Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Statues to Hatchet-Wielding Colonist Reconsidered
gvw_ap_news
By Associated Press
Published 4 years ago on
April 29, 2021

Share

BOSTON — The fierce monuments honor an English colonist who, legend has it, slaughtered her Native American captors after the gruesome killing of her baby.

But the statues to Hannah Duston — one in Massachusetts where she grips a hatchet and another in New Hampshire where she clutches a bundle of scalps — are being reconsidered amid the nationwide reckoning on racism and controversial public monuments.

Many Say the Monument Is a Misrepresentation

Historians, Native Americans and even some of Duston’s descendants argue that many of the details of the 17th-century story are lost in the telling, such as the fact that many of the victims weren’t even Indigenous warriors, but children.

They say Duston’s story became propaganda for European colonists to justify eradicating New England’s Indigenous population, and served the same purpose generations later as the new nation expanded west. The monuments themselves were built in the late 1800s, as U.S. forces battled Indigenous peoples and forcibly removed them from their ancestral lands.

“The savages and this pioneer mother who stands up to them,” Craig Richardson, a Duston descendant who is on a committee to redesign the New Hampshire memorial, said Thursday. “That’s really what they’re trying to depict.”

Hatchet to Be Removed and Inscription Updated

In Massachusetts this week, the Haverhill City Council voted to keep the city’s memorial in place but remove Duston’s hatchet and update the statue’s inscription, which tells her tale and calls Native Americans “savages.”

Mayor James Fiorentini said Thursday he supports the council’s recommendations, including adding a new memorial to Native Americans near the site. He’s formed a commission chaired by two members of the Native American community to pursue the idea.

But Peter Carbone, who chairs the city’s historical commission, maintains the Duston monument should simply be relocated to a museum or other place where more context could be provided, a move he said some of her descendants supported during recent hearings.

Advisory Committee Want to ‘Share the True History of the Region’

In neighboring New Hampshire, the advisory committee that Richardson is on continues to weigh changes to a memorial on a small island in Boscawen, at the alleged site of Duston’s bloody revenge.

Native Americans on the committee say the 1874 memorial, which has been the subject of decades of debate, should reflect a fuller picture of the region’s long Indigenous history and the conflicts with European colonists.

“We don’t want a statue that honors Hannah, but on the other hand, we need an outlet in order to share the true history of the region,” Denise Pouliot, a member of the Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook Abenaki People, told WBUR recently. “How many historical books have been written based on this false narrative?”

According to legend, Duston and another woman, Mary Neff, were taken captive in 1697 by Native Americans raiding the English settlement of Haverhill. Duston’s husband escaped with eight of the couple’s children, but one of their babies died.

In the version popularized by Cotton Mather, the child’s head was bashed against a tree, but historians have long wondered whether the influential Puritan minister, who also played a role in the infamous Salem witch trials, simply sensationalized those and other details.

What’s also often lost is that the Native American family that eventually took the women didn’t even keep them locked up or guarded, according to Barbara Cutter, a University of Northern Iowa professor who wrote about the Duston monuments and their controversial legacy for Smithsonian Magazine.

Still, Duston, Neff and another English captive set upon the sleeping family with hatchets, killing ten of them, including six children. They even removed their scalps to collect a reward in Massachusetts. At the time, Cutter notes, English and French colonists and their Native American allies were embroiled in King William’s War, one of a number of conflicts between the rival settlers.

“The powerful dynamic the story helped to establish remains with us today,” Cutter wrote in 2018. The U.S. has “portrayed itself as the righteous, innocent, mother-goddess-of-liberty patriotically defending herself against its ‘savage’ enemies.”

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

Fresno Mayor Dyer Bullish on Growth, Calls on Newsom for $200 Million

DON'T MISS

Rejoicing Peruvians See Pope Leo XIV as One of Their Own After His Many Years in Peru

DON'T MISS

FEMA’s Acting Administrator Is Replaced a Day After Congressional Testimony

DON'T MISS

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Leads Missile Test, Stresses Nuclear Force Readiness, KCNA Says

DON'T MISS

Shohei Ohtani Could Have Landed 15-Year Deal, Agent Says, but He Didn’t Want to Risk Skills Decline

DON'T MISS

White House Overhaul of Troubled US Air Traffic Control System Will Cost ‘Lots of Billions’

DON'T MISS

US Military to Start Kicking out Transgender Troops Next Month, Memo Says

DON'T MISS

Los Angeles Coliseum and SoFi Stadium to Share Opening and Closing Ceremonies for 2028 Olympics

DON'T MISS

Jennifer Aniston’s Alleged Stalker Appears in Court Shirtless and a Judge Orders a Mental Evaluation

DON'T MISS

Gas Up and Go: These Car Shows Are the Ultimate Road-Trip Destinations

UP NEXT

Shohei Ohtani Could Have Landed 15-Year Deal, Agent Says, but He Didn’t Want to Risk Skills Decline

UP NEXT

Joe Biden Blames Kamala Harris’ Loss on Sexism and Racism and Rejects Concerns About His Age

UP NEXT

Before Tariff Price Increases, Mark Cuban Suggests Stocking Up on These Items

UP NEXT

He Was Killed in a Road Rage Shooting. AI Allowed Him to Deliver His Own Victim Impact Statement

UP NEXT

More Older Americans Worry Social Security Won’t Be There for Them

UP NEXT

Sen. John Fetterman Raises Alarms With Outburst at Meeting With Union Officials

UP NEXT

Special Report: At Social Security, These Are the Days of the Living Dead

UP NEXT

Video: Raccoon With Meth Pipe in Its Mouth Discovered During a Routine Traffic Stop in Ohio

UP NEXT

What Customers Can Expect as Rite Aid Closes or Sells All Its Drugstores

UP NEXT

Warriors Take Game 1 From Cold-Shooting Wolves Despite Curry’s Departure With Hamstring Strain

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Leads Missile Test, Stresses Nuclear Force Readiness, KCNA Says

15 minutes ago

Shohei Ohtani Could Have Landed 15-Year Deal, Agent Says, but He Didn’t Want to Risk Skills Decline

15 minutes ago

White House Overhaul of Troubled US Air Traffic Control System Will Cost ‘Lots of Billions’

19 minutes ago

US Military to Start Kicking out Transgender Troops Next Month, Memo Says

30 minutes ago

Los Angeles Coliseum and SoFi Stadium to Share Opening and Closing Ceremonies for 2028 Olympics

1 hour ago

Jennifer Aniston’s Alleged Stalker Appears in Court Shirtless and a Judge Orders a Mental Evaluation

1 hour ago

Gas Up and Go: These Car Shows Are the Ultimate Road-Trip Destinations

1 hour ago

Joe Biden Blames Kamala Harris’ Loss on Sexism and Racism and Rejects Concerns About His Age

1 hour ago

Average US 30-Year Mortgage Rate Steady at 6.76%, Near Highest Levels This Year

2 hours ago

Celsius Founder Alex Mashinsky Gets 12 Years Prison for Crypto Fraud

2 hours ago

Fresno Mayor Dyer Bullish on Growth, Calls on Newsom for $200 Million

Despite a budget shortfall of at least $20 million and awaiting $200 million more promised from the state, Fresno Mayor Jerry Dyer is bullis...

4 minutes ago

4 minutes ago

Fresno Mayor Dyer Bullish on Growth, Calls on Newsom for $200 Million

5 minutes ago

Rejoicing Peruvians See Pope Leo XIV as One of Their Own After His Many Years in Peru

11 minutes ago

FEMA’s Acting Administrator Is Replaced a Day After Congressional Testimony

A handout photo shows missiles being launched, in North Korea, May 8, 2025. KCNA via REUTERS
15 minutes ago

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Leads Missile Test, Stresses Nuclear Force Readiness, KCNA Says

15 minutes ago

Shohei Ohtani Could Have Landed 15-Year Deal, Agent Says, but He Didn’t Want to Risk Skills Decline

19 minutes ago

White House Overhaul of Troubled US Air Traffic Control System Will Cost ‘Lots of Billions’

The Pentagon building is seen in Arlington, Virginia, U.S. October 9, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/File Photo
30 minutes ago

US Military to Start Kicking out Transgender Troops Next Month, Memo Says

1 hour ago

Los Angeles Coliseum and SoFi Stadium to Share Opening and Closing Ceremonies for 2028 Olympics

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend