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Sunday, September 5, 2010

Pages 24-38 of "Decolonizing the Abenaki: A Methodology for Detecting the Vermont Tribal Identity" Regarding the "Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck" led by Luke Andrew Willard:

S. 222 § 853. (b) Recognition Criteria:

Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck
190 Cross Road

Newport, VT 05855
Prepared by
Chief (Sogomo) Luke Willard
and
Prof. Fred Wiseman
Chair, Department of Humanities
Johnson State College

This document has been prepared by the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck Tribe to fulfill the recognition criteria as required by Vermont Statute S. 222 § 853. (b). The materials contained herein are for the purposes of legislative recognition by the Vermont Legislature-only, and--may not be published or otherwise used without permission of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck.

© 2010 Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck
S. 222/ § 853 (b) For the purposes of recognition, a Vermont Native American tribe must demonstrate that it has:


(1) A physical and legal residence in Vermont.
Headquarters, Abenaki Nation at Nulhegan
190 Cross Road
Newport, VT 05855

(2) An organized tribal membership roll along with specific criteria that were used to determine membership, including evidence of kinship among tribal members.
Genealogical census of families; ongoing registration of births, marriages, and deaths. Census committee oversees new registrations based upon documentable descendency from known Abenaki families within Nulhegan/ Memphremagog/ Coos ancestral territory.

(3) Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage.
Detailed historical/geographical data compiled by Frederick Wiseman submitted Jan 22. Summary review appended as Appendix 1.

(4) A tribal council, a constitution, and a chief.
(a) Tribal council
Legislative: Tribal Council
Judiciary: Elders Council
(b) Constitution
Written Constitution
(c) Chief
Chief (Sogomo)
Asst. Chief (Sogomis)

(5) Been and continues to be recognized by other Native American communities in Vermont as a Vermont tribe.
All Tribes are united in an Alliance (The Vermont Indigenous Alliance) and after a vigorous three year vetting process (2006-2009) each tribe of the Alliance recognizes all others as Indian tribes. See cover letter.

(6) Been known by state, county or local municipal officials, or the public as a functioning tribe in Vermont.
Officials:
Fred Wiseman (Researched post-1790 history of Nulhegan; Attachment 1).
Our "First nations Powwow and Heritage Weekend" in June is co-sponsored by the City of Newport. Worked with City of Newport on various projects (Attachments 2 & 3)
Public
Our yearly Pow-wow in the Newport, VT area, is our main public awareness/ public relations event where the local and regional public learn of our distinct local Native culture and heritage. We have been featured in local newspaper articles (Attachment #4)

(7) Not been recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation
The Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck has never been officially recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation

(8) An enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that can be documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, genealogy, folklore and/or other applicable scholarly research. (Appendix 2)
The Abenaki Tribal Museum and
The Wôbanakik Heritage Center
17 Spring St. Swanton, VT 05488

Where the past points to the future

Memo

To: Who It may Concern

From: Frederick M. Wiseman, Ph.D
Director
Date: 02/28/10
RE: Nulhegan Band
February 20, 2010

I am writing this. letter of support for the Nulhegan Band of the Abenaki Nation. Although I have known Nulhegan elders, such as the recently deceased Nancy Cote, for many years, I was unaware of the tribal structure and local history of the Nulhegan band until 2006, when it became obvious that I had to study and understand this group in order to resolve political friction that was occurring between Nulhegan and Missisquoi. It has been a joy to work with Chief Luke Willard and Band members such as Ms. Cote's daughter Dawn Macie over the last several years in helping design their cultural center, assisting with grant writing for their social services wing AHA, Inc. (Abenakis Helping Abenakis), and completing a research project (with Chief Willard) concerning their local band history for my upcoming book Against the Darkness (to be published by University Press of New England). I was also present at the opening of the VT Quadricentennial "Indigenous Celebration" where Chief Willard proudly represented his people before the crowds of tourists at the Burlington Waterfront.

I am entirely convinced that the Nulhegan Band is currently and has been a functional Indian Tribe in Vermont. The Band exercises a measure of political oversight of their population, and relate to their Vermont neighbors in cultural, historical and other ways in a positive manner. l know that Nulhegan has been an enthusiastic partner in the Vermont Indigenous Alliance, and has initiated contact with the Elnu Tribe to have them participate in their pow-wow, so I expect that Nulhegan will be a growing and positive influence in the VT Native world.
(802)868-3808 / wisem@vtlink.not
Attachment 2. (see #8)


NEWPORT CITY COUNCIL MEETING
AGENDA
Monday, 3 March 2008

IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING 7:00 PM PUBLIC HEARING
CITY COUNCIL ROOM
City Council: Ellwood Guyette, Mayor
Paul Monette
John Wilson
Richard Baraw
Charlie Elliott - John Ward, Jr., City Manager
James D. Johnson, City Clerk/Treasurer

1. Call the Meeting to Order
2. Approve Minutes of February 4, 2008
3. Consider Approval for March of Dimes Walk America on Sunday May 4, 2008
4. Consider Approval of Resolution for VCDP Senior Housing Grant
5. Consider Appointment to Development Review Board
6. Consider Appointment of Town Service Officer
7. 7:30 Public Review and Comment on the City of Newport Solid Waste Implementation Plan
8. Discussion of AEA, Inc Cultural Museum & Education Center Project
9. Consider Landfill Leachate Proposal
10. Request to Replace Flooring in Police Department
11. Discussion on Boat Storage at Water Tower
12. Request to Approve Grants Management Contract with Northeast Kingdom Learning Services Inc.
13. Review Income/Expenses thru January 08
14. New Business
15. Old Business
16. Set Next Meeting Date
17. Executive Session – Personnel Issue
18. Executive Session – Union Issue
19. Executive Session – City Manager Evaluation
20. Adjourn
Attachment 3. (see #10)


NEWPORT CITY COUNCIL MEETING
AGENDA
Monday, 5 February 2007
7:00 PM CITY COUNCIL ROOM

City Council: Ellwood Guyette, Mayor Paul Monette
John Wilson
Richard Baraw
Karin Zisselsberger
John Ward, Jr., City Manager
James D. Johnson, City Clerk/Treasurer

1. Call the Meeting to Order
2. Approval Minutes of January 22, 2007
3. Approval Minutes of January 29, 2007
4. Approval Minutes of January 30, 2007
5. City School Board Budget Presentation
6. Causeway Traffic Light Discussion with Passumpsic Savings Bank
7. Review Passumpsic Savings Bank Traffic Access Plan New Building Consider Moving Location of Gardner Street
8. Consider Coin Drop Requests
9. Community Justice Center Legislation
10. Consider Cultural Museum Proposal from The Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk-Abenaki People (previously tabled)
11. Action City of Newport SRF Loan Documents (Arsenic Mitigation) Resolution and Certificate
General Obligation Bond
Certificate of Registration
Tax Certificate
Loan Agreement
IRS Form 8038-G
12. New Business
13. Old Business
14. Executive Session – Personnel Issue
15. Set Next Meeting Date
16. Adjourn
Attachment #4 Newspaper article photo of Nulhegan Band leadership in 2002


Some of the members of the Nulhegan Band, Cowasuk Abenakis, who are petitioning the Vermont legislature for state recognition. From left to right, rear, Luke Willard, Dawn Macie (Dancing Light), front row, left to right: Nancy Cote, Silent Thunder, Sparkling Water. (Photo by Anne L. Squire)

The Express (Newport, VT) May 16, 2002

Mr. Frederick Matthew Wiseman PhD I guess, forgot (?) to INCLUDE, the article that attached to this particular photograph in The Express Newspaper of Newport, Vermont. Here is the LINK: http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010/02/nulhegan-group-article-in-express.html so that people can KNOW exactly the FULL DETAILS and CONTEXT of the photograph itself.
APPENDIX 1

§ 853 (b) (3) Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage.

The Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck retains a significant fund of traditional knowledge and customs that can be tied to a native heritage through ethnography or folkloric studies, as detailed in Appendix 2. Below is a sample of data to specifically address criterion § 853. (b) (3) "Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage." Many of these data have been abstracted from the more detailed Appendix 2

Traditions and Customs
At Nulhegan it is hard to separate traditions and customs of modern and recent band citizens and so both will be considered together. According to tradition recounted by both Nulhegan and Koasek (see below) citizens, a well-known Derby Line, VT family ("The Ramos") was accepted as Abenaki by everyone "before it became cool to be Abenaki" (in the 1950's). The most important modern tradition/custom at Nulhegan involves land use. Author and Nulhegan Band Chief Luke Willard noted in an e-mail to Wiseman that "Each branch (i.e. "core" family band) has land on their respective bluffs (of the Clyde/Nulhegan Rivers) and each branch is separated by approximately 3-4 Miles of river. Relations between the branches are strong among the older ones... not so much in the younger ones." These "branches" evolved slightly different life ways: one "branch" was involved in commerce, one in tribal affairs, another was known for its hunting and trapping, and one for gardening and fishing. This family-based geographic (and to a certain extent economic/political) segregation is identical to the Indigenous Wabanaki land tenure system described by Frank Speck on pages 212-229 of his Penobscot Man, to reconstruct Indigenous land tenure and use but heretofore without local VT confirmation. One of the most complete examples of "Northern Indigenous Horticulture" agricultural custom is the "Curtis family branch" garden of bean, corn, and squash at Salem Lake. It was planted in traditional large mounds illustrated as "a typical Indian corn hill" on page 71 of Kerry Hardy's 2009 book Notes on a lost flute: A field guide to the Wabanaki (Downeast Press). According to family oral history recorded from several Nulhegan Band members; heirloom seed varieties, a few of which may still remain, were also planted there. This geographic and environmental information on Abenaki family distributions and adaptations makes the Nulhegan zone one of the few regions in VT that we can trace ancient Indigenous-style, family-based land use zones that remained functional into 20th century living memory. In addition to land-use, there are traces of distinctive local water-based Native customs, such as an enigmatic steel apparatus -- a recycled, 1920's tubular steel fishing rod tipped with a very sharp spring wire spike, flanked by two outward curved spring wire prongs and lashed together with two diameters of flex steel wire. Unfortunately, we have missed its customary use by one generation in that the modern owner of the spear did not know what it was used for, but only that it came from his father's house in Lake Park (North Derby, VT). This contraption was clearly an Indigenous Wabanaki style fish spear (see Appendix 2 for more detail), one of only two documented examples that have come from anywhere west of Maine in the last 20 years!

Legends
Unfortunately the only documented legend from the area was recounted to Wiseman in Magog, QC, of an underwater creature in Lake Memphramagog that is probably the supernatural creature tatoskok, the underwater serpent. More cannot be said to this matter.
APPENDIX 2

§ 853. (b) (8) An enduring' community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that can be documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, genealogy, folklore and/or other applicable scholarly research.

Introduction
This information is extracted from the "Something of Value" paper delivered to the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs on Jan 22, 2010.

The most northern locus of Vermont Indigenous presence is a zone on the southeastern side of Lake Memphremagog, extending to Salem Lake and the Clyde/Nulhegan Rivers and down to Wells River in Orleans, Essex, and Caledonia Counties. This Abenaki cultural zone has a "Crossroads Before and Beyond" exhibit at the Memphremagog Historical Society of Newport (in the State Office Building); but does not have a published detailed history, like Missisquoi's Voice of the Dawn, or The Original Vermonters. Years ago, local Abenakis complained about this lack of published history to historian Mariella Squier (Squire). On page 155 of her 1996 dissertation, Contemporary Western Abenakis, she quotes a young man: "I just finished reading Haviland (The Original Vermonters' first author) and he doesn't mention us at all. If we're not in Haviland, do we really exist?" So obviously, much more ethnographic and historical detail is necessary.

A scanned "pdf" document on file in the Wôbanakik Heritage Center (Swanton) archives shows that in 1796 a Chief "Philip," Chief of Upper Coos, as well as Molley Messel (a.k.a Marie Michel/Mitchell) and Ms. Mooselek Sussop signed an important document called the "Deed of the Coos Country." This deed gave up the indigenous land legal ownership of the "Coos Country," but reserved rights of taking fish in all waters forever by Indians who used this tract of land, as well as the "liberty of four bushels of corn and beans." In addition to being a good place to begin the historical narrative, it geographically lays out the "Upper Coos" region. The deed explicitly noted that Lake Memphramagog (then called Mamsloobagogg), the carrying place (canoe portage) to the Clyde River, then the upper Nulhegan (called Nulpeageawnuk) River and the east side of the Connecticut south to the mouth of the Ammunoosuck (Ammonoosuc River, more or less at modern Wells River, VT), are Upper Coos territory.

Historian Gordon Day pointed out on pages 58 and 59 of his 1981 The Identity of the St. Francis Indians, that this deeded area encompassed persistent Indian settlements, often of traditional birch bark wigwams, in the post 1780 period -- at Salem Lake, Lake Seymour, Crystal Lake, Lake Elligo (still retaining its Native name derived from eligo-sigo), and near Craftsbury. This is the region I consider in this section of the narrative. And so, unlike the more well-known Missisquoi, or even Koas, the foundation of this culture zone's confirmation of collective Vermont Indigenous identity rests not on a settled, widely known village, but instead on mapping ancestral residency, supported by a rich legacy of artifacts, ethnobotanical knowledge and photographs that have descended in modern Nulhegan Band leaders', and members' possession; and whose kind sharing of these materials and genealogies is the basis of this historical geography.

Historical "players" in the Upper Coos
The Upper Cowass area has a long subsequent history of Indigenous settlement, especially on or near the significantly named "Indian Point," a high bluff land jutting into the Vermont portion of Lake Memphramagog from the East. It was here that historian Gordon Day, in pp. 58-59 of his Identity of the St. Francis Indians asserted that Captain Sozap (Pierre Joseph Wawanolet) positioned his band's main village -- where first known Roman Catholic Mass in the area was performed in 1840 (see also catholicparishesofnortheastvermont.com/stmary/history_htm). Another important locus of Indigenous presence is Salem Lake, just to the east of Derby, VT, that was formerly known as "Lac d' Abenaquis." Vermont Historian Katherine Blaisdell in her 1979 book Over the River and through the Years (Courier Printing Company), notes that at least one traditional bark wigwam was on the shores of Salem Pond in the mid 19th century; home to "Old Joe Indian," and his wife Mary. V. Downs, in his 1960 Vermont Life (14 11 14) "Indian Joe" article, noted that his hunting grounds apparently extended south-to Cady's Falls, near Morrisville, VT. There is a slight possibility that he was Captain Sozap of Indian Point, but more
likely he was Joseph Sabattist, or one of the six other "Josephs (or Suseph, which is "Joseph" in Abenaki) from the Newbury VT, "Company of Indians" who fought in the Revolutionary War (or possibly a child of one of these men). "Old Joe Indian," was apparently a prodigious fisherman. It seems that he was well liked in the nascent Euroamerican community, trading fish for whiskey, sharing their pork and beans, and listening to Euroamerican music. Another important local early 19th century Abenaki individual was "Old Swassin," a well-known Indian guide on Lake Memphramagog. This was probably Swassin Otondosonne, who was buried (after 1805 and before 1813) in Barton, VT (http://www.avcnet.org/ne-doba/cs_d08_1.html). Incidentally, Barton, VT was reported by Gordon Day on page 59 of his 1981 Identity of the St. Francis Indians as having "numerous wigwams at Crystal Lake" in 1790. These recorded "town characters" are the local VT Abenakis who chose to interact as Indians with their Euroamerican neighbors. We can rest assured that there were many others left unrecorded, except in the many 19th century descriptions of their "Indian camps." According to Abenaki Historian Mariella Squier (Mariella R. Squire) on page 176 of her 1996 dissertation, The Contemporary Western Abenakis, Joe and Mary's daughter, a Polly Sosap, had many modern descendents in the area: Old Swassin's daughter, Helen Totoson stands as an important matriarch of the modern Nulhegan Band's genealogical records. Later residents of Salem Pond (Figure 12) baptized their children at St. Francis (Odanak), and retained other Indigenous characteristics that we discuss below.


Figure 1. Ms. Nancy Snow, a mid 19th century Upper Cowass matriarch
She is wearing early 19th century silver "ball and cone" earbobs.


This ethnic enclave was on the divide between the larger north trending St. Francis River drainage, and the smaller, east trending Clyde/Nulhegan River. This place was such an important canoe trail between the St. Francis and Connecticut River that it was called the "Indian Stream" in the 1842 Webster-Ashburton Treaty that set the US Canadian border. Although St. Mary's parish (Newport) was founded in 1873 when Rev. J.S. Michaud became its first resident pastor, many local Indigenous people continued to register their children's baptisms at St. Francis, a 19th century affirmation of ethnic connection. For example; one of Totoson's turn-of-the 20th century descendents from Derby, VT who was genealogically well-documented in the Nulhegan Band's tribal record files; had most of his children baptized at St. Francis. But most importantly for a claim of VT residence -- they all died in Derby or Newport; VT -- documenting an American, rather than Canadian residence of these people during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. One of those children was born in modern Stanstead, Quebec in 1905 when it was Derby, VT (the border was
 
farther north in the 19th century, which is why most 19th century Stanstead records are now held in Derby, VT); and married and died at Salem Lake in modern Derby Town, VT. Family tradition states that she never crossed into Canada after age 5, because she was "afraid that she may not be able to re-cross the border back into the United States." Yet another important ethnic identifier was a collective remembrance held by the Euroamerican community concerning local Native identity. According to tradition recounted by both Nulhegan and Koasek (see below) citizens, a well-known Derby Line, VT family ("The Ramos") was accepted as Abenaki in the 1950's "before it became cool to be Abenaki." While US Census data did not record non-reservation (VT) Indian people as Native; the 1880 Canadian Census classified "born in the USA" Ramos' then residing in Ontario, as being Native. This is empirical evidence of an American rather than Canadian family origin of the surname, gives a measure of independent confirmation to the local tradition of Native acceptance. This is an example of documentary, genealogical and oral history evidence locating Indigenous lineages in Vermont during the 1860-1920 period. It is also critical for the argument of VT Indigenous identity, to note that these 19th century people did not re-settle in Quebec Native communities, or spend large amounts of time there, like the Champlain Valley's Obomsawin, Panadis and families, but stayed in the United States to beget large numbers of socially organized American descendents who still live in the region today.

Artifacts and imagery
In addition to "Indian Characters" and kin-group geography, there is other, more empirical evidence of cultural continuity in the Upper Cowass. Probably the most telling image of regional, mid 19th century Indigenous life in Vermont is Cornelius Krieghoff's famous 1854 painting "Indian Encampment, Lake Memphramagog" (Figure 2), complete with important pictorial data on local canoe construction, clothing styles and an atypical conical bark lodge.

Figure 2. "Indian Encampment, Lake Memphramagog," 1854, Cornelius Krieghoff

Canoe maker and scholar of the craft, Aaron York has found an early canoe (late 18th or early 19th century) from the Lake that he considers evidence of a discrete canoe building tradition at Lake Memphramagog. This canoe served as the basis of his 2007 recreation of a 1609-era canoe now curated at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum. York notes that the thwart and gunwale construction is distinct from the typical 19th century "St. Francis" (Odanak) canoes such as the ca. 1880 example (probably made by the binational Panadis family) as curated at the Abenaki Tribal Museum in Swanton, VT. York infers that these design differences are evidence of a technological tradition that is distinct from Odanak, an important point that supports a culturally separate Indigenous technological tradition in the Lake Memphramagog area.

Independent evidence of local Native lacustrine (lake) adaptation is an enigmatic steel apparatus found in a garage sale in Newport, VT. It is basically a recycled, 1920's tubular steel fishing rod tipped with a very sharp spring wire spike, flanked by two outward curved spring wire prongs. The whole assembly is wired together with two diameters of steel wire (Figure 3). This is a diminutive version of the highly distinctive Wabanaki fish spear (see Missisquoi Appendix, Figure 7) executed in metal rather than wood. It shows the
creative adaptation of the guide-technology that is the hallmark of the Wabanaki spear, and brings this technology into the second quarter of the 20th century. Unfortunately, the owner was dismissive of the spear, and did not know what it was used for, but only that it came from his father's house in Lake Park (North Derby).


Figure 3. Steel eel or ice-fishing spear, near Newport, VT. Ca. 1930-40.

LINK: http://www.nedoba.org/topic_wiseman.html

There are minor 19th and early 20th century material indicators of a local ash-splint basket making and selling tradition in the area. The main evidence for the practice is a wooden basket gauge (Figure 4) from Troy, VT; and a well-documented horse-feed basket (curated at the Wôbanakik Heritage Center, Swanton, VT), made and sold in Newport, VT, which points to a local tradition. In addition, a unique regional "fancy basket" characteristic pointed out to Dr. Fred Wiseman years ago by VT ethnographer John Moody, is the incorporation of over-weave of cherry root as a design motif in an early 20th century example. At this time, there are no written records of north-central VT basket makers to date, describe or otherwise corroborate evidence of this economic activity. However, given the abundance of evidence for Native-style behaviors in other media and cultural realms, a basket making component would be expected.

Figure 4. Pine "Basket gauge," used to split ash wood splints to standard widths
19th century Troy, VT
Recently deceased Nulhegan Band Archivist and elder Nancy Cote deposited a copy of an important photograph at the Wôbanakik Heritage Center (Swanton, VT) of the Curtis Family of Salem Lake VT, of whom there is a wealth of allied data.


Figure 5. The Curtis Family, Salem Lake VT (Nancy Cote photo).

Not only are the family members phenotypically native, the matriarch wears a blanket in the historical Indian style for the photograph illustrated as Figure 5. Ms. Cote also donated a copy of ca. 1930 photograph of her relative (unfortunately unnamed, but probably Antoine Cote according to author Chief Luke Willard) in typical Eastern Native, early 20th century "cut cloth fringe" interpretation of Plains-style regalia that we illustrate as Figure 6.

Figure 6. Man (Antoine Cote) in cut-cloth fringe "Plains-style" clothing, Ca. 1930
(Nancy Cote photo).

Also from Ms. Cote was a ca. 1910 beaded belt with tassets, illustrated in Figure 7. This distinctive article of clothing was worn all over the Northeast by Native people who sold baskets in "Indian costume."


Figure 7. Niagara style 8/0 polychrome beaded velvet belt w/tassets and leather fringe. Ca. 1910

There is an important digital copy of a tin-type photograph in the Wôbanakik Heritage Center in Swanton, labeled "Chief old Antoine (Anthony) Phillips Sr. Born 1787 at Lake Memphramagog, Vermont." His Native ethnicity (and VT residency!) is validated by the VT Eugenics Survey as having "French and Indian Blood" (Vermont State Archives Case B, Drawer 4; in Phillips Pedigree folder Page 2). This annotated photograph is one of only three 19th century records that exist of an Indian "chief" in Vermont (the others are Ben Gravel's chief at Swanton (See Missisquoi petition appendix); and the dying chief of Bellows Falls (mentioned in the Elnu appendix). The Phillips family is still resident in the Lake Memphramagog area. Author Chief Luke Willard acknowledged in an e-mail to Wiseman, "Yes, there is a bunch of Phillips over here (north-central VT). They're definitely Abenaki and they know it." In addition, "Chief” Antoine was himself the direct forebear of numerous VT Indigenous people. For example Chief Phillips had a son, Pierre Phillips (b. 1809), who had a daughter, Rosa Delphine Phillips (b. 1868) who had a daughter; Lillian "Delia" Bessette (b. 1909) who had a daughter, Margaretia Burbo (b. 1931), who has a son, Donald Stevens (b. 1966), who is an active member of the Vermont Indigenous community, most recently having been Chair of the VT Commission on Native American Affairs. An interesting detail is that the tintype (detail, Figure 8) distinctly shows "Chief Antoine" wearing moccasins that have the ethnically distinct vamp-top that forces the front bottom sole to rise; as well as pointed side-flaps of a type made by many Indigenous peoples throughout the Northeast in the late 19th century.

Figure 8_ Detail, Antoine Phillips' moccasins with distinctive "raised toe," wide vamp, and side flaps.

There is a pair of almost identical construction at the Wôbanakik Heritage Center from Lac Brome, Eastern Townships; only 20 miles from Lake Memphramagog. (but of course in Canada). In the 19th century Far

Below is the actual FULL PHOTOGRAPH

Grandpa Antoine Phillips
NOTICE the two different ink writings
Photographic Image 
"Brief History of the Abenaki Phillips and Blake Families and Genealogy"
By Winifred ("Morning Star) (Jerome) Yaratz
1st Printing January 2006 by Elk RIver Buffalo Press.
2nd Printing 2006.
Notice how someone has "implied"/concluded that this is "Old" Antoine Phillips (1787-September 01, 1885) but could this be his son Antoine Phillips (ca. 1828-March 11,1918), or Antoine Phillips, son of Peter Phillips and Delia nee: Bone (March 04, 1947-October 25, 1924)?
Northeast, the wearing of native-style moccasins was an indicator of Indian status -- or a hunter or fisherman who collected "Indian curios" from his guide — obviously not the case here. Mr. Phillips is also wearing a two-stranded necklace of some kind over his waistcoat and under his suit coat. Few late 19th century Euroamerican men openly wore necklaces.


Historical geography of Indigenous subsistence zones
In the early twentieth century, there were several major extended Indigenous family bands in the "Upper Cowass," each with its own exclusive culturally semi-autonomous regions; that still form the core of the modem Nulhegan Abenaki community. This community lay at a "continental divide," with direct access to the St. Lawrence River, Lake Champlain and the Connecticut River. From west to east, the family groups were located in a trend from 1.) Troy (originally "Mesesco," a geographic variant of "Missisquoi" from the Abenaki language), below the Big Falls of the Missisquoi River (Lake Champlain Drainage), to 2.) Newport, on Lake Memphramagog (St. Lawrence River drainage), to 3.) Salem Lake, between Lake Memphramagog and the Clyde River (Connecticut River Drainage), to 4.) Pensioner Pond in Charleston, VT (Connecticut River Drainage), and 4.) nearby Seymour Lake in Morgan, VT (Connecticut River Drainage). There is another important active Upper Cowass focal point -- just to the south -- in the Brownington and Barton VT area. All of these families knew each other and, as repeatedly documented in the modern Nulhegan Band's genealogical files, routinely intermarried. Author and Nulhegan Band Chief Luke Willard noted in an e-mail to Wiseman that "Each branch has land on their respective bluffs and each branch is separated by approximately 3-4 miles of river. Relations between the branches are strong among the older ones... not so much in the younger ones." It is also interesting that these "branches" seemed to also have evolved slightly different life ways based on cultural and natural environment. One regional "branch" was involved in Euroamerican commerce, one was involved in tribal affairs, another (in the poorer uplands) was widely known for its hunting and trapping expertise, and one (which was located on good lakeside soil) was more involved with gardening and fishing. This family-based geographic (and to a certain extent economic/political) segregation is identical to the Indigenous Wabanaki land tenure system described by Frank Speck on pages 212-229 of his Penobscot Man, a source used (e.g. Haviland and Powers, 1994 The Original Vermonters) to reconstruct VT Abenaki land tenure and land-use but heretofore without local VT confirmation. This pattern is confirmed for at least three areas in Vermont. The last "branch" listed above has always been located on the shores of Salem Lake (formerly Lac des Abenaquis), VT, and was widely known for its gardening prowess. Its oral history, as recounted by modern Nulhegan Band members, gives good ethnobotanical evidence of longstanding local Indigenous tradition. One of the most complete descriptions of the persistence of "Northern Indigenous Horticulture" into the mid 20th century is the technologically unique garden of a "Curtis family branch" at Salem Lake. They maintained a "huge" garden of beans, corn, and squash planted in traditional large mounds -- mechanically different from the row cropping as practiced by contemporaneous Euroamericans This ethnically distinct "horticultural mound" system is illustrated as "a typical Indian corn hill" on page 71 of Maine ecologist Kerry Hardy's 2009 book Notes on a lost flute: A field guide to the Wabanaki (Downcast Press). According to family oral history recorded from several Nulhegan Band members; heirloom seed varieties, a few of which may still remain, were also planted there. Modern Nulhegan Band citizens garden this same plot of land with smaller, residual "corn hills," but distinct enough to show clear evidence of ethnobotanical continuity. This geographic and environmental information on Abenaki family distributions and adaptations makes the Nulhegan zone one of the few regions in VT that we can trace ancient Indigenous-style, family-based land use zones that remained functional into 20th century living memory. However, there was exogamy (out-marriage) of these family bands with family bands in other tribal areas. In 2006, Wiseman learned from Nulhegan Band Elder and tradition keeper Nancy Cote that his grandmother's "Ouimet lineage" grandfather is Cote's Nulhegan ancestor.

The Upper Cowass/Nulhegan Renaissance
The Upper Cowass renaissance was spurred in the third quarter of the 20th century by Nancy Cote (who reported much Nulhegan area history to me in the early 1990's), and to a certain extent, Elsie "Moonbeam" Davis (a close friend of Missisquoi Chief Homer St. Francis) in the 1970's. This unique, long-standing female-centric tradition is expressed in one of the modern Nulhegan Band's governing polities, the Ladies' Judiciary (now the Elder's Council). At first Cote, Davis and other locals participated with Missisquoi in their regional renaissance. In the early 1980's the re-coalescing political community became included in the more regionally restricted Abenaki bands that were forming, dividing and reconfiguring in the
Northeast Kingdom during the tumultuous early phase of the Abenaki renaissance. In the late 1990's and early 2000's the core "branches" discussed above, began the process of re-separation from this political mishmash to become its own more locally-focused political entity; concentrating on the Newport and Northeast Kingdom area of VT – now called the "Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck Abenaki." Chief Luke Willard stated in a February 2010 e-mail to Wiseman that the Nulhegan Band maintains tribal-rolls and has explicit criteria for citizenship that is shared with applicants to become citizens. There is still much to learn in this region. For example, there are outlier lineages, such as one living on the banks of the Clyde River in Charleston, VT that are known to Odanak Abenakis to not be linked at all with that Canadian Abenaki village. There is also a local person of obvious VT Abenaki identity; who has had, at this point, no known genealogical work done on him.


Conclusion
In this section we have provided internally consistent evidence of a long-term Vermont Indigenous settlement area in the Troy, Newport and Derby VT area in the 19th and 20th centuries. They divided the area into subsistence/settlement sectors, as was done by the Penobscots and other allied bands in Maine. Like their more eastern Native neighbors, the micro-regional bands, such as the Curtises of Salem Lake, communicated and intermarried to create an integrated river-based autonomous region covering many square kilometers. There is a wealth of genealogical, material, oral-historical, botanical and other evidence of a cooperative, kinship-based entity – an entity that maintained collective control over territories during the critical post-1790 period, adapting to European land tenure – so much so that modem descendents retain deeded title to their lands. We have material and oral history evidence of distinct basket making, fishing and horticultural technologies that can be stylistically or technologically related to known "Indian" examples from neighboring areas. The modem "Nulhegan Band of the Coosuck Abenaki" polity evolved from an inter local assembly composed of citizens from these micro-regional bands, and exercises political power internally, as well as represents its citizens in local and state Euroamerican politics. We therefore contend that Nulhegan is a regional autonomous VT Native community that meets the criteria for political designation as an Abenaki tribe.

MY RESPONSE:
Within this blog, documents retrospectively show and provide the conclusive evidence that Luke Andew Willard (whether Sackett or Pike is his paternal father matters not to me particularly, yet he does carry his mother's surname) is NOT who he appears or claims to be. Documentarily, he is shown to have been (retrospectively-speaking) a part of Ralph Skinner Swett's "Clan of the Hawk, Inc." (of which Mr. PhD Wiseman claims "in his opinion" that such incorporation does not constitute an "Abenaki Tribe or Band") as was Nancy Lee Cote and her daughter Dawn Macie. Also, Luke Andrew Willard was retrospective part of the late David Andrew Hill's group (and also David Hill's Inc. successor Reynold Choiniere's group "North American People of the Dawn, Inc.)"

LINK: http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010/02/bank-checking-account-0115908-at-first.html
Financial chief and treasurer for North American People of the Dawn, Inc., Luke Willard, said they recently rented a new office and offer six social service programs, including tribal registration and genealogy research. He said he encourages people to join the tribe, "but it has to be certified, without error, and backed up. Eventually, we'll go for recognition, and they are going to ask for all these files."
June 16, 2006 Newport Daily Express
What Mr. Frederick Matthew Wiseman PhD does not convey in this "Decolonizing the Abenaki: A Methodology of Detecting Vermont Tribal Identity" is that none of what is in this write-up, is really of HISTORICAL merit.

It IS an HYSTERICAL attempt at RE-WRITING ABENAKI HISTORY.

To my thinking, Mr. PhD Wiseman tried retrospectively-speaking, to bullsh** the Office of Federal Acknowledgment (B.I.A), and was not successful in that attempt. Now, he bullsh**'s the State of Vermont Legislature with the VERY SAME TACTICS, SCHEME'S and FALSEHOOD'S. Why doesn't the PhD, show and provide the "Something of Value" paper supposed submitted to the January 22, 2010 Committee? Why didn't he accurately and truthfully show and provide the article that went with the Attachment #4 Photograph he cited?

Obviously, Fred M. Wiseman & Company (this so-called "Vermont Indigenous Alliance of these 4 groups in Vermont) MUST assume that if it is NOT SHOWN or PROVIDED, then people in Vermont and elsewhere will be blind, stupid, and ignorant of the truth....about who they really are....where they truthfully come from....and truthfully what it is they are attempting to do FRAUDULANTLY and BY USAGE OF DECEPTION AND OMMISSION, accomplish, against the Abenaki Ancestors and those Abenaki Ancestors' descendants!

THE FACT THAT RECENTLY LUKE ANDREW WILLARD AND DAWN MACIE (ALL OF THEM, THAT WERE APPOINTED TO THE VCNAA ARE CONNTECTED TO THESE 4 INCORPORATION GROUPS OR SUPPORT THE "ALLIANCE" IN THIS DECEPTION AND DECEIT THESE 4 GROUPS ARE PERPETUATING) WERE APPOINTED TO THIS NEWLY RE-CONSTRUCTED VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS IN MONTPELIER, BY THE OUTGOING GOVERNOR JIM DOUGLAS, IS BLANTANTLY HYPOCRITICAL OF THE LACK OF TRUTHFULNESS, HONESTY, INTEGRITY OF THIS WHOLE "ABENAKI RECOGNITION PROCESS" IN VERMONT! SHAME ON ALL OF THEM!

Saturday, September 4, 2010

Pages 12-23 of "Decolonizing the Abenaki: A Methodology for Detecting the Vermont Tribal Identity" Regarding the so-called "Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki" led by Roger A. "Longtoe" Sheehan:


S. 222 § 853. (b) Recognition Criteria:
Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki
5243 VT Route 30
Jamaica, Vermont 05343

Prepared by
Chief Roger Longtoe,
Tribal Genealogist Vera Schulmeisters
Elnu Abenaki Tribe
and
Prof. Fred Wiseman
Chair, Department of Humanities
Johnson State College

This document has been prepared by the Elnu Abenaki Tribe to fulfill the recognition criteria as required by Vermont Statute S. 222 § 853 (b). The materials contained herein are for the purposes of legislative recognition by the Vermont Legislature only, and may not be published or otherwise used without permission of the Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki.

© 2010 Elnu Abenaki Tribe of the Abenaki
S. 222/ § 853 (b) For the purposes of recognition, a Vermont Native American tribe must demonstrate that it has:


(1) Physical and legal residence in Vermont
Tribal Headquarters
5243 VT Route 30
Jamaica, Vermont 05343
(2) An organized tribal membership roll along with specific criteria that were used to determine membership, including evidence of kinship, among tribal members.
Permanent Tribal Genealogist maintains--
Tribal rolls organized on computer
Supporting hard copy personnel files
Genealogical descendency charts maintained on computer
(3) Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage.
Detailed historical/geographical data compiled by Frederick Wiseman submitted Jan 22: (abstracted as Appendix 1).
(4) A tribal council, a constitution, and a chief.
(a) Tribal council
Council of Elders, Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki
(b) a constitution
Written Constitution, based on historical memorized wampum rercords
(c)chief
Sogomo (Chief)
(2) Elder Councilors
(5) Been and continues to be recognized by other Native American communities in Vermont as a Vermont tribe.
All Tribes are united in an Alliance (The Vermont Indigenous Alliance) and after a vigorous three year vetting process (2006-2009) each tribe of the Alliance recognizes all others as Indian tribes. See cover letter.
(6) Been known by state, county or local municipal officials, or the public as a functioning tribe in Vermont.
Officials
      Fred Wiseman, Chair, Department of Humanities, Johnson State College(Attachment 1)
Catherine Brooks, Cultural Heritage Tourism Coordinator Vermont
Department of Tourism and Marketing is very supportive. (Attachment 2)
Others, including events sponsored by state and Burlington City officials
Lake Champlain Maritime Museum Native Heritage Weekend, 2007, 2008, 2009 (Attachment 3)
City of Burlington Waterfront Festival, Jul, 11, 2009
VT Indigenous Celebration, Jul 10-13, 2009 (QUAD Signature Event)
Jamaica State Park, native programming on various dates.
____ to portray ancestors (2008-2010)
Public -

Most recently, the VT public has become very familiar with the Elnu Tribe through the following films produced for the Lake Champlain Quadricentennial Celebration:
                1609: The other side of history
                The Changling
                The Lake Between
                Before the Lake Was Champlain(7) Not been recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation
The Elnu Abenaki Tribe has never been officially recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation
(8) An enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that can be documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, genealogy, folklore and/or other applicable scholarly research. (Appendix 2)
Attachment 1


The Abenaki Tribal Museum and
The Wôbanakik Heritage Center
17 Spring St. Swanton, VT 05488
Where the past points to the future

Memo
To: Who it may concern

From: Frederick M. Wiseman, Ph.D
           Director
Date: 02/28/10
RE: Elnu Band                        February 20, 2010

I am writing this letter of support for the Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki. Although I have only worked with the Elnu Tribe since 2007, I have been working closely, on almost a daily basis since that time on projects ranging from preparing for the large Quadricentennial "Indigenous Celebration," to smaller educational, political, cultural and spiritual issues. For example, the Elnu tribe provided the delegates representing the VT Indigenous Alliance in negotiations with Sotheby's and the Six Nations Haudenosaunee in New York City last year. Also, Elnu's Chief has accompanied me to the Mohawk reserve of Kahnawake to begin a process of alliance with the Haudenosaunee.

I have also had the pleasure of working on the history of the Lower Cowass, with the assistance of Chief Sheehan and Tribal Genealogist Vera Schulmeisters. This research has convinced me that Elnu has arisen out of a fertile and deep ethnic Abenaki soil in Southeastern Vermont.

It has been a privilege to work beside Elnu at gatherings and celebrations all over Vermont, from Vergennes to Swanton, to Burlington and beyond, to Lake George and Fort Ticonderoga, where they are the proud standard-bearers of the VT Abenakis. I know • from discussions with their tribal genealogist that they take their tribal rolls seriously and assure that their membership is truly Abenaki. But genealogy is not enough, candidates must share a commitment to educate and participate in the Abenaki culture at all times and places, and therefore the Elnu are probably the tribe most often seen throughout the state and are in large part responsible for educating our public about the history and culture of these original Vermonters.

(802)868-3808 / wisem@vtlink.net
Attachment 2


Department of Tourism & marketing   [phone] 602-828-3237
One National Life Drive, 6th Floor                [fax] 802-828-3233
Montpelier, VT 05620-0501
http://www.vermontvacation.com/

December 4, 2009

Roger Longtoe,
Sogomo Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki
Tribal Headquarters
5243 VT Route 30
Jamaica, Vermont 05343

Dear Roger,

On behalf of the Vermont Lake Champlain Quadricentennial Commission, I want to thank you and the Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki for your excellent and tireless efforts to share Abenaki history and culture at numerous Quadricentennial events this past year.

Early in the planning for the 2009 Quadricentennial, the Commission set as one of its goals to convene a working group of Native leaders, artists, historians, and others to plan initiatives focusing on Native American culture and history. That many of the Native American project plans came to fruition is due to the level of participation by the Elnu Tribe.

We are very grateful for your passion to share your culture with visitors at ECHO Lake Aquarium and Science Center at the Leahy Center for Lake Champlain, and the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, and to play-key roles in the Vermont Indigenous Celebration signature event, the Burlington International Waterfront Festival parade and the Indigenous Peoples conference at Saint Michael's College. Your encampment program – with the details of period clothing and 17th century replica artifacts, and the knowledge of your re-enactors – did so much to help the public understand the culture that was here at the time of Samuel de Champlain arrival.

As we move beyond 2009, the Vermont Department of Tourism & Marketing looks forward to a continued relationship with the Elnu Tribe, helping to promote your efforts to share Native culture with visitors to Vermont. Thank you for all you have done, and for your continued efforts.

Sincerely.

Bruce Hyde
Commissioner. Vermont Department of Tourism & Marketing
 Attachment 3.

Lake Champlain
MARITIME MUSEUM

January 14,2008

To Whom It May Concern:

This is to offer our strong support for Vera Longtoe Sheehan's proposed exhibit work for the Sugarhouse Indian Museum Project.

This past summer, Vera Longtoe Sheehan and members of the El-Nu Abenaki Tribe worked with the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum to develop an indigenous, "living history" weekend at the Museum. The event was an unqualified success.

The professionalism and historically-accurate interpretation achieved by the El-Nu is remarkable; their faithful and compelling representation of living skills noteworthy in the bringing to life of traditional Abenaki arts, techniques, costumes, and crafts.

The effort to help people truly imagine important aspects of our collective heritage is among the most valuable work we can do. Judging from our experience at LCMM, traditional native artist Vera Longtoe Sheehan's proposed Abenaki Village Diorama and photo exhibit will provide a valuable resource rich in content and of the highest quality.

Sincerely,

Jeff Meyers, Associate Director
Lake Champlain Maritime Museum
4472 Basin Harbor Road
Vergennes, VT 05491
APPENDIX 1


§ 853. (b) (3) Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage.

The Elnu Abenaki tribe retains a significant fund of traditional knowledge and customs that can be tied to a native heritage through Anthropology or folkloric studies, as detailed in Appendix 2. However, we have abstracted and organized a sample of this information, to specifically address the § 853. (b) (3) "Documented traditions, customs, and legends that signify Native American heritage" criterion.

Traditions
A first important tradition that signifies native heritage is that of Indian identity handed down through individual families. For example, research by Karen Ameden, Head of the Jamaica Historical Foundation and Roger Longtoe Sheehan (Elnu Abenaki Tribe), reveal an unexpectedly large number of Windham county residents retain a memory of Native ancestry. A well-documented example of this form of traditional memory is a digital video recording of Chief Longtoe's father and aunt discussing a "great-great aunt" who wore "Indian clothes, around the time of the Second World War." This anecdotal information is probably the latest evidence of New. England Abenakis overtly "being Indian" before the renaissance of the 1970's.

The second type of tradition is more community-based. An example of this kind of tradition was noted by Ms. Kevin Parson, President of the now defunct "Tolba Clan" in the 1990's. She said that her organization evolved from (or was based on) what she called the "Old Tolba" of the area, a fourth tradition of a regional Connecticut River area totemic signifier (others are Nolka ("Deer), Bear and Wolf clans. In addition, a colleague of Chief Sheehan mentioned that his grandfather used a "turtle" signifier in discussing the Brattleboro, VT area homeland. The Elnu constitution was, until recently unwritten, but a traditional living document memorized by the Band's leadership, perhaps enhanced from time to time by mnemonic wampum strings.

Customs
Local indigenous people go to "the (Bellows) Falls" petroglyph site to carry out rituals of observance and respect, including offering medicine bundles of red cloth, tied with appending beads and turkey feathers bound with leather and cotton cordage; almost certainly filled with tobacco, an enduring result of Native American honoring ceremonies. One of the authors' (Chief Sheehan) own family, as well as other Elnu citizens, have long performed these rituals at the petroglyph site every October. These customs may include silent prayer, singing, the use of musical instruments such as drums and ritual gesture.

The inter-related core Elnu families retained a focus on Native-style subsistence and the traditional craft arts. This family-based cultural legacy has been tied to a unique (in VT) collective interest in using and amplifying these traditional skills. Status within the group is based first on kinship, but secondarily on traditional knowledge and/or artistic proficiency. It is this shared technical and historical custom that, in great part, binds the group together.

Community Legends
There are proprietary beliefs held by the Elnu Abenakis regarding the water across from the petroglyphs site at Bellows Falls. The nature of these beliefs is internal to the local Indigenous community. However, no one from the Elnu Abenaki tribe, although excellent swimmers, will use the adjacent section of the Connecticut River for swimming. There are also community legends remaining in the Elnu Tribe, of ancient Native Ancestral spirits that still haunt certain regions of Bellows Falls.
APPENDIX 2


§ 853. (b) (8) An enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that can be documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, genealogy, folklore and/or other applicable scholarly research.

These data are abstracted from the "Something of Value" paper delivered to the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs on Jan 22,2010.

~PAY VERY CLOSE ATTENTION TO THE ABOVE~
IF THIS DATA WAS "ABSTRACTED" FROM THE "SOMETHING OF VALUE" PAPER, THEN WHY WASN'T THIS PARTICULAR CITED DOCUMENTATION WITHIN THE VERMONT ARCHIVES ALONG WITH THE REST OF WHAT WAS SUBMITTED TO THAT ARCHIVES?

WHY didn't the Senate Committee on Economic Development, Housing and General Affairs on January 22, 2010 submit this to the Vermont State Archives? Did Mr. Wiseman PhD and or the Senate Committee Representatives Hinda Miller and Vincent Illuzzi have something to hide, by NOT submitting this "Something of Value" paper Mr. Wiseman allegedly submitted to them on this Committee on January 22, 2010?

According to Scott Reilly, Archivist for the Vermont State Archives and Records Administration in Montpelier, Vermont, quote:
Date: Tuesday, June 29, 2010, 10:59 AM

Mr. Buchholz,
"Having gone through all of the records that the committee has transferred to the State Archives, no paper is included that matches what you describe. I also checked with the Legislative Council to inquire whether they had transferred everything they had from that committee, and they replied that yes they had. They also noted that that particular Committee does not often retain all of the supporting material that they receive WHY NOT?. I checked the House committee’s records as well, but to no avail. There however are other committee records related to S. 222 that you are welcome to come in and review if you like."

Date: Tuesday, June 29, 2010, 1:33 PM from Scott Reilly, Archivist to Douglas Lloyd Buchholz:

"The committee file for S. 222 primarily contains legislative drafts and some correspondence. It’s probably about 100 pages of documents. To obtain a copy of the entire file, I estimate the charges would be about $14.00 based on the Uniform Schedule of Public Records Charges for State Agencies (available at http://vermont-archives.org/research/fees/fees.htm).


Is there a chance that Mr. Wiseman “delivered” the paper "Something of Value" in the sense of simply presenting it, rather than physically handing it over to the Committee (Chaired by Rep. Vincent Illuzzi and of which Rep. Hinda Miller was part of as well?) If that is the case, the Legislative Council may have audio recordings of his testimony to the committee. Just a thought." Scott Reilly

Introduction,
An important historic cultural region of the Connecticut River VT is located in Southernmost Lower Coos, on the border of the old Sokoki region in Windham County, VT. Lyman Simpson Hayes pointed out in some detail in his History of the Town of Rockingham VT 1753-1907 (Town of Bellows Falls, 1907:29- 45), that there was a large ancient Indian town in the area. The website vermontgenealogy.com/history/indian_fishing_rights.htm, notes that "The reputation of the Great (Bellows) Falls had been known to them (Native Americans) generations earlier, and that, at certain seasons of the year, pilgrimages were made from distant points by parties of red men to secure generous supplies of a necessary article-of food (shad and salmon speared in the spring)." These references are supported by archaeology -- the great numbers of Indian artifacts and burials that were plowed up by settlers. Many of the internments on the VT side of the Connecticut River were flexed burials. An almost metaphysical sense of a large antecedent Indian village remains; Chief Roger Longtoe Sheehan of the Elnu Abenakis recounted stories of phantom Indians walking through the factories on the "Island" at Bellows Falls.

The 19th century
There were two, probably seasonal, 19th century settlements in the Bellows Falls, VT area. They were at Pine Hill and the mouth of Saxton's River. Hayes noted (p. 47) that there were so many Abenakis in the area that many local 19th century businesses Bellows Falls were named "Abenaki," the earliest evidence of the use of this ethnic term in VT in referring to resident Indians. In discussing this Indigenous community, Hayes gives the most detailed technical description of Abenaki wigwams made of bark and hide draped over poles that we have for the State of Vermont. He also notes that men fished and hunted while women sold "baskets and trinkets" a 19th century gender labor division pattern identical to that reported in Newbury to the north. According to Hayes, these Indians were "from Canada and New York" as well as from local "roving parties of Indians" (p. 29). I suspect that the "from Canada and New York" and "roving" assignations may have more to do with Hayes' colonialist desire to assure his readers that these Indians were "from anyplace but here," so as to not acknowledge these Indians as regional or VT residents. It is unlikely that significant numbers of Abenakis traveled from the tiny early 19th century mill-working Abenaki enclave at Albany, NY, or the small, 100 household Odanak Reserve in Canada to the Bellows Falls region. The "domicilium vacuum (or transient Indian)" argument is a well-known gambit used to deny Native Americans aboriginal rights to their homelands. Hayes pointed out on pages 45-49 of his book that in 1856, the "Last Chief of the Abenakis" chose to die at Bellows Falls. This chief, who proudly bore a George III silver peace medal, was buried in an unmarked grave in the "old Catholic cemetery" in Bellows Falls, VT. His avowed reason for dying there was to be "buried with his fathers." This geographic death choice of an obvious high ranking Abenaki official – to be buried "with his fathers," is corroborating evidence of an important antecedent, probably 17th or 18th century, Indigenous settlement at Bellows Falls. Combining this information with the archaeological data of more ancient native residency, with the well-described mid 19th century Pine Hill and Saxton's River Native settlements, we have verification of an important but heretofore un-researched 18th - 19th century Native community. Apparently there is a documented "… early picture of the toll bridge here (Bellows Falls), (which) shows a rope ladder let down from the bridge with an Indian in a rude chair spearing passing salmon" mentioned in the website vermontgenealogy.com/history/indian_fishing_rights.htm. We would expect that this image would be mid or later 19th century. There is also beaded wristband of a type not worn as a souvenir by Euroamericans (Figure 1). It is of the 1850's- 1870's period and has a solid Bellows Falls, VT provenance, so we suspect more artifactual materials await discovery, research and curation.
Figure 1. Mid 19th century beaded velvet wristband (with tiny 15/0 beads!). Bellows Falls VT


There was third important historic Native settlement in the Lower Coos; at the mouth of the West River; in the Brattleboro, VT area. In the Annals of Brattleboro (unfortunately no author and no pagination), "Chapter One: Indians and Fort Dummer," there are references to Indian petroglyphs, granaries, underground barns, the remains of stone agricultural implements such as pestles, and burial grounds (with flexed burials like at Bellows Falls and Newbury), documentary references to Native settlement in the southeastern-most part of Vermont. There is also a tintype that has the inscription "Indian girl from Brattleboro" inscription scratched into the black "japanning" on the back.

Figure 2.
Tintype of "Indian girl from Brattleboro"
Her blouse or dress has contrasting color ribbon decoration. Ca. 1890-1910
Complementing the tintype is there is a coeval, mid 19th century "varying splint" basket from Southern Vermont in the Wộbanakik Heritage Center collections (Figure 3). It has a solid Vernon, VT provenance, coming directly to auction from an 18th century house in the town in 1989. Heretofore, we dismissed the basket as being a central New England basket traded north. This belief was due to its repetitive stamping style, slightly different from the more "calligraphic" mid 19th century north-central VT Abenaki style. It also has certain characteristics that are similar to Central Massachusetts and even New York basketry styles. However, Vernon and Brattleboro are in the old "Sokoki" or Squakeag Village area, which lies just downstream on the other side of the River. The other 19th century evidence cited above, raises the exciting possibility that this basket was manufactured by a local, early 19th century Sokoki-tradition basket maker. Technologically, we would expect such a basket to exhibit a more "southerly materials and decorative style, due to its critical proximity to southern New England and the Mohawk River. Needless to say, more research needs to be done on this transitional basket-making tradition.


Figure 3. Varying-splint ash basket with daub-dye thin splints and repetitive stamp wide splint decoration.
Second quarter of the 19th century, Vernon, VT

If we move our perspective from the Connecticut River floodplain zone, Lyman Hayes notes (p. 29), that there were also contemporary "roving parties of Indians" in the hinterlands of Southeastern Vermont during the 19th century. Apparently these people lived in the uplands and foothills of Windham County. In addition, the dying chief of Bellows Falls may have been referring to these shadowy people in his apocryphal quote "You see yonder mountain-you find the bear there, you find the wild cat there, you find the deer there, you find the Indian there," (vermontgenealogy.com/history/last_abenaqui_chief.htm). The subsequent history of these upland people is hinted at in the photographic image and reference to the Jamaica, VT ethnic enclave described below. Also, a possible artifact resulting from their shadowy activity was described in the 1808 record of a large pine tree in Weathersfield VT that was carved with images of three men and a woman. According to newspaper reporter Mark Bushnell (Times Argus 6/21/2009), this reference was by expatriate Englishman Edward Kendall on page 219 of his Kendall's Travels Vol. 3 "Brattleboro."

The 19th century was a complex time in the Southernmost Lower Cowass, with at least three geographic "hot spots" of documented Indian activity in the Connecticut River floodplain on the VT side, as well as a possibility of groups of itinerant "roving" Indians scattered in the uplands and foothills of Windham County. However, this area has seen the least concerted ethnographic and material culture survey and collection dealing with the 19th century, of any region in Vermont. We expect that, as time goes on, more old 19th century documents, memories and artifacts will emerge with satisfactory Southern Lower Coos provenance.
The 20th century

Conversations with local Windham county residents by Elnu tribal members, as well as a local historical society (e.g. The Jamaica Historical Foundation) officers, reveal an unexpectedly large number of people who claim Native ancestry. Unfortunately, there is little current research into the 20th century culture and craft arts of the southernmost Lower Cowass area. However there is some evidence of continuity, at least in the materialist realm of personal attire.

A Ms. Ruth W. Stark appears in an early 20th century photograph curated at that Jamaica (VT) Historical Foundation. She wears a "cut cloth fringe" dress quite similar to the fringed dress from the White River VT area of the Lower Cowass. Also included in the photograph is a small wigwam, based on earlier conical bark wigwams, that was often used to signify Indian status in pageants and festivals: Ms. Karen Ameden, Chair of the Foundation, told author Chief Sheehan that the woman in the photograph was known to be part of a significant local Native enclave. Therefore, Ms. Stark may be an early 20th century descendent of Hayes' 19th century "roving Indians" of Southeastern VT. We would suspect that Ms: Stark's "enclave" may perhaps, with more research, be found to represent a 19th and perhaps 20th century location of an old river-oriented subsistence/settlement zone such as we see elsewhere in Vermont.

One of the authors (Vera Schulmeisters) has a digital video recording of Chief Longtoe's father and aunt discussing a "great-great aunt" who wore "Indian clothes, around the time of the Second World War." This anecdotal information is probably the latest evidence of New England Abenakis using distinctive regalia before the renaissance of the 1970's. It would be interesting to know what these late Indian clothes looked like, but so far no items of early mid-20th century style attire have surfaced in the Southern Lower Coos area with a solid provenance. We would expect, however, that they would resemble either a late, degraded version of "Niagara Style" Beadwork, or the early post-war "Pan-Indian" long-fringe, leather-based style found elsewhere at this time.

Complementing materialist history, there has been a very strong tradition of ceremonial observance at ancient sacred places in the Southern Lower Coos region. One of us (Chief Sheehan) has pointed out that until recently, local indigenous people would go to "the (Bellows) Falls" to carry out rituals of observance and respect. During his research field work in the 1980's, Dr. Fred Wiseman saw medicine bundles of red cloth, tied with appending beads and turkey feathers bound with leather and cotton cordage to branches at the Bellows Falls petroglyph site. They were of different ages, some heavily weathered and worn, some relatively recently made. These bundles were almost certainly filled with tobacco, an enduring result of Native American honoring ceremonies that took place at this important ancient rock art site decades ago. Supporting Wiseman's observation, rock art scholar Edward Lenik noted on pages 100 and 101 of his 2002 Picture Rocks: American Indian Rock Art in the Northeast (UPNE,) that the Bellows Falls petroglyphs are still venerated by Indigenous people. He says "...Abenakis still live in the area and it is likely that they still visit the (Bellows Falls) site." Chief Sheehan's own family, as well as other Elnu citizens, performed these rituals at the petroglyphs every October. Sheehan has also referred to proprietary beliefs held by the Elnu Abenakis regarding the water across from the petroglyphs. These retained memories and practices, as well as an artifactual record, are importance evidence of a tradition of Native American reverence for this section of the Connecticut River.

The political renaissance of the "Southern" Lower Coos began in the last two decades of the 20th century, including many people who are modern Elnu Tribe citizens. The regional Abenaki renewal at first centered on the "Tolba (Turtle) Clan," in the Southern portion of the VT Connecticut River Valley. It later spread to the uplands surrounding the Valley on the VT side. The "Tolba Clan" renaissance of the 1990's was led by Ms. Kevin Parson as "President" and Roger Longtoe Sheehan as "Vice President" Ms. Parson noted that the Tolba Clan organization evolved from (or was based on) what she called the "Old Tolba" of the area. The antecedent Tolba cultural group is the fourth regional signifier like the Deer ("Nolka Clan") of the Thetford VT area or the Bear and Wolf clans (unknown exact location). With such a Connecticut River Drainage toponymic (culture place-name) context, the "Tolba" designation is probably an authentic cultural entity. This inference is bolstered by living memory of this area being a "turtle region," perhaps another indirect reference to the "old Tolba.” A colleague of Chief Sheehan traces his distant Native ancestry to the Brattleboro, VT area -- and mentioned that his grandfather used a "turtle" signifier in discussing that
particular homeland. In due course, the Tolba Clan declined as a cultural entity, whereupon Roger Sheehan and other leaders took it upon themselves to formulate a successor -- the modern "Elnu Abenaki Tribe."


To culturally separate themselves from any antecedent groups, this descendent group chose the simple "Elnu" (a variant spelling of "human being" in the Abenaki language) appellation. The inter-related core families retained memory of Abenaki heritage with a focus on Native-style subsistence and the more traditional craft arts. In the last twenty years, this family-based cultural legacy has been tied to a unique collective interest in using and amplifying these traditional skills within the parameters of an almost academic historical awareness. It is this shared technical and traditioanl interest that, in great part, binds the group together. For example, their constitution was, until recently unwritten, but a traditional living document remembered by the leadership, perhaps enhanced from time to time by wampum strings. As pointed out above, they have also been involved with the old Bellows Falls petrogylph and native settlement area as focus of ceremony and feeling of homeland, a second cultural element that unites the group. The Elnu Abenakis have delighted in practicing their culture through living history and educating others about Abenaki historical technology. Status within the group is based first on kinship, but secondarily on traditional knowledge and/or artistic proficiency. As scholar Laura Peers has shown in her recent (2009) book Playing Ourselves (Altamira Press), this very delicate and complex, tribal-based "living history"/experimental technology approach is a critical part of tribal revitalization and recognition -- and the Elnu Abenakis may be considered on the "cutting edge" of this aspect of Abenaki culture. Due to the complex segregation of the micro-regional bands in the Connecticut River Valley; as well as people wanting to join Elnu because of their living history interest; Elnu Tribe citizenship rolls are managed by an active and rigorous genealogy program. Elnu has developed a creative solution to the "wannabe" (non Natives who wish to "play Indian") problem. It is an "auxiliary" non-tribal organization called the "Woodland Confederacy" that undocumented Abenakis, other Indian people, or even non Indians, can join to participate in living history, reenactments or other activities with the Elnus. In the last decade, the Elnu Tribe has reached out to other VT Indigenous peoples in their regional revitalization, as well as VT state activities such as the Lake Champlain Quadricentennial celebration (see Attachment I). Their experimental ethnography focus and the commitment of Elnu citizens to travel probably make them the Abenaki band most familiar to most Vermonters all over the state, as well as in New York, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. Today, they are important political allies of Vermont's other indigenous peoples in their collective political aspirations -- such as VT state recognition.

Since the Elnu Abenaki Tribe exercises political power internally, as well as represents its citizens, history and culture in local and state Euroamerican politics; it is our opinion that the Elnu Abenaki Tribe meets the historical and geographic criteria for designation as a Vermont Indian tribe.

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