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Battle of Turner's Falls

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60-70 warriors
  
150

Date
  
19 May 1676

Location
  
Gill

100-200, mainly women, children, and elderly
  
39 killed or captured

Result
  
Colonial victory

Battle of Turner's Falls httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
King Philip's War, Battle of Bloody Brook, Wheeler's Surprise, Great Swamp Fight, Raid on Deerfield

The Battle of Turner's Falls, also known as the Peskeompscut massacre, was fought on May 19, 1676, during King Philip's War, in present-day Gill, Massachusetts, near a falls on the Connecticut River. The site is across the river from the village of Turners Falls. A band of English colonists under the command of Captain William Turner fell upon the poorly guarded Indian village of Peskeompscut near the falls at dawn, slaughtering many of its inhabitants. Many of the warriors in the camp escaped, and they regrouped with those from other nearby camps to harass the English retreat, during which Turner was killed.

There is an extensive account of the battle and the colonists' reasons for attacking contained in a book authored by George Madison Bodge and reprinted by the Genealogical Publishing Company in 1967. The account includes a description of the battle, a listing of many of the soldiers who fought with the colonists, the soldiers who were slain in the battle, and soldiers or their descendants who were entitled to land due to their participation in the battle.

The site of the battle is in the Riverside Archeological District, a historic district listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

References

Battle of Turner's Falls Wikipedia


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