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Accomac
Total population
extinct as a tribe[1]
Regions with significant populations
Virginia
Languages
unattested Eastern Algonquian language
Religion
Indigenous
Related ethnic groups
Powhatan Confederacy

The Accomac people were a historic Native American tribe in Accomack and Northampton counties in Virginia.[1] They were loosely affiliated with the Powhatan Confederacy.[1]

The term Accomac was eventually applied to a larger group of related Indigenous peoples living on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. To the north, the Eastern Shore of Maryland was home to the Pocomoke and related tribes, such as the Annamessex.[2] Further north, the Assateague people lived on the Atlantic Coast of Maryland and Delaware.[3]

History[edit]

Monument to Debedeavon, a 17th-century Accomac chief

Their primary settlement, also called Accomac, was near present-day Cheriton, Virginia, on Cherrystone inlet in Northampton County.[1]

Debedeavon (Accomac, died 1657) was the principal chief of the Accomac when English colonists first arrived in 1608. They called him the "Laughing King" and allied with him. In 1608, the Accomac were recorded as having 80 warriors.[1]

By 1700, the Accomac population had declined by approximately 90 percent due to introduced diseases such as smallpox and violence from the colonists.[4] The colonists began calling all American Indians to the immediate east of Chesapeake Bay "Accomac."[1] They maintained communal lands through 1812, mostly in and near Accomack County.[1]

A subgroup, the Gingaskins, lived near present-day Eastville, Virginia. They intermarried with African Americans living nearby. After Nat Turner's Rebellion in 1831, local White Americans forcibly expelled them from their homelands.[1]

Subtribes[edit]

Historical marker for the Gingaskin Indian Reservation in Northampton, Virginia.

Subtribes of the Accomac included the following groups:

  • Acohanock, also written Accohannock
  • Anancock, Oanancocke, Onancock
  • Chiconessex, Chicconessick
  • Combec
  • Gingaskin, Gangascoe, Gingaskoyne,
  • Kiquotank, Kikotanke
  • Matchapungo, Machepungo, Mastiapungo, Matchopungo,
  • Macheteege
  • Mashawatoc
  • Matomkin, Matompkin, Motomkin
  • Nadue, Nandewy, Nanduye
  • Occoahannock
  • Pungotege, Pungoteque.[5]

Name[edit]

Philologist James Hammond Trumbull wrote that Accomac means "the other-side place" or "on-the-other-side-of-water place."[6] Alternative spellings include Accawmacke, Accomack, Accowmack, Acomack, and Acomak.[1]

Cultural heritage groups[edit]

Maryland designated the Accohannock Indian Tribe as a state-recognized tribe in 2017.[7] They claim to be descendants of the Accomac people; however, historians and other Native American tribes dispute those claims.[7] The Maryland-based organization should not be confused with the American Indigenous Accawmacke Indians, an unrecognized nonprofit organization based in Cape Charles, Virginia.[8]

See also[edit]

Further reading[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Frederick Webb Hodge, Handbook, 8.
  2. ^ Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 240–41.
  3. ^ Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 241.
  4. ^ Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 242.
  5. ^ Christian F. Feest, "Nanticoke and Neighboring Tribes," 248.
  6. ^ Frederick Webb Hodge, Handbook, 7.
  7. ^ a b Tkacik, Christina (11 February 2018). "Maryland recognition of Accohannock tribe sparks debate within community of Native Americans". baltimoresun.com. Archived from the original on 23 October 2018. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  8. ^ "American Indigenous Accawmacke Indians". GuideStar. Retrieved 16 March 2024.

References[edit]

External links[edit]