| Years | Image | Event | Description | Keywords |
| 1662 | | The Wampanoag sachem Wamsutta dies mysteriously. | Wamsutta, also known as Alexander, was Massasoit's oldest son and Metacom (or Philip's) brother. | Indian, Philip |
| 1675 | | King Philip's War | Read a modernized version of Philip's account of Indian grievances originally contained in a narrative by the Rhode Island Quaker, John Easton | Indians, Philip |
| 1677 | | Surviving Indians confined to Praying Towns | | Indian, Philip |
| 1683 | | Mary Rowlandson's narrative | The birth of the "captivity narrative" as a American genre | Philip, women |
| 1689 | | Abenaki kill Richard Waldron in Dover, NH | The attack on Waldon's garrison was in part retaliation for a double cross at the end of King Philip's War. | Indian, Philip, NH |
| 1704 | | Deerfield Massacre | A winter raid resulted in the deaths or captivities of three-fifths of the town's inhabitants. The attacking force included men from Odanak and Schaghiticoke, where many New England refugees had gathered after King Philip's War. | Indians, French, frontier, captivity" Philip |
| 1772 | | Paul Revere engraves a "portrait" of King Philip | | Indian, Philip |
| 1773 | | Mary Rowlandson's narrative reprinted | | women, Philip" Philip |
| 1814 | | Washington Irving, "Philip of Pokanoket" | An early, sympthetic account of King Philip | Indian, Philip |
| 1827 | | James Fenimore Cooper, "The Wept of Wish-ton-Wish" | A little-known novel about King Philip's War | Indian, Philip |
| 1829 | | First performance of "Metamora" | | Indian, Philip |
| 1836 | | William Apess. Eulogy on King Philip | | Indian, Philip |
| 1842 |  | Eleanor Field gives the Rhode Island Historical Society a basket purportedly made during King Philip's War. | | |
| 1860 | | Matthew Brady photographs Edwin Forrest as "Metamora" | | Indian, Philip |