For background about this war see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Philip%27s_War. It came to my attention because the son of my ancestor Captain John Johnson was a Captain (Isaac Johnson) who fought in this war and was killed at Fort Narranganset. Reading the genealogy of the Twitchell family who intermarried with the Johnson family, I found that my ancestor Joseph Twitchell (son of the first Twitchell immigrant Benjamin) who married Mary Riggs (daughter of the first Riggs immigrant Edward) also fought in this war. I would like to start a project linking the war to the members of various Colonial American families / towns, and am looking for collaborators.
Hatte
Just add me to the Project when you get it going as a Collaborator, and start a discussion within that project calling for research resources to load up in the project overview and documentation module.
I think I have a bunch of ancestors who fought in that war and I face a learning curve to understand it.
One thing I've found useful is a "timeline" document so I can see how the war came about, where it was fought (battles etc)., the political "players" and so on.
Ben - yes, that's what I love about having a project about this war, it helps me see how all those families were intertwined through marriage, through serving together in the war, through banding together to establish new towns and of course through their civic and church involvement. Before Geni, the names were not connected. I knew that the Twitchells married the Johnsons. I knew that Isaac Johnson, brother of my ancestor Humphrey, was a hero. I found out when I met Tammy that my Twitchell great X grandmother was actually a Riggs. And of course Humphrey Johnson was married to a Cheney and a Cheney died with Isaac Johnson. It really makes things come alive to envision the people in families and engaged in various networks. I realize how small their numbers were and how much certain families interacted with each other.