Patuxent people

The Patuxent were one of the Native American tribes living along the western shore of the Chesapeake Bay. They spoke an Algonquian language and were loosely dominated by the Piscataway.

Patuxent
Total population
Extinct as a tribe
Regions with significant populations
Western Shore of Maryland
Languages
Eastern Algonquian
Religion
Native religion
Related ethnic groups
Piscataway

Living along the Patuxent River, they were among the first people taught by Andrew White.

The first European to explore the river was Capt. John Smith who sailed 40 miles [1] of it in 1608, writing: “On the west side of the Bay were five faire and delightful navigable rivers the fifth river is called Pawtuxent.”

The Algonquians migrated here 2,000 years ago. Capt. Smith noted 17 Indian villages along the Patuxent River. English historians asserted that the Indians were not very settled, but—as asserted by archaeologist Wayne Clark—they actually had extensive agricultural fields and raised corn, beans, squash, sunflowers and tobacco; the Indian ‘old fields’ were much in demand because they were already cleared.

As European settlements grew and tobacco plantations took over, surviving Indians moved on. By 1674, some Pawtuxent Indians lived on 700 acres of land set aside for them by Lord Baltimore at Billingsley Point, now public park land near Upper Marlboro at the confluence of the Patuxent River and Western Branch. [2] By the 1690's, survivors left that site and joined another group in Chaptico on the Potomac side of Maryland.

References

  1. Chesapeake Bay Gateways Network. "Exploring the Western Shore: The Patuxent River" (PDF). National Park Service. p. 8. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  2. "Billingsley's Point". Maryland-National Capital Park and Planning Commission. Retrieved 2020-06-21.
  • Maryland: A Colonial History. p. 22, 41



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