Answer:
Massachusetts
Explanation:
The wampanoag (or also wôpanâak, "people of the East") are an Algonquian tribe, also called pokanoket. They were semi-sedentary, like most tribes in the area, and were fed thanks to the cultivation of corn, game and fish. They were divided into sub-tribes run by sachem or sub-chiefs, although only one could rule the entire tribe in case of war. They were linguistically related to the Massachusett and Narragansett and allied with the Pennacook.
By 1600 they had 30 villages, and their caudillo Massasoit, in spite of his initial mistrust, signed peace with the first white settlers, the Puritan colonists of Portsmouth, whom he received with the other chiefs Squanto and Samoset. Its main town was Pokanoket, near Mount Hope (now Bristol). In 1617, however, they suffered an epidemic of black plague that decimated them. Even so, the pilgrims were well received by the head of the pokanoket, Iusamequin, in Sowami, capital of Massasoit.