
The History of the Americans
The history of the people who live in the United States, from the beginning.
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Mar 28, 2025 • 40min
King Philip’s War 2: Lighting the Match
After Massasoit's death in 1660 or 1661, his son Wamsutta became sachem of the Pokonoket community and the leading sachem of the Wampanoag confederation, and early on he followed Algonquian custom and changed his name. He asked the men of Plymouth Colony, longstanding allies of his nation, to give him an English name, and they proposed Alexander. His brother Metacom also took an English name, Philip. Alexander would soon die under circumstances that deeply concerned the Wampanoags, and his brother Metacom, now known to the English as King Philip, assumed the paramount sachemship.
During the 1660s and 1670s, a series of crises would degrade the now fifty year alliance between Plymouth Colony and the Wampanoag confederation, with war narrowly averted in 1671. Then, in early 1675, the Harvard-educated Christian Indian John Sassamon would be found dead, murdered by someone. Plymouth prosecuted and executed three Wampanoag men on scanty evidence, a violation of Philip's sovereignty. Misunderstandings piled on top of outrage, and pressure built on both Philip and the Plymouth authorities to mobilize. The deputy governor of Rhode Island tried to broker peace, but events moved too fast. On June 23, 1673, the war began.
Errata: (1)Toward the end of the episode, I said that the town of Mattapoisett was "just east of New Bedford." Oops. There is a town with that name there today, per Google maps, but in 1675 the place with that name was on the water near Swansea, where the Taunton River flows into Mt. Hope Bay. (2) At another point, I said there had been "almost forty" narratives written about the war. Since there were at least 29, I should have said "almost thirty."
Maps of New England during King Philip's War
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Lisa Brooks, Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip’s War
Jill LePore, The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity
Matthew J. Tuininga, The Wars of the Lord: The Puritan Conquest of America’s First People
John Easton, A Relation of the Indian War (pdf)
Philip Ranlet, “Another Look at the Causes of King Philip’s War,” The New England Quarterly, March 1988.

Mar 16, 2025 • 39min
King Philip’s War 1: The Kindling of War
This episode looks at the background causes of the brutal war between the New English colonies of Plymouth, Massachusetts Bay, and Connecticut and their indigenous allies against a tribal alliance including both the Wampanoags and the Narragansetts between 1675 and 1678.
King Philip’s War is the most widely used name of that bloody and arguably existential war. In surveys of American history, it is often the only event between the founding of Jamestown, Plymouth, and Massachusetts Bay and the end of the 17th century that rates more than a sentence or two. This is for good reason, insofar as King Philip’s War changed the trajectory of New England’s history. It is thought to be the bloodiest war in American history as a proportion of the affected population. As many as 1000 colonists died, including perhaps 10 percent of the English men of military age. Three thousand Indians were killed, and as many as a thousand were sold into slavery abroad. The war altered the relationship between the European colonists and the Indians of the region to a far greater degree than the Pequot War or any of the other conflicts that had preceded it, shattered the military and cultural power of New England’s most powerful indigenous nations, and so devastated the English that by some estimates per capita wealth in the region did not return to the level of 1675 until the eve of the American Revolution a century later. The New England frontier, for better or worse, did not advance for forty years after King Philip’s War.
Suffice it to say, we should understand the issues that broke the long peace in the summer of 1675, almost exactly 350 years ago.
Maps of New England during King Philip's War
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Lisa Brooks, Our Beloved Kin: A New History of King Philip's War
Jill LePore, The Name of War: King Philip's War and the Origins of American Identity
Matthew J. Tuininga, The Wars of the Lord: The Puritan Conquest of America's First People
Pekka Hämäläinen, Indigenous Continent: The Epic Contest for North America
Philip Ranlet, "Another Look at the Causes of King Philip's War," The New England Quarterly, March 1988.

Feb 17, 2025 • 32min
Jolliet and Marquette: Loose Ends and Notes on Early Chicago
This episode ties up the loose ends that remained at the end of the expedition of Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette in 1673. Among other things, we explore the ultimate fate of Jolliet's optimistic vision that a canal could bridge the continental divide in Illinois, allowing sailing ships to travel from Lake Erie all the way to the Gulf. Along the way we learn all sorts of factoids, including the fate of the Carolina Parakeet, snippits from the earliest history of Chicago, including the origin of the name of that city, its first non-indigenous resident, and the resolution of Marquette's pervasive gastrointestinal issues.
[Errata: About five minutes along I saw that Jolliet arrived at Quebec about July 29, 1673. Should have been1674. Oops.]
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Mark Walczynski, Jolliet and Marquette: A New History of the 1673 Expedition
John William Nelson, Muddy Ground: Native Peoples, Chicago's Portage, and the Transformation of a Continent
Francis Borgia Steck, The Jolliet-Marquette Expedition, 1673 (pdf)
Jean Baptiste Point du Sable

Feb 3, 2025 • 42min
Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette Explore the “Mesippi”
In the summer of 1673, two now famous Frenchmen and five others who are all but nameless traveled by canoe from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan at the Straits of Mackinac to central Arkansas on the western bank of the Mississippi River, and then back again. Louis Jolliet was a new sort of Frenchman, a natural born North American, having come into this world in Quebec in 1645, now a fur trader and voyageur. Jacques Marquette was the more usual sort, having been born in France in 1637. By the time of the expedition Marquette was a Jesuit priest, long known to the nations of North America as a “Black Robe.”
The episode begins with an overview of New France in the years between Samuel de Champlain's death in 1635 and 1661, when it languished because the Five Nations of the Iroquois had it entirely bottled up. The expedition was a marker of New France's rapid expansion after King Louis XIV began to rule in his own right that year.
Along the way, our heroes become the first Europeans to visit Iowa (Go Hawks!), see some extraordinary painted monsters, learn the importance of the calumet, and find a short portage in the eastern continental divide at a place soon to be called Chicago.
Map of the route (visible in the shownotes for the episode on the website), credit Illinois State Museum
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Mark Walczynski, Jolliet and Marquette: A New History of the 1673 Expedition
Francis Borgia Steck, The Jolliet-Marquette Expedition, 1673 (pdf)
Piasa "monsters" (Wikipedia)
Carignan-Salières Regiment (Wikipedia)
Beaver Wars (Wikipedia)

Jan 20, 2025 • 44min
Raid on America 3: “All Theyr Cry was for New Yorke!”
This is the last of a three-episode series on the Dutch "raid on America" in 1673, during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. Commander Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest of the Admiralty of the Dutch province of Zeeland - "Kees the Devil" - and a privateer named Jacob Benckes had pillaged English possessions in the Indies. By late June 1673 their fleet of at least 12 ships was sailing to the Chesapeake Bay, where the year's crop of tobacco from Virginia and Maryland had been loaded on merchant ships to sail by convoy to England. Arriving there on July 10, Evertsen and Benckes fought two English warships in the second Battle of the James River, and captured or destroyed thousands of hogsheads of tobacco. As they left with their haul, they grabbed a ketch with, among other people, a couple of the New Jersey rebels on board. They gave Evertsen important intelligence about the shoddy defenses of New York. By the end of July, only three weeks after arriving at the Chesapeake, Kees the Devil would reconquer New Netherland.
But not before a brave English soldier got decapitated by a cannon ball.
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Donald G. Shomette and Robert D. Haslach, Raid on America: The Dutch Naval Campaign of 1672-1674
John E. Pomfret, Province of East New Jersey, 1609-1702: The Rebellious Proprietary
Robert C. Ritchie, The Duke's Province: A Study of New York Politics and Society, 1664-1691
Battle of the James River (1667) (Wikipedia)

Jan 13, 2025 • 39min
Raid on America 2: Kees the Devil Sails
This is the second of three episodes about a daring Dutch raid on the West Indies and the English colonies of North America during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. The extended raid, led by Commander Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest of the Admiralty of the Dutch province of Zeeland and a privateer named Jacob Benckes, was a sideshow in that war, yet its consequences were far-reaching. Among other accomplishments, Evertsen, known to his fans as Kees the Devil, and Benckes, “subdued three English colonies, depopulated a fourth, captured or destroyed nearly 200 enemy vessels, inflicted a serious injury upon the Virginia tobacco trade, wiped out the English Newfoundland fisheries, and caused unending panic in the New England colonies.”
This episode covers the first phase of the "raid on America," in which Evertsen's squadron sails from Zeeland for the South Atlantic, aiming to capture the English East India fleet at St. Helena. Failing that, the squadron sailed for South America and the Indies, eventually meeting up with Benckes at Martinique. After capturing prizes and burning down St. Eustatius, the episode ends with Evertsen and Benckes headed toward the rich tobacco fleet then gathering in the Chesapeake.
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Donald G. Shomette and Robert D. Haslach, Raid on America: The Dutch Naval Campaign of 1672-1674
Map of the land campaign against the United Provinces in the Third Anglo Dutch War:
Third Anglo-Dutch War (Wikipedia)
Cornelis Evertsen The Youngest (Wikipedia)
The Fifth Column Podcast

Dec 31, 2024 • 41min
Raid on America 1: Overview of the Anglo-Dutch Wars
This is the first of three episodes about a daring Dutch raid on the West Indies and the English colonies of North America during the Third Anglo-Dutch War. The extended raid, led by Commander Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest of the Admiralty of the Dutch province of Zeeland and a privateer named Jacob Benckes, was a sideshow in that war, yet its consequences were far-reaching. Among other accomplishments, Evertsen, known to his fans as Kees the Devil, and Benckes, "subdued three English colonies, depopulated a fourth, captured or destroyed nearly 200 enemy vessels, inflicted a serious injury upon the Virginia tobacco trade, wiped out the English Newfoundland fisheries, and caused unending panic in the New England colonies.” They recovered New York for the Dutch to the great if fleeting joy of much of its citizenry, and so demoralized the English that Parliament turned against the war and forced Charles II to sue for peace.
The story is best understood in the context of the Anglo-Dutch Wars, which have been in the background of many of our episodes. This episode, therefore, is a primer on the first two Anglo-Dutch wars, and the run-up to the third, which will feature in the next episode.
Map of the Low Countries at the relevant time (note the corrider denoted the "Bishopbric of Leige" connecting the Dutch Republic to France):
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Useful background episode: https://thehistoryoftheamericans.com/the-fall-of-new-amsterdam-and-the-founding-of-new-york/
Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
Donald G. Shomette and Robert D. Haslach, Raid on America: The Dutch Naval Campaign of 1672-1674
C. R. Boxer, "Some Second Thoughts on the Third Anglo-Dutch War, 1672-1674," Transactions of the Royal Historical Society, 1969.
Third Anglo-Dutch War (Wikipedia)
Four Days Battle (Wikipedia)
Raid on the Medway (Wikipedia)

Dec 18, 2024 • 33min
New Jersey Is Revolting!
In 1672, the settlers of the New Jersey proprietary colony arose in a bloodless rebellion against Philip Carteret, appointed by the proprietors as governor. The wannabe rebels formed an illegal legislature, and installed Captain James Carteret as "president," putting them in conflict with Lord John Berkeley and Sir George Carteret, James's father. The conflict had to do with taxes, quitrents, and title to land. John Ogden, ancestor of your podcaster, emerged as a key player in the "popular party." By the summer of 1673, the proprietors, with the help of the Duke of York and King Charles II, had put down the rebellion. James, now virtually disowned by his father, fled to Carolina, but along the way would be captured by the Dutch captain Cornelis Evertsen the Youngest, known to his many fans as "Kees the Devil." James, or one of his resentful allies, would describe the defenses of New York to Evertsen, setting up the Dutch reconquest of New York.
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Useful background: https://thehistoryoftheamericans.com/ohhhh-whaddabout-new-jersey/
Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website)
John E. Pomfret, Province of East New Jersey, 1609-1702: The Rebellious Proprietary
James Carteret: The Black Sheep (Interesting blog post on James Carteret)

Nov 30, 2024 • 41min
The First English Settlement of South Carolina
The first English settlers in today's South Carolina departed England in August, 1669, but would not actually get to the coast of Carolina until April and May the next year. Along the way they would lose ships to hurricanes and incompetence, and get into a firefight with Spaniards and their Indian allies on an island off the coast of Georgia. An unknown number would die on an island in the Bahamas. And, yet, once on the banks of the Ashley River, the first English South Carolinians would lose only 12% of their population in their first 18 months, a record of survival in the first "seasoning" year matched only by Maryland in the 17th century.
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the episode notes on our website - https://thehistoryoftheamericans.com/the-first-english-settlement-of-south-carolina/)
Edward McCrady, The History of South Carolina Under the Proprietary Government 1670-1719
L. H. Roper, Conceiving Carolina: Proprietors, Planters, and Plots 1662-1729
George Bancroft, History of the United States of America: From the Discovery of the Continent
Alexander S. Salley, Jr., Narratives of Early Carolina 1650-1708 (Includes narrative of Maurice Mathews)
Letter from Henry Woodward to Sir John Yeamans, September 10, 1670
J. Leitch Wright, Jr., "Spanish Reaction to Carolina," The North Carolina Historical Review, October 1964.

Nov 14, 2024 • 43min
Lord Ashley, John Locke, and the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina
Notwithstanding the promising expeditions of William Hilton and Robert Sandford, by the end of 1666, with the Carolina proprietors waging war with the Netherlands and contending with plague and fire in London, the Carolina project was on the brink of failure. Then the youngest proprietor stepped forward; the venture received new vigor under the leadership of Anthony Ashley Cooper, Lord Ashley.
With his friend and confidant John Locke, Lord Ashley would develop a fantastically – some would say hilariously - detailed plan of government for Carolina that would never be put into effect, but which would inspire and confound historians and even be cited by courts into our own time, the Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina. This episode is about Ashley, Locke, and those strange Fundamental Constitutions.
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Selected references for this episode (Commission earned for Amazon purchases through the website)
George Bancroft, History of the United States of America: From the Discovery of the Continent
Edward McCrady, The History of South Carolina Under the Proprietary Government 1670-1719
L. H. Roper, Conceiving Carolina: Proprietors, Planters, and Plots 1662-1729
Fundamental Constitutions of Carolina, March 1, 1669
Jennifer Welchman, "Locke on Slavery and Inalienable Rights," Canadian Journal of Philosophy, March 1995.
John Locke