MISCELLANEOUS
| PAGE | |
| New England as seen by the English | 2 |
| Aboriginal customs | 4 |
| Some social, also warlike conditions | 6 |
| Indian Fort on Long Hill | 7 |
| Beginning of inland emigration | 11 |
| Pioneers organize | 13 |
| Westward Ho, along the Indian's path | 15 |
| The route, via Woodstock | 17 |
| Hartford to Springfield | 19 |
| Long meadow Gate | 19 |
| Namerick brook | 20 |
| In Windsor | 21 |
| Woodward's and Saffery's map | 22 |
| Pilgrim's Spring | 25 |
| United States Armory | 27 |
| County road, Brookfield to Springfield | 34 |
| Bay Path identified 1685-1735 | 36 |
| Daniel Graves' meadow | 47 |
| In Monson | 48 |
| Site of Fellow's Tavern | 57 |
| The Path in Brimfield | 61 |
| Woddaquodduck hills | 61 |
| Location of Indian Hill | 63 |
| The Eliot monument, 1655 | 72 |
| The Bay Path identified in Sturbridge | 76 |
| The old camp ground | 78 |
| Interpretation of "Tantousque" | 85 |
| Physical features of Tantä in Nipnet | 85 |
| The Indian deeds | 99 |
| At the Leadmine between 1644 and 1664 | 108 |
| John Pynchon's account book | 115 |
| Nadawahunt, the Christian, and his home | 125 |
| Descendants of Nadawahunt | 132 |
| Ephraim Curtis' report to the Governor of the Massachusetts Colony | 135 |
| Governor and Council alarmed, and Curtis sent the second time to treat with the Indians |
130 |
| His report July 24, 1675 of finding them at the same place | 151 |
| Wascomos acknowledged chief | 154 |
| Attempt to prevent alliance of Quabaugo and Wampanoags | 155 |
| The war which raged for a full year | 157 |
| Pathetic appeal of enemy chiefs for an armistice | 158 |
| Prizes offered for captives and scalps | 161 |
| Flight of the neutral Indians of Tantousque | 168 |
| The grouping of historic facts | 172 |
| "I am Konkawasco, let my people go" | 174 |
| Continuing the Path thru Southbridge and Charlton | 175 |
| "Home Lots" in Oxford | 181 |
| Two landmarks noted in the old records of Milbury | 187 |
| One of the reservations for Christianized Indians | 188 |
| "The Hundredth Town" | 189 |
| The seventh "village of praying Indians" | 204 |
| The great highway over Beaver Dam | 206 |
| The family of the great John Awassamog | 216 |
| First Indian church in New England | 217 |
| Imaginary description of departure and journey of the Rev. Thomas Hooker | 224 |
| The pilgrims from Newtown, at home in another Newtown, on the banks of the Great River |
237 |