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The roots of North Kingstown extend back in time to 1637, when Roger Williams,
recently banished from the nearby Massachusetts Bay Colony, established a
temporary trading post at the intersection of two major Native American
thoroughfares, the Pequot Path (now Post Road) and the major east-west route of
Narragansett People between their winter and summer villages (now Stony Lane);
this seasonal trading outpost was additionally adjacent to the home of his
friend Narragansett Chief Sachem Canonicus. Williams was followed by two
additional seasonal traders, Richard Smith and Edward Wilcox in 1639. Wilcox
left the area after a time and relocated to the region that was to become
Westerly, but Smith in 1641 and Williams in 1643 decided to make the
“Narragansett Country”, as it was then known, their permanent home. Roger
Williams, for his part, stayed on here at Cocumscussoc for nearly eight
years, farming, raising goats on Queen’s Island, and trading with the
Narragansett People for fur and wampum. Much of Williams’s groundbreaking
writings, including Experiments of Spiritual Life and Health were written
here. In 1651, Roger Williams, needing funds for a trip to England to secure
the Rhode Island & Providence Plantations Colony’s Charter, sold his land to
Smith and never again lived here on a permanent basis. Richard Smith on the
other hand was here to stay and increased his land holdings greatly through his
involvement in the 1658 Pettasquamscutt Purchase. Smith’s vast estate
eventually included all the lands in an area approximately nine miles long by
three miles wide.

In 1674, Kings Towne was founded by the colonial government. This region
contained much of the old “Narragansett Country” and included the present day
towns of North Kingstown, South Kingstown, Exeter, and Narragansett. It got off
to a rocky start though, as by virtue of its strategic location in the region
and Richard Smith’s growing allegiance with the Connecticut Colony, it became
the center of the whirling maelstrom that was the King Phillips War, a conflict
between the Narragansett and Wampanoag People and the inhabitants of the
Connecticut, Plymouth, and Massachusetts Bay Colonies, fought in 1675-6. More
than 30 years of peaceful co-existence between the settlers of the region and
the Narragansett people was over in the flash of muskets and the corresponding
destruction of all colonial structures south of Warwick.
Click on
Map for Larger Version
When the smoke settled, Kings Towne was now in the sole possession of the
English and European settlers and colonial expansion began, primarily adjacent
to Cocumscussoc, in the Quidnessett region, and at Bissells Cove (Hamilton) and
Davis Mills (Davisville). By the start of the 18th century,
settlement in all areas of Kings Towne was increasing at such a dramatic pace
that the colonial government divided it up into North and South in 1722, with
the understanding that North Kingstown, which included all the areas of earliest
settlement, was to be the 1674 town. North Kingstown was later partitioned
again in 1742, when Exeter was formed out of its western regions.
By
and large, 18th century North Kingstown can be characterized as an
agricultural community made up primarily of small to medium sized family farms,
although two farms, that of Lodowick Updike (heir to Richard Smith) and Ezekiel
Gardiner were expansive and successful enough to be considered a part of the
greater “Narragansett Planter” society centered largely just across the border
in South Kingstown. Additionally, the seaport of Wickford, established at the
beginning of the century, rapidly grew in prominence until it rivaled its sister
across the bay – Newport.
The 19th century saw water-rich North Kingstown, with its many rivers
and streams, plunge headlong into the textile revolution that had begun earlier
in the northern part of the state. Numerous mill villages were established at
every feasible location along the Hunt, Shewatuck/Annaquatucket, and
Pettasquamscutt River systems. Larger villages like Lafayette, Hamilton,
Belleville, and Davisville as well as smaller forgotten hamlets such as Oak
Hill, Annaquatucket, Narragansett Mills, Shady Lea, Silver Springs, and Sand
Hill Village owe their existence to the dominance of the textile trade
throughout this timeframe. The textile industry largely flourished throughout
this century and into the first quarter of the 20th, but soon after,
as happened all across southern New England, this way of life began to ebb. By
the close of the 1930’s the age of the mill village was largely a thing of the
past.
The 20th century saw North Kingstown’s destiny head off in a new
direction, driven by two very different factors. The first was the rapid
establishment in 1938, of the Quonset/Davisville military complex, designed and
constructed at breakneck speed as the nation contemplated its future role in
World War II. The corresponding massive influx of personnel, first to construct
and then to staff, the big base, forever changed the fabric of the community as
it too expanded and contorted to accept this rapid increase in citizenry. The
second factor impacting the community’s development was the ever-increasing
concept of North Kingstown as a summer resort community. The age of the
automobile and the increased mobility that this afforded people allowed numerous
summer cottage colonies such as Saunderstown, Mount View, Shore Acres, Plum
Beach, and Barber Heights to spring up where farms once stood. By the middle of
the 20th century, North Kingstown, which had just prior to that
timeframe been an agricultural and mill village centered community, was now
largely residential in nature and would stay that way throughout the 20th
century and into the 21st.
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