The Annamessex people were a historic Native American tribe from the Eastern Shore of Maryland.[1] Their homelands were part of present-day Somerset County, Maryland.[1]

Annamessex
Total population
extinct as a tribe
Regions with significant populations
Maryland
Languages
unattested Eastern Algonquian language
Religion
Indigenous
Related ethnic groups
Pocomoke people

Along with the Manokin, Nasswatox, and Aquintica, the Annamessex were a subtribe of the Pocomoke people,[2] like the Manokin to their immediate north and the Morumsco at their immediate south. The Nanticoke and Choptank lived north of the Pocomoke, while the Accomac people lived further south in Virginia.[1]

History edit

English settlers from the Roanoke Colony made contact with the tribes in this region in the 1580s, while Spanish colonists also explored the area.[3]

The leaders of the Annamessex and neighboring tribes signed a peace treaty with the English in 1678.[4]

On May 6, 1686, leaders from the Annamessex and other Pocomoke people, headquartered at Askiminokonson met with the Land Office Commissioners of Maryland. They reported that British squatters from Accomac Shire, including by Charles Scarborough, had encroached upon their lands and British-owned cattle were destroying their crops.[2] The land office designated a reservation for those tribes.[4]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ a b c Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 241.
  2. ^ a b Wise, Jennigs Copper (1911). Ye Kingdome of Accawmacke. Richmond, VA: The Bell Book and Stationery Co. p. 62.
  3. ^ Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 242.
  4. ^ a b Murphree, Daniel S., ed. (2012). Native America: A State-by-state Historical Encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, CA: Greenwood. p. 485. ISBN 9780313381263.

References edit

  • Feest, Christian F. (1978). Trigger, Bruce G. (ed.). Handbook of North American Indians: Northeast, Vol. 15. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution. pp. 240–48.