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  2. Apr 2, 2014 · Squanto, also known as Tisquantum, was a Native American of the Patuxet tribe who acted as an interpreter and guide to the Pilgrim settlers at Plymouth during their first winter in the New World.

  3. Apr 9, 2024 · Squanto (died November 1622, Chatham Harbor, Plymouth Colony [now Chatham, Massachusetts, U.S.]) was a Native American interpreter and guide. Squanto was born into the Pawtuxet people who occupied lands in present-day Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Little is known about his early life.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Nov 18, 2020 · Squanto is best known for his work as a guide and interpreter for early settlers in Southern New England. His advice and assistance were integral to the survival of early Pilgrims, including the Mayflower Pilgrims.

    • Karen Schweitzer
  5. Nov 21, 2022 · For generations, the dominant cultural narrative of America’s Thanksgiving holiday has told how a Native American man named Squanto showed the Pilgrims how to get food after they arrived on the...

  6. May 9, 2018 · Squanto was born around 1600 in Patuxet, a village of about two thousand Native Americans located in what is now Plymouth Bay, Massachusetts. He was a member of the Patuxet band of the Wampanoag tribe, which dominated the region.

  7. Squanto (Tisquantum) teaching the Plymouth colonists to plant corn with fish. Squanto’s Native Roots and the Patuxet Tribe. Before his first contact with Europeans, Squanto lived a low-profile life with the tribe in which he was born, the Patuxet Tribe of the Wampanoags. Very little is known about Squanto’s early life.

  8. Native America. The story of Squanto. Tisquantum was born in 1580 and became known as Squanto, though little is known of his early life. Some believe Tisquantum was captured as a young man on the coast of what is now Maine by Captain George Weymouth in 1605.

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