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Why the Narragansett Spared Providence

Episode 5441 Published 3 weeks, 3 days ago
Description
During King Philip's War in 1676, the most devastating conflict in colonial New England's history, the Narragansett people made a decision that has puzzled historians for centuries. Despite having every reason and ample capacity to destroy the small settlement of Providence, Rhode Island, they chose instead to spare it. The story of why they did so reveals a complex web of diplomacy, personal relationships, and Indigenous political calculation that challenges simplistic narratives about colonial-era warfare. The Narragansett occupied a powerful position in southern New England. They were the largest tribe in the region, maintaining a population and military capability that made them a force no colonial settlement could afford to ignore. Their relationship with Providence and its founder Roger Williams was unique among colonial-Indigenous interactions, built on decades of genuine personal diplomacy and mutual respect that had no real parallel elsewhere in New England. Roger Williams had arrived in the region decades earlier as a religious exile from Massachusetts Bay Colony, and from the beginning he had treated the Narragansett with a respect and fairness that was extraordinary by colonial standards. He learned their language, lived among them, negotiated honestly for land, and consistently advocated for their interests in colonial courts. Williams was not merely tolerant but genuinely appreciative of Narragansett culture, and the relationships he built were personal as well as political. When war erupted across New England and the Narragansett were drawn into the conflict despite their initial attempts at neutrality, Providence lay directly in their path. The town was virtually defenseless. Williams, now elderly, walked out to meet the approaching warriors and pleaded for the settlement's survival. The Narragansett burned most of the physical structures but deliberately avoided killing the inhabitants, a decision that reflected both their relationship with Williams and their own political calculations about maintaining potential allies. This episode explores why the Narragansett spared Providence when they destroyed virtually everything else in their path, revealing how personal diplomacy, cultural respect, and Indigenous strategic thinking created a moment of restraint amid one of the most violent chapters in early American history.
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