SeacoastNH Home

FRESH STUFF DAILY
Seacoast New Hampshire
& South Coast Maine

Home
------------------------------
TODAY
Calendar
Weather
News
Editor at Large
Read Our Mail
Top Events
Contest
Local Web sites
------------------------------
TOPICS
Arts
Travel
Food
Lodging
------------------------------
HISTORY
Seacoast History
Maritime History
Famous People
Black History
Places & Events
Timeline
------------------------------
SEACOASTNH
Who We Are
Advertise With Us
Talk With Us
Site Map
New Contest
Add Your Event
July 2008 August 2008
Friday, July 04, 2008
Default Picture
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
1 2 3 4 5
6 7 8 9 10 11 12
13 14 15 16 17 18 19
20 21 22 23 24 25 26
27 28 29 30 31

Click to enter and Win Win Win!
If its in the Seacoast, Its in here.
Discover more than 1,000 places to go
Free Delivery
E-mail Address;

 
 
| Touring | Local Sites | Newsletter | Feedback | Advertise | Buy the Book | Calendar |
Home arrow Places & Events arrow NH History arrow The Meaning of Piscataqua
The Meaning of Piscataqua Print E-mail
Written by J. Dennis Robinson   

Piscataqua

NH INDIAN HISTORY

The Piscataqua River that divides New Hampshire and Maine is the third fastest-flowing navigable river in the world. Okay, readers respond -- but what does "Piscataqua" mean? It is a term much easier to understand if you are a prehistoric Seacoast Indian.
Read on.

 

 

SEE: Guide to Indian Artifacts

Every year two or three people write to ask me what the word "Piscataqua" means. I write back and promise to look it up. My mind wanders. I forget.

I tell them, instead, that the Piscataqua River that divides New Hampshire and Maine is the third fastest-flowing navigable river in the world. I don’t really know what that means, other than that the current can be treacherous. Innocent victims have been pulled out to sea in little boats, never to be seen again. Serious sailors have struggled, even died, battling the Piscataqua tides.

Portsmouth historian Ralph May tackled the derivation of this Indian word in his book Early Portsmouth History (1926). Forty years later he was still working at the puzzle. In 1966 he published a 20-page booklet entitled "Piscataqua : The Correctness of Use and the Meaning of the Word". The booklet opens with a daunting three-page poem about the river. That poem has always blocked my entrance. This week I took a deep breath and read the whole booklet. Here’s what it says.

John Smith used a similar sounding name for this region in his 1614-era map. The precise modern spelling "Piscataqua" first appeared in English writing in 1623, Ralph May says, the same year that David Thompson settled his fishing group at what is today Odiorne Point in Rye. The word eventually appeared as "Pascattaway" and "Pascataquack" and another thirty variations in an era when consistent spelling was of no special value. May gets his propeller caught in the seaweed here. He gets snagged on the variant spellings, searching for meaning that is not there.

All of the versions are descended from the Abenaki term (also spelled Abnaki, Abnaque, Wabanaki) used to described the river or the New Hampshire and Maine land in its vicinity. In short, the name describes a place where a river separates into two or three parts. Native Americans defining the word, Ralph May wrote, often extended an arm with two or three fingers splayed apart to illustrate the concept. May offered this definition: "a place where boats and canoes ascending the river together from its mouth were compelled to separate according to their several destinations." Not bad.

It is, metaphorically, a place from where people take their separate paths, and in reverse, a place where they come together -- a sort of prehistoric airport or bus terminal. This concept was important for migrant natives who lived in family and tribal groups, moved with the seasons, traveled by river and came together for annual ceremonies and celebrations. The sea was less interesting to them than the many tributaries of the Piscataqua further inland. That’s where the fish are easier to catch and the fur-bearing animals come to hunt. For thousands of years before the Europeans came, Native American tribes had spent part of each year at the falls of the many rivers that lead toward the Piscataqua -- at Cochecho, the Bellamy, the Lamprey, the Exeter, the Oyster rivers and at Salmon Falls. These were their separate destinations branching at Dover Point where the highway rushes above the entrance to Great Bay, our central tidal lake.

In his early research Ralph May wrote to Indian language expert Fanny Eckstorm who wrote back to him in 1929, three years after his book was published. All of the errant spellings of "Piscataqua", she told him, would have been recognized as proper by an Indian listener. "Peske", she said, means "branch", and "tegwe" is a river with a strong current, possibly tidal. Piscataqua, "peske-tegwe" to an Abenaki speaker, would likely mean the portion of the river between Great Bay and the sea. While the "Piscataquack" pronunciation would likely refer to the branching off point itself, according to Eckstorm, along Great Bay and Little Bay. She knew best. In her research, Eckstorm traveled on rivers with native-speaking guides – asking questions, listening, imagining.

Ralph May studied and rejected a clever anglo-centric theory that the word means "place of many fish" and is derived from the words "Pices" (fish) and "aqua" (water). These words, according to the story, may have been Latin terms picked up by the Indians, taught to them by explorer Martin Pring who reputedly was the first white man to sail up the Piscataqua River in 1603. It seems unlikely that the natives waited thousands of years for just the right Latin phrase to describe their home waters.

May also rejected the translations "the great deer place" and "dark or gloomy river" found in a number of sources. He found the definition "meeting of the waters" too vague.

A determined scholar, Ralph May tracked down every other river, town, mountain and county in the East with a name resembling Piscataqua. He contacted every local library or historical society and dutifully reported the results in his essay, quoting entire letters from reference librarians and local historians. Most knew nothing. The town of Pascataway in New Jersey, May discovered, took its name from settlers who came there from the Piscataqua region of New Hampshire in 1668 -- another lexicographical dead end.

On this issue, to borrow a phrase from George Bernard Shaw, you could hook every reference librarian in New England together and they wouldn’t reach a conclusion. They do not speak Abenaki. The people who did were driven forever from their ancestral homelands by white settlers long before the American Revolution.

For Ralph May, nailing down the meaning of his favorite river was a long and winding scientific journey through a mountain of books. But eventually he came to think like an Indian, not a white scholar. The branching point of this swift flowing river is both a visual and a spiritual description. It is the point where decisions must be made and families must part. The river demands no less. After searching four decades, the author came to an understanding of the word, rather than a definition. One does not have to spell or pronounce a word precisely, he learned, in order to recognize the great Piscataqua or to feel its supernatural power.

Source: Ralph May, "Piscataqua: The Correctness of Use and the Meaning of the Word," lithographed by the Randall Press, Portsmouth, NH, 1966, 20 pages and from his book Early Portsmouth History, CE Goopspeed & Co, Boston, 1926, Chapter 3.

Copyright © 2005 by J. Dennis Robinson. All rights reserved.

MORE VERSIONS OF "PISCATAQUA" (click below)


 

Calendar
Little Engine That Could
July 4 - 6, 2008
LINCOLN -- Hi everyone!! We are trying to get the word out that the Little Engine That Could will be at the Hobo Railroad in Lincoln, NH on July 4,5 & 6, 2008. People can purchase tickets right online at our website. The train is a full-sized repli...

Art in Nature
July 4 - 10, 2008
RYE, NH -- Celebrate art, nature and science during this week-long event. We will explore inspiring and creative ways of connecting to the environment through hands-on workshops, programs and activities for all ages. You can learn about organic sculptur...

Zoo Farm
July 5 - 6, 2008
CANDIA -- Enjoy all day zoo admission; unlimited pony, tractor and horse-drawn hay. rides; and a bag of grain for each child. All for just $16.00 per person! So pack your lunch and spend the day with us at the farm. We look forward to seeing you! For...

Freedom Rocks
July 5, 2008
The Freedom Rocks Festival is one that truly incorporates a gamete of musical talent. Everything from metal bands, garage, funk, alternative, retro and classic rock perform on stage. Ranging music styles and artists come together to form a festival fill...

Tommy Gallant Jazz Festival
July 6, 2008
This 13th annual celebration of joyous creativity which Tommy Gallant helped initiate, has become a staple item on our summer menu. Don't miss this venue of jazz greats organized by UNH Jazz Master Dave Seiler.

Sammie Haynes
July 6, 2008
ROCHESTER -- The Governor's Inn presents a beautiful late afternoon in the garden (or under the patio in case of rain) Great food and drinks and company

HARVEY REID
July 6, 2008
SOUTH BERWICK -- Maine songwriter and stringed-instrument virtuoso Harvey Reid will appear in concert This is Harvey's only local concert this summer. It takes place outdoors in the beautiful garden at the historic Hamilton House in South Berwick, Maine...

Theatre Camp
July 7 - 11, 2008
KIDS THEATRE CAMP, July 7-11, 9 AM to 12 NOON, Ages 6-9 Now in its eighth year, this popular week-long camp features creative drama, movement, and visual arts activities, with a final performance at 6:30 PM on Friday, July 11. Limited to 14 campers. ...

PPAF Summer Theatre Academy begins
July 7, 2008
We believe that every child has an innate sense of creativity and imagination. Our Summer Theatre Academy is geared toward developing confidence and advancing performance skills so that every child can be a star. Students will not only learn theatrical ...

NHTP Teen Camp Starts
July 7, 2008
TEEN THEATRE CAMP, July 7-19, Ages 13-17 This intensive camp will focus on a theme from classic dramatic literature. (Teen Camp 2007 featured William Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night). Participants will learn acting, directing and design skills along with...

View Full Calendar

Key Sponsor

Friday, 04 July 2008 
This Just In

 

Copyright 1996-2008 SeacoastNH.com. All rights reserved. Privacy Statement
PO Box 7158, Portsmouth, New Hampshire 03802 | 603-427-2020

Site by enorm..