Arosaguntacook Tribe

Abenaki Village

Abenaki Village.

The Arosaguntacook people, also known as Androscoggin, Amoscoggin, and other variations, were a tribe of the Abnaki Confederacy.

They formerly lived in the Androscoggin River watershed in present-day southern Maine and northern New Hampshire. Their primary village was located in Androscoggin County, Maine, in a village that bore the same name on Androscoggin River. Together with the Pequawket, they formed the southernmost part of the Abenaki tribes and were, therefore, one of the first in contact with the English colonists of New England. Living on the edge of the first English settlements in Maine, they participated in King Philip’s War in 1675.

They were later removed to St Francis, Canada, soon after the Abnaki were defeated in the Battle of Pequawket at present-day Fryeburg, Maine, in 1725. It is assumed that by the 18th century, they had been absorbed by neighboring tribes.

 

© Kathy Weiser-Alexander/Legends of America, updated March 2025.

Also See:

Index of Tribes

Indian Wars

Native American Photo Galleries

Native Americans – First Owners of America

See Sources.