Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Eulogy on King Philip
View through CrossRef
In the heart of New England, on the doorstep of the Pilgrim founding fathers, William Apess delivered this eulogy honoring their greatest enemy, Metacomet of the Wampanoags, known as King Philip, who led a coalition of Native peoples that came close to destroying the whole English colonial enterprise in 1675–76. In 1836, one hundred sixty years later, Apess chose to re-examine the circumstances of King Philip’s life and death, and pronounced him equal to or even greater than Washington in love for his country, military skill, and personal honor. While redeeming the memory of Philip as a martyr for his people, Apes takes opportunity to indict white Christian Americans for the false promises, broken treaties, murders, enslavements, and other oppressions visited upon the Native inhabitants by the European invaders.
“We say, therefore, let every man of color wrap himself in mourning, for the 22d of December and the 4th of July are days of mourning and not of joy.… the prayers, preaching, and examples of those pretended pious, has been the foundation of all the slavery and degradation in the American colonies, towards colored people.”
Apess’ was a brave voice amid the prejudice and Indian Removal policies dominant in the United States. His Eulogy is an early cry by a Native author for equity, for recognition, for common humanity, and for reconciliation: “you and I have to rejoice that we have not to answer for our fathers’ crimes, neither shall we do right to charge them one to another.”
William Apess (1798–1839) was born to Pequot parents, grew up among whites as an indentured servant before running away to join the militia in the War of 1812. He became a Methodist minister, preacher, author, and publisher, advocating for Native rights and for anti-slavery causes.
Title: Eulogy on King Philip
Description:
In the heart of New England, on the doorstep of the Pilgrim founding fathers, William Apess delivered this eulogy honoring their greatest enemy, Metacomet of the Wampanoags, known as King Philip, who led a coalition of Native peoples that came close to destroying the whole English colonial enterprise in 1675–76.
In 1836, one hundred sixty years later, Apess chose to re-examine the circumstances of King Philip’s life and death, and pronounced him equal to or even greater than Washington in love for his country, military skill, and personal honor.
While redeeming the memory of Philip as a martyr for his people, Apes takes opportunity to indict white Christian Americans for the false promises, broken treaties, murders, enslavements, and other oppressions visited upon the Native inhabitants by the European invaders.
“We say, therefore, let every man of color wrap himself in mourning, for the 22d of December and the 4th of July are days of mourning and not of joy.
… the prayers, preaching, and examples of those pretended pious, has been the foundation of all the slavery and degradation in the American colonies, towards colored people.
”
Apess’ was a brave voice amid the prejudice and Indian Removal policies dominant in the United States.
His Eulogy is an early cry by a Native author for equity, for recognition, for common humanity, and for reconciliation: “you and I have to rejoice that we have not to answer for our fathers’ crimes, neither shall we do right to charge them one to another.
”
William Apess (1798–1839) was born to Pequot parents, grew up among whites as an indentured servant before running away to join the militia in the War of 1812.
He became a Methodist minister, preacher, author, and publisher, advocating for Native rights and for anti-slavery causes.
Related Results
APPENDIX II: THE MARRIAGE OF WILLIAM MARSHAL THE YOUNGER
APPENDIX II: THE MARRIAGE OF WILLIAM MARSHAL THE YOUNGER
Brief in which King Henry III recalls that as there are people who might perhaps convey to the lord pope and cardinals certain business which has recently been transacted by him as...
Martin Luther King
Martin Luther King
Martin Luther King Jr. (b. 1929–d. 1968) was born Michael King in Atlanta, Georgia. His father, Michael King Sr., was a Baptist preacher. After attending a Baptist World Alliance i...
Did King Philip II of Ancient Macedonia Suffer a Zygomatico-Orbital Fracture? A Maxillofacial Surgeon's Approach
Did King Philip II of Ancient Macedonia Suffer a Zygomatico-Orbital Fracture? A Maxillofacial Surgeon's Approach
Philip II, father of Alexander the Great, succeeded his brother, Perdiccas III, to the throne of Macedonia in 360 BC. He has been described by historians as a generous king and mil...
The Deeds of Philip Augustus , by rigord
The Deeds of Philip Augustus , by rigord
This chapter presents a translation of Rigord's Deeds of Philip Augustus (Gesta Philippi Augusti). the first decade of the reign of King Philip II of France was characterized by hi...
Rodney King and the Los Angeles Uprising of 1992
Rodney King and the Los Angeles Uprising of 1992
After the acquittal of the Los Angeles Police Department officers who beat Rodney King during a traffic stop the year prior, the black community in South Central Los Angeles rose u...
What to the American Indian Is the Fourth of July? Moving beyond Abolitionist Rhetoric in William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip
What to the American Indian Is the Fourth of July? Moving beyond Abolitionist Rhetoric in William Apess's Eulogy on King Philip
Nineteenth-century Pequot minister William Apess has appeared to many readers over the years as a Native American figure who fully assimilated into the expectations of the dominant...
Eulogy: James C. Embry
Eulogy: James C. Embry
This chapter highlights Bishop Henry McNeal Turner's eulogy for his good friend and fellow bishop, James C. Embry, at the Bethel African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church in Philade...
Edgar Allan Poe, Stephen King, and the American Detective
Edgar Allan Poe, Stephen King, and the American Detective
Most critics assume that it is a specifically Gothic/supernatural influence that King inherited from Poe’s work. Most frequently referenced are the Poe chestnuts: “The Pit and the ...

