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There is no evidence of Squanto's Indian family. Squanto was kidnapped when he was a young boy by a Spanish man named Captain George Weymouth. George took Squanto to England. Squanto lived with Ferdinando Gorges. Ferdinando raised him until he returned to the United States.
Squanto was an interpreter and guide for Englishmen in New England.
Squanto's wife died in England in 2009. She was a tough cookie.
Squanto ad Samoset were two Indians who helped the pilgrims of plymouth. Squanto and Samoset shared food with them. They also taught the pilgrims the Native American way to plant corn, go hunting,and also go fishing. they showed them how to plant veggies and fish also to hunt
In the spring of 1621, the Pilgrims met two Native Americans, Squanto and Samoset, who, to the Pilgrims' surprise, spoke English. Samoset had learned English from traders, and Squanto had learned it in England, where he had been a prisoner. These two Native Americans offered a peace pact on behalf of the Wampanoag leader Massasoit. They believed that the Pilgrims could be useful allies and signed a treaty in 1621.
Squanto learned English after being captured and taken to England, where he lived for a period of time. He returned to America with English settlers, which is how he learned to speak the language.
Squanto learned English when he was captured by English explorers and brought to England. During his time in England, he learned the language and eventually returned to North America. This helped him to communicate with the English settlers who later arrived in the New World.
Squanto learned English while living in England, where he was captured and sold into slavery. He eventually gained his freedom and returned to North America, where he acted as an interpreter and mediator between the Pilgrims and Native American tribes.
Squanto learned to speak English after being kidnapped and taken to England, where he spent several years before returning to America. During his time in England, he picked up the language and was able to communicate with the English settlers when he later returned to the New World.
Many things happened during Squanto's life. As a young boy he was taken from his home in Massachusetts to visit England. When he returned to North America he was captured by an Englishman and sold as a slave in Spain. He was freed from slavery by friars of the Catholic church. He made his way first to England and then Newfoundland and finally home to Massachusetts. He discovered that his entire village had been wiped out by a plague (maybe small pox). When colonists arrived from England at Plymouth, Samoset helped them learn how to grow food and catch fish.
There is no evidence of Squanto's Indian family. Squanto was kidnapped when he was a young boy by a Spanish man named Captain George Weymouth. George took Squanto to England. Squanto lived with Ferdinando Gorges. Ferdinando raised him until he returned to the United States.
Yes, Squanto was captured and sold into slavery in Spain before he returned to North America. However, he eventually regained his freedom and played a key role in facilitating communication and cooperation between the Pilgrims and Native American tribes.
Squanto was first take to England by George Weymouth (an Eglishman) in 1605, but this may not technically be ocnsidered a kidnapping. it is possible that Squanto went with him voluntarily as it was Weymouth's intention to show off Squanto (and four others of his tribe) as examples of the exciting things to be found in the New WorldSquanto did not like England. He was terribly homesick and he returned to North America where he was captured in 1614 by Thomas Hunt (another Englishman). This was definely a kidnapping as Squanto was purposefully on his way to his home, and Hunt was intending to sell native into slavery in Spain.
Squanto had a very interesting life, not just with his tribe and with the pilgrims. He was imprisoned and taken to Spain as a slave, returned to North America and then sent back to England. His story is clearly written on the web site http://www.nativeamericans.com/Squanto.htm
Yes, specifically, Squanto was captured first by George Weymouth (an Eglishman) in 1605. He returned to North America and was captured again in 1614 by Thomas Hunt (another Englishman).
Squanto, a Native American from the Patuxet tribe, learned English when he was abducted by English explorers and taken to Europe. He later returned to America and acted as an interpreter between the Wampanoag tribe, which Massasoit led, and the pilgrims.
Squanto learned English through his experiences with English traders who visited his region before the Pilgrims arrived. He had been kidnapped and taken to England, where he learned the language, and later returned to North America. His knowledge of English helped him act as an interpreter and mediator between Massasoit and the Pilgrims.