield". Located in a relatively isolated position in the Massachusetts colony, on the edge of English colonial settlement, Deerfield became a target of frontier conflict between the French and English and their respective Native American allies. The colonial outpost was a traditional New England
subsistence farming community. The majority of Deerfield's settlers were young families who had moved west in search of land. The labor of the wives and other women was essential to the survival of the settlement and its male inhabitants.
Previous raids on Deerfield By 1675 the village had grown to a population of about 200. In that year, conflict between English colonists and Indians in southern
New England erupted into what is now known as "
King Philip's War". The war involved all of the New England colonies, and the colonists destroyed or severely decimated and pacified most of the Indian nations in the region. There were also many casualties among the New England colonists. Deerfield was evacuated in September 1675 after a coordinated series of Indian attacks, culminating in the
Battle of Bloody Brook, resulted in the deaths of about half the village's adult men. The village was one of several in the Connecticut River valley abandoned by the English, and it was briefly reoccupied by the warring Indians. The colonists regrouped, and in 1676 a force of mostly local colonists
slaughtered an Indian camp at a site then called "Peskeompscut". It is now called "
Turners Falls", after William Turner, an English colonist who was killed in the action. , are shown. Ongoing raids by the Mohawk forced many of the remaining Indians to retreat north to French-controlled
Canada or to the west. Those going west joined other tribes that had formed a peace of sorts with the authorities in the eastern area of the
Province of New York. During
King William's War (1688–1697), Deerfield was not subjected to major attacks, but 12 residents were killed in a series of ambushes and other incidents. Supposedly friendly Indians who were recognized as Pocomtuc were recorded as passing through the area. Some claimed to have participated in attacks on other frontier communities. English attacks on the frontier communities of what is now southern
Maine in the
Northeast Coast Campaign of 1703 again put Deerfield residents on the alert, as they feared retaliation. In response to their own losses in the Campaign, the French planned an attack on Deerfield with their native allies. They were specifically seeking to capture a leader of high enough rank to propose a prisoner exchange. The town's
palisade, constructed during King William's War, had been rehabilitated and expanded. In August of that year, the local militia commander called out the militia after he received intelligence of "a party of French & Indians from Canada" who were "expected every hour to make some attaque on ye towns upon Connecticut River". However, nothing happened until October, when two men were taken from a pasture outside the palisade. In addition to these men, the townspeople mustered about 70 men of fighting age; these forces were all under the command of Captain Jonathan Wells. The forces for the raid had begun gathering near
Montreal as early as May 1703, as reported with reasonable accuracy in English intelligence reports. However, two incidents delayed their execution of the raid. The first was a rumor that
Royal Navy warships were on the
Saint Lawrence River, and the French sent a significant Indian force to
Quebec for its defense. The second was the detachment of some troops for operations in Maine; critically, these forces included
Jean-Baptiste Hertel de Rouville, who was intended to lead the raid on Deerfield. In addition, his raid against
Wells raised the frontier alarms at Deerfield. Hertel de Rouville did not return to Montreal until the fall of 1703. The force assembled at
Chambly, just south of Montreal, numbered about 250. It was a diverse collection of men. The 48 ethnic Frenchmen, were made up of
Canadien militia and recruits from the
troupes de la marine, including four of Hertel de Rouville's brothers. Several men among the French leadership had more than 20 years' experience in wilderness warfare. The expedition's departure was not a secret. In January 1704, Iroquois warned New York's Indian agent
Pieter Schuyler of possible action by the French and their allies. He notified Governor Dudley and Connecticut's Governor
Winthrop; they received further warnings in mid-February, although none was specific about the target. ==Raid==