Sassacus fled to what he thought was safety among the IroquoisMohawks in present-day New York state, but they murdered him and then sent his head and hands to the Connecticut Colony as a symbolic offering of friendship.[3]
Sassacus possibly had a brother who married Ninigret's daughter, and his sister-in-law may have married Harman Garrett.[4][5]
^Vaughan, Alden T. (1995). New England Frontier: Puritans and Indians, 1620–1675, p. 150. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN0-8061-2718-X, 978-0-8061-2718-7.
^Glenn LaFantasie, The Correspondence of Roger Williams, (1988) 311-312
^Pulsief, ed., Acts of the Commissioners, I, 100, 169
References
Oberg, Michael Leroy, Uncas, First of the Mohegans, 2003, ISBN0-8014-3877-2
Vaughan, Alden T. (1995). New England Frontier: Puritans and Indians, 1620-1675, p. 150. University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN0-8061-2718-X, 978-0-8061-2718-7