English: An Iroquois longhouse. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
The
Iroquois lived in the area that had the St. Lawrence as its northern
border.
From there they
spread south throughout what we would identify today as New England.
Although
not exactly happy with the arrival of smelly, hairy white people
they took
advantage of the opportunity to obtain the interesting new
goods that
the fur trade brought them.
Unfortunately
the smelly, hairy people also brought guns which the
Iroquois
quickly learned to use and soon beavers
were in short supply.
So the
Iroquois started to look north at land along the
St.
Lawrence River where their traditional enemy the
Huron tribe
lived.
The Hurons
were, if you remember, allied with the French.
They were
also vulnerable because in 1639 a small pox epidemic
had killed
at least half of them.Iroquois tribes got through with them.
Algonquian speaking tribes - the Cree, the Mi'kmaq, etc.
Fearful for their own survival and angry at the loss of this potential market
the Iroquois started to attack the French settlers.
This is the
time of the horrific Indian raids which included scalping and killing
the men and
carrying off the women and children.
Things got
so bad that eventually the King of France sent in the troops
and the Iroquois decided
to negotiate a peace.
The English*
are in New England, the French are in New France
and the
Iroquois are in the land between them.
Like this
is going to last.
New England was settled mostly by
Puritans and Pilgrims who left England after the English civil war in order to
find a safe place to practise their faith.