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Thursday, October 14, 2010

St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Vermont Abenakis: Proposed Finding--Summary Under the Criteria--That This Group Does Not Exist As A Indian or Abenaki Tribe: Pages 53 to 67:

St. Francis/ Sokoki Band of Vermont Abenakis:
Proposed Finding - Summary Under the Criteria
Page 53
because they were Catholics rather than Protestants like most of the white settlers in the region. In 1793, he claimed there were still 70 Indians in the area. They continued gradually leaving until they were all gone by 1798. A group of four or five families of unidentified Indians moved to the village in 1825 to hunt and fish and sell baskets, but they left after a year or two. The author stated this event ended "the account of the St. Francis Indians in the region" (Hemenway 1882 Swanton and Others, 3442). Perry, however, did not describe the petitioning group's claimed ancestors, who at the time, according to the group's statistics, numbered 1,282 people in the Franklin County area and 511 in Swanton, or any social interaction among them. (43.)

Four years later, the Vermont Historical Gazetteer, published Rowland Robinson's "Sketch of the Early History of Ferrisburgh," a town north of Vergennes and south of Burlington near the lower portions of Lake Champlain, about 50 miles south of Swanton. (44.) The only reference to Indians in the excerpt provided was to "three Indian canoes, turned upside down with the paddles under them, and the poles of a wigwam" discovered by three boys "near the mouth of Mud Creek on Little Otter" (Hemenway 1867.00.00, 33). In a footnote, Robinson related that the origin of some Indian place names were explained to him by a man named John Watso, "an intelligent Indian of St. Francois [Quebec]". He also stated "others of the tribe" he had "conversed with" had also given him interpretations of various names (Hemenway 1867.00.00, 33). John Watso, an acquaintance of Robinson's who came from Odanak in Quebec and visited Ferrisburgh with other Indians from that village on a seasonal basis (see Day 1998, 239; 1978, 37-38). There is no available evidence to indicate Watso was part of an Indian group containing the petitioner's ancestors in Vermont or elsewhere.

In 1868, S. R. Hall's Geography and History of Vermont was published. In it, Hall discussed the Indians of Vermont from about 1609 to 1780. On page 100, he referred to the Indians as "formerly owners of the soil." He also stated: "A tribe known as the Iroquois owned the land in the west part of Vermont, and once had numerous inhabitants on the lake and on the rivers that flow into it. Indians from the Cossuck and St. Francis tribes frequented other parts, rather as hunting ground than as a place of permanent residence." He described no Indian group in Vermont after 1780 (Hall 1868).

Two years later, the American Association for the Advancement of Science published George H. Perkins's "On an Ancient Burial Ground in Swanton, Vt." This article discussed the discovery of an ancient Indian burial site in Swanton, which may have pre-dated the arrival of Missisquoi Indians. He explained that a "branch of the Algonquins, the St. Francis Tribe, as they were latterly called, were living on the banks of the Missisquoi River, near Swanton, when the place
FOOTNOTES:
42. Since the original page numbers in this document are either missing or illegible, the page number cited refers to the page number of the FAIR image file.

43. The population of Swanton in 1860, according to the website of the Swanton Historical Society, was 2,678.

44. During the latter part of the 19th century, Robinson also wrote a series of semi-fictional sketches of life in Vermont, some of which described sporadic encounters with individual Indians. These sketches, most of which appeared in collected editions during the 20th century, were based on his dealings with a few St. Francis Indians from Odanak who had relocated to or were seasonal visitors in Vermont (See Robinson 1921, 1934; Martin 1955, Day 1978, Dann 2001}. In none of these writings did Robinson allude to the existence of a community of Indians in the Franklin County or elsewhere in Vermont.
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was settled by white men. These Indians had a village near the river, which had been occupied since ancient times" (Perkins 1870.08.00, 4). Apparently the gravesite was not too distant from the village which also contained a more recent Indian burial site. The author also added the following: "While, of course, the survivors of the St. Francis tribe, a few of whom lived near Swanton not many years ago, were acquainted with the burial place of their own tribe, they had no knowledge ... of the more ancient cemetery" (Perkins 1870.08.00, 4). Perkins did not provide specific information which would connect the petitioner's claimed ancestors to an Indian entity in Swanton in 1870. Indeed, he indicates the historical Indian entity had left the region in the late 18th century when white settlement commenced in significant numbers. In 1870, the petitioner's claimed ancestors, according to the group's estimates, should have numbered over 1,000 people in the Franklin County area with as many as 500 living in Swanton. (45.)

Rowland Robinson also kept a journal called "Nature Notes," which described events from his life from about 1879 to 1881. In the pages for February to May 1881, Robinson related an April 30th encounter near Ferrisburgh (located in Addison County, approximately 50 miles from Swanton) with some Indian friends—Joe Tucksoose, Louis Tahmont, and his wife and their baby girl, all of whom he described as Abenaki (Robinson 1879.00.00-1880.00.00). In his semi-fictional sketch "Silver Fields," Robinson described Swasin Tahmont and the people connected to him as migratory Indians from St. Francis in Quebec. Robinson did not depict these individuals as being part of Indian group containing the petitioner's claimed ancestors. in this journal. (46.)

In 1883, Hamilton Child, in the Gazetteer and Business Directory of Franklin and Grand Isle Counties, Vt., wrote that in 1755, "the northern parts of Lake Champlain were in the possession of the St. Francis tribe of Indians, ...and as late as the time of the Revolutionary War, a branch of this tribe had a village at Swanton, consisting of about fifty huts, with a church, Jesuit missionary, and had some land under cultivation." It appears, however, these Indians were no longer living there in 1798, when the "Caughnawaga" Indians advanced a claim for the area (Child 1883.01.00, 38). The author did not describe an Indian community of the petitioner's claimed ancestors as residing in the Franklin County area in 1883. In fact, he indicated that the last Indian entity in the region had left in 1798. According to the petitioner's estimates its claimed ancestors around Franklin County should have numbered over 1,000 in the early 1880's. (47.)

The petition record also contains a copy of the 1891 History of Franklin and Grand Isle Counties, Vermont, edited by Lewis Cass Aldrich. The book claimed the Missisquoi Abenaki occupying the area began "their gradual withdrawal" from the Lake Champlain area after the French and Indian War. Yet, they "continued to occupy" the village at Missisquoi until "at least
FOOTNOTES:
45. The population of Franklin County in 1870 was 30,131. No Indians were listed (US Census Bureau 1872). The population of Swanton, according to the website of the Swanton Historical Society, was 2,866. The petitioner did not provide population estimates for the census years of 1870, 1880, and 1890, as part of its "Abenaki Population-statistics for 1790 to 1910.

46. See also Rowland Robinson 1894.11.00.

47. The population of Franklin County in 1880 was 30,225. No Indians were listed (US Census Bureau 1901).
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as late as 1800," and "were still in the habit of drifting back in bands of eight or ten families to favorite camping grounds to spend part of the year, up to as late as 1835 or 1840" (Aldrich 1891, 28). This article indicated the Missisquoi Abenaki community was gone by 1800, and only unidentified families from an unknown place returned to the area until around 1840 on a seasonal basis to hunt and fish. The author did not describe these migratory families as having any connection to or interaction with the petitioner's claimed ancestors in the Franklin County area, who, according to the group's estimates, numbered about 912 in 1840. (48.) Nor did the author describe the existence of a group of the petitioner's ancestors in the Franklin County area in 1891.

In its 1982 submission, the petitioner described but did not submit a passage from page 79 of Henry K. Adams's 1899 centennial history of St. Albans, a border town in Franklin County, Vermont. The quoted portion read as follows:

Within my own remembrance, a squaw, who [was] assumed to be a descendant of one of the original proprietors of the soil, lingered here for many years on the Burton farm, as the sole representative of her tribe; and she was hopeful the lands of her fathers would be restored to her. Her name was Madam Campo and when she anticipated a business call from the possessor of her assumed heritage, would place a broad green ribbon on her stovepipe hat, and tramp with much dignity, with a pipe in her mouth, in front of her log cabin. But she hoped in vain, like many others from the same source; and finally ... retired from the haunts of civilization. (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 54)

The petitioner argued that the account demonstrated that Madam Campo "received business calls from those who assumed her heritage" and that there were "other Indians in visiting distance" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 54). An analysis of the passage does not substantiate such a claim. For one, this was a retrospective description of a woman who was only "assumed" by others to be an Indian descendant. The author described Madam Campo as the "sole representative of her tribe," suggesting she was an isolated Indian no longer in tribal relations. The passage also contains the statement that she "anticipated a business call from the possessor of her assumed heritage" suggesting the woman was waiting for a visit, one which did not occur, from the non-Indian person who now owned her land, rather than a social visit from other Indians in the area. Moreover, the petitioner has not presented evidence to demonstrate that any of the current members of the petitioning group descend from Madam Campo. This passage does not describe the petitioner's claimed ancestors, who at the time, according to the group's figures, numbered as many as 1,772 in the Franklin County area and 343 in Saint Albans. Nor does this passage describe any social interaction among those claimed ancestors.

As the above analysis of the local histories shows, the available evidence does not demonstrate that the petitioning group's claimed ancestors lived as a group or as an entity that that was distinct from other populations. Nor does the available evidence demonstrate any social interactions or relationships among these claimed ancestors that might demonstrate community under criterion 83.7(b). The documentation submitted does not provide instances of outside
FOOTNOTES:
48. The population of Franklin County in 1890 was 29,641. No Indians were listed (US Census Bureau 1901).
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observers describing social interactions in such an entity. This omission is especially surprising because the petitioner claims its community ranged in size from 207 people in 1800 to as many as 1,772 in 1900, which would have made it one of the largest Indian communities in New England. The petitioner contends the lack of description of its claimed ancestors was due to their going "underground," hiding their identity to avoid detection from hostile outsiders. This claim is unpersuasive given the available evidence. It seems unlikely such a large group of Indians could have entirely escaped the notice of non-Indians for such a long time. Numerous travelers and surveyors of New England Indians during this time described many other Native-American groups, large-and small, which lived surrounded by hostile or unfriendly neighbors. These Indian groups made little attempt to hide from these outsiders who proved very willing to describe them in great detail. Other external observers also frequently described migratory Indians from Canada who were passing through Vermont during this period, but they did not portray them as part of a group which contained or was connected to the petitioner's claimed ancestors.

In addition to outside observers not recognizing or describing the group's claimed ancestors as Indians or members of a distinct community, the available evidence indicates that the alleged ancestors themselves were unaware of their existence as an Indian group distinct from the wider society. In 1979, petitioner researcher John Moody advanced this claim:

Despite many strong traditions and the widespread knowledge of Abenaki heritage within the community, few if any outsiders knew its true extent until 1976. As it had been since the early days, the only people who knew of all the families with Abenaki heritage were the central fam1lies like those described here. (Moody 1979, 62; emphasis added)

Yet, as revealed in the petitioner's 1986 submission, which was based on Moody's research, these alleged "central families" constituted only 25 of the 266 various claimed families (SSA 1996.01.17, [Part B, Appendix IA]." (49.) In addition, many of these families, as described later in this section, came from unconnected points of origin, mainly from Quebec and other areas of Canada, and moved to northwestern Vermont over a very long time. Such a collection of disconnected individuals, never described by outsiders before the 1970's as a group with at least some minimal distinction from others, and unknown to most of its members, does not meet the definition of a community under 83. 1, which in part requires that a group's members be differentiated and identified as distinct from nonmembers. The petitioner's reliance on 19th century historical accounts is insufficient because these accounts do not describe such distinctiveness among the group's claimed ancestors.

If the petitioner intends to use local histories, newspapers, and accounts by travelers from the 19th century to demonstrate community, it is encouraged to locate and submit copies of other
FOOTNOTES:49. The petitioner described these families as 25 "central" families, 30 "other" families, 131 "small" families, and 93 "ancestral" families, for a total of 279 rather than 266 families. Presumably there is some overlap or duplication that explains the discrepancy in figures. According to the petitioner "[a]ll of the Central families, half of the Other and one quarter of the small families of the Small families in the present membership" appeared in the Franklin and Grand Isle County records they referenced from 1790 to 1910. And "over fifty of the ancestral families" referenced had "known Abenaki Indian origins and/or ties to the 18th century Missisquoi Abeanki community (SSA 1996.01.17 Part B Appendix IA]. In 1995, the petitioner claimed 20 "core" families for the purpose of descent (SSA' 1995.12.11 [Second Addendum], 10; see criterion 83.7(e) for further details).
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such sources from the period that show actual social interactions and relationships, as described in criterion 83.7(b), specifically among its claimed ancestors. The petitioner may wish to integrate its discussion of such documents with other documentary evidence and provide a chronological analysis, possibly arranged by decade, demonstrating the existence of a community, as defined in 83. 1, containing its claimed ancestors during the 19th century.

School, Church, and Town Records

The local records used by the petitioner to claim the existence of community in. the. 19th century are also unpersuasive. A major problem is that the petitioner has described but not submitted these records, making it very difficult to analyze and validate the group's claims. Yet even as described or listed, the records do not demonstrate that a predominant portion of the petitioner's claimed ancestors maintained social interaction or relationships.

School Records

In its 1986 submission, the petitioner provided a "Scholar's List, 1822-1858" for Swanton, Vermont. It described this list of abstracted names as "taken from a periodic census done by the town of Swanton on those families in each school district sending their children to the one room school houses in March of the year cited" (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 3, 118). In "most cases," the list contained the name of only the father of the children. The petitioner did not supply the copies of the original public school censuses, and is encouraged to do so. The petitioner further explained "no indication of race was given in these records, but the names found here have been independently confirmed to be Abenaki from other sources" (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 3, 118). These other sources were not provided, and the petitioner is encouraged to supply there analysis and verification. According to the petitioner, "most of the individuals cited here appear in the family genealogies and histories found in this Addendum," suggesting that some undetermined number may not appear in those records (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 3, 118). An evaluation of the actual names by an OFA researcher indicates that only one person listed, Lewis Colomb, has been identified as having possible descendants among the current members (see criterion 83.7(e)). Two other individuals listed, Richard and Antoine Colomb, may have been Lewis's brothers, but it is unclear from the available evidence if they have descendants among the current membership. These lists of names also do not demonstrate community under criterion 83.7(b), particularly given the small number of identifiable ancestors represented on them, the limited time frame of the records, and narrow geographical area covered. The petitioner has not provided evidence the claimed ancestors who attended this school were a predominant or significant portion of the students during this time. There is no available evidence demonstrating that the school functioned as an important institution in which shared secular or ritual activity took place (83.7(b)(1)(vi)). The petitioner has not provided evidence that significant informal interaction among a broad number of its claimed ancestors occurred at the school (83.7(b)(1)(iii)). Nor has the petitioner explained how its claimed ancestors' activities in this school differed in some way from those of other students (83.7(b)(1)(vii)). In fact, it is unclear whether the petitioner is claiming that all or only some of the names of the students on the school lists were its claimed ancestors. These lists of names from school records do riot indicate the existence or activities of a group of the petitioner's claimed ancestors in northwestern Vermont from 1822 to 1858.
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If the petitioner intends to use school records to demonstrate that a predominant portion of its claimed ancestors comprised a distinct community under criterion 83.7(b), it is encouraged to locate and submit copies of other school records from the Franklin County area of Vermont during the 19th century. The petitioner should examine these records for evidence that demonstrates consistent interactions and significant social relationships among its claimed ancestors which differentiated them from other students who were not its claimed ancestors. The petitioner must also be able to demonstrate that these claimed ancestors are ancestral to present-day members of the group. The petitioner might wish to provide an analysis of these and other submitted documents, perhaps arranged by decade, which traces the activities of its claimed ancestors throughout the 19th century.

Church Records

For the period from 1800 to about 1830, the petitioner relied mainly on a few baptismal records from several parishes in Quebec, well north of the Franklin County area of Vermont. As stated before, most historians believe the vast majority of the Missisquoi Abenaki from Vermont had relocated to Saint Francis in Quebec by that time. The Canadian baptismal records, discussed but not submitted by the petitioner, did not describe anyone as being from an Indian group in northwestern Vermont from 1800 to 1830, when the petitioner's claimed ancestors ranged in number, according to the group's statistics, from 207 to 700 people. In most cases, it is impossible to identify the origin of these described people, or if they belonged to an Indian community of any kind (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 58-61). In fact, they may have simply been migrants in the area or traveling Saint Francis Indians from Quebec. That some of these individuals may have shared family-name variations with current members of the petitioner does not demonstrate that they were actually part of or interacting with a group containing the petitioner's ancestors. Nor does the appearance of these random Indian names in baptismal records from Quebec demonstrate that the petitioner's claimed ancestors were interacting as part of a distinct community in northwestern Vermont or anywhere else.

For the post-1830 period, the petitioner has submitted two lists of names of mostly baptismal and a few marriage records from two separate Catholic churches in northwestern Vermont. The petitioner did not submit copies of the original records and is encouraged to do so for analysis and verification. One set of abstracted names is from the Burlington Mission," 1831-1847, which was actually St. Mary's of Burlington, Vermont, in Chittenden County. The other is from St. Mary's Church of St. Albans, 1847-1858, in Franklin County. St. Mary's of Burlington was founded in 1830 with Father Jeremiah O'Callaghan as its first priest. O'Callaghan also provided missionary services to other Catholics in northern Vermont. St. Mary's Church of St. Albans was founded in 1847. No Catholic Church records were available in Vermont before the 1830's, when the first missionaries arrived to serve Vermont's Catholics. The Catholic Church did not establish permanent parishes in the state until the 1850's.

These lists of names do not provide evidence of consistent interactions and significant social relationships as described in 83.7(b) among the petitioner's claimed ancestors. The vast majority of Catholic parishioners in Vermont parishes like those in Burlington and St. Albans were French-Canadians and Irish (Ledoux 1988, 137-139). The only Catholic missionaries appointed
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for Abenaki Indians in New England were in Maine, not Vermont (Shea 1855, 152-162). In its 1986 submission, the petitioner admitted these church records did not identify any of its claimed ancestors as Abenaki. While the petitioner claimed the" individuals and families cited" in these documents were identified as Abenakis "by at least one other source," it did not submit these documents. It is also unclear if all of the people on these lists were the petitioner's claimed
ancestors or if they have descendants in the current group (See criterion 83.7(e)). Moreover, in most cases, claims of Indian identity were based on family-name variations identified by the petitioner, which, as discussed previously, does not demonstrate that these individuals were interacting as part of a distinct and separate community (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 5, 134).

The petitioner has not provided evidence its claimed ancestors formed a predominant or significant portion of the parishioners these churches. There no available evidence the churches functioned as places where shared sacred or secular activity took place encompassing most of the group's claimed ancestors (83.7(b)(1)(vi)). The petitioner has not provided evidence that significant informal interaction among a broad number of its claimed ancestors took place at the churches (83.7(b)(1)(iii)). Nor has the petitioner explained how its claimed ancestors' involvement in these churches differed from that of other parishioners. There is no indication from these lists that a significant portion of the petitioner's claimed ancestors may have maintained strong religious beliefs or practices different from those of other church members (83.7(b)(2)(iii)).

If the petitioner intends to use church records to demonstrate criterion 83.7(b), it is encouraged to locate and submit copies of other church records from the Franklin County area during the 19th century. Such records might include membership files, baptismal, marriage, confirmation, and death records, cemetery records, or even records from religious fraternal organizations. The petitioner should examine these records for evidence that demonstrates consistent interactions and significant social relationships among its claimed ancestors which differentiated them from other churchgoers who were not its claimed ancestors. The petitioner might then wish to provide an analysis of these and other submitted documents, perhaps arranged by decade, which traces the activities of its claimed ancestors throughout the 19th century.

Town Records

In the case of the town records, the petitioner did not provide any of them as part of its 1982 petition because it argued that very few of them existed before the 1840's, and were, therefore, of "limited value" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 57). In 1986, however, it submitted some "land records lists" of land transfers from Swanton, Highgate, and St. Albans, Vermont. These were petitioner-generated abstracts of lists of individuals taken mostly from sporadic real estate transactions from throughout the 19th century. The petitioner did not provide copies of the original documents, and is encouraged to do so for as many of them as possible for analysis and verification. The petitioner contends this "material is only a small sample of the numerous examples of Abenakis assisting each other to retain lands for familial and community subsistence" (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 4, 124). However, the petitioner did not claim these lands were identified as Indian property. It made no assertion that anyone in these documents was described as Indian or Western Abenaki, their Indian identity once again being claimed on unsupported family-name variations, rather than on any evidence that these individuals interacted
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with each other as part of a group (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 4, 124). It also is unclear if most of the individuals mentioned in these lists have descendants among the current membership (see criterion 83.7(e)).

While these lists of names from land records might indicate some of the petitioner's claimed ancestors resided or purchased land in Swanton, Highgate, and St. Albans, they do not demonstrate that a predominant portion of them comprised a distinct community in the 19th century. Nor does this list of names from routine real estate transactions show the petitioner's ancestors were involved in some significant economic activity, such as logging or fishing together, aimed at preserving group subsistence (83.7(b)(1)(iv)). The abstracts do not indicate that the individuals were retaining "Indian" or "Abenaki" land. If the petitioner wishes to use land records to demonstrate community, it is encouraged to use them as part of a residency analysis to demonstrate that more than 50 percent of its claimed ancestors resided in a geographical area exclusively or almost exclusively composed of those ancestors, and that the balance of the group's claimed ancestors maintained consistent social interaction with the members of this core community (83.7(b)(2)(i)).

Federal Census Records

The petitioner has provided a set of abstracted census data for 1790 to 1910 it claims demonstrates the existence of an Indian community composed of its claimed ancestors in northwestern Vermont. The petitioner did not submit copies of the actual censuses, and is encouraged to submit these for analysis and verification. An evaluation of the abstracted census data, along with other limited available evidence, does not demonstrate the petitioner's claimed ancestors maintained consistent interactions and significant social relationships with each other, or that they were differentiated from and described as distinct from nonmembers.

The Federal censuses for Vermont from 1860, when the racial category for "Indian" was first used in Vermont, to 1910 never listed more than 30 Indians in the state. None of the petitioner's claimed ancestors was listed as Indian on these censuses (1860 Census St. Albans, Vermont; 1860 Census Swanton, Vermont; US Census Bureau 1864; 1870 Census Highgate, Vermont; 1870 Census Swanton, Vermont; US Census Bureau 1872; 1880 Census Highgate, Vermont; US Census Bureau 1894; 1900 Census Swanton, Vermont; 1900 Census Highgate, Vermont; 1910 Census St. Albans, Vermont; US Census Bureau 1901).

The petitioner claimed some people included in their "census lists" were identified as Abenaki in others sources, presumably by some form of family-name variation. But the group did not provide these sources, and the available evidence does not demonstrate these people had descent from or were connected socially as a group to an Indian entity. The petitioner also described some individuals on the census lists as "highly likely to be confirmed as Abenakis in further research" (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 1 B, 26-98). Elsewhere, the petitioner professed that "over fifty of the 93 ancestral families" from its 1986 submission had "known Abenaki Indian origins and/or ties to the 18th century Missisquol Abenaki Community," which implies the other 43 families did not (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 1 A, 7). A survey of the families who "were highly likely" to be confirmed as Abenaki at some future date shows the names of such families are dispersed liberally throughout the population lists. This fact indicates the petitioner was
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claiming as parts of its historical community many families who had not been identified by the group as Abenaki or who do not have descendants among the current membership. It also suggests the petitioner based its description of the historical community not on social interaction or significant relationships among claimed ancestors but on their purported family name variations, followed by their residency patterns. A community theoretically constructed in such a manner by SSA does not meet the requirements of 83.7(b).

These abstracted census lists do not show that more than 50 percent of the claimed ancestors lived in a geographical area exclusively or almost exclusively composed of those claimed ancestors (83-7(b)(2)(i)). They were living dispersed among other non-member families in the Franklin County area, families which the petitioner has not described. Other evidence in the record indicates these neighborhoods were probably largely French-Canadian (Vicero 1971.00.00, 290-294; Hamon 1891, 194-198, 227-228). The petitioner has not provided evidence that significant informal interaction among a broad number of its claimed ancestors occurred in the neighborhoods listed in the abstracted census records (83-7(b)(1)(iii). Nor has the petitioner explained how its claimed ancestors in these areas differed in some way from other residents (83.7(b)(1)(vii)).

Finally, by relying on unsupported family-name variations to construct a historical community rather than evidence of actual consistent interactions and significant social relationships, the petitioner has described a collection of people whose migration and demographic patterns do riot demonstrate the behavior of a group of people who comprised a distinct community. For example, the petitioner contends that its claimed ancestors in 1800 numbered 207 people in 38 families, 19 neighborhoods, and 11 towns in the Franklin County area. By 1810, the number of ancestors had more than doubled to 591 people in 96 families, 25 neighborhoods, and 11 towns. Just 10 years later, however, the claimed group had shrunk to 316 people in 50 families, 23 neighborhoods and 2 islands, and 7 towns. But by 1830, the number of claimed ancestors morel than doubled in size to 700 people in families, and 11 towns. In 1840, they rose in number to 912 people in 154 families, 37 neighborhoods, and 10 towns. Ten years later, 924 people lived in 169 families, but the number of neighborhoods had fallen, without explanation, to 27 in 10 towns. In 1860, the totals had climbed to 1,282 people in 235 families, 32 neighborhoods, and 8 towns (the number of people in Swanton doubled in this time). The petitioner provided no figures for 1870 to 1890, and it unclear why it did not. In 1900 the number of claimed ancestors reached 1,322 people in 243 families, 27 neighborhoods, and 8 towns, but also included an unexplained "2 or 3 three groups of 100-150 each living in the Islands, St. Albans Bay and Swanton/Highgate" for a total of 1,522 to 1,772 (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix IA, 8-9). Such drastic fluctuations in the group's claimed ancestral population, often over a 10-year period, without any reasonable explanation of the social forces causing them, raises serious questions regarding the behavior of the petitioner's claimed ancestors in the 19th century. A community of people who have consistent interactions and significant social relationships with each other, and who have existed on a substantially continuous basis as required by the regulations, do not come and go so easily without reason. Therefore, the census data, for the reasons stated above, do not demonstrate the petitioner constituted a historical community as defined under criterion 83.7(b).
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Petitioner's Use of Vital Records in Demonstrating Criterion 83.7(b)
The petitioner's genealogical research as presented does not demonstrate that a predominant portion of the group's claimed ancestors comprised a distinct community during the 19th century. Generally, vital records are used as evidence for criterion 83.7(e), but they can in some circumstances have application as supporting evidence for certain aspects of criterion 83.7(b), such as demonstrating kinship ties and significant rates of patterned marriage among a group's members. In the petitioner's case, its assertions regarding kinship and marriage cannot be adequately analyzed or validated because the group did not provide any copies of primary vital documents such as birth records, baptismal certificates, marriage licenses, military documents, or death records for either its present-day members or its claimed ancestors. According to the petition, sources for data cited in the family history files and oral histories, including "Abenaki" and non-Indian "oral tradition" and other material, were supposed to be part of an Addendum C in the 1986 petition. The petitioner, however, never submitted these records (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 2, 99; Salerno 2001.10.23). The petitioner is encouraged to submit copies of vital records which demonstrate their case for criteria 83.7(e) and (b).

Despite the lack of documentation, some preliminary conclusions about its claimed ancestors can be drawn from the petitioner's limited evidence. The available evidence indicates the petitioner's claimed ancestors did not move to Vermont as a group; rather, they came as individual, unrelated families from different or unknown origins over an extended period of time. This does not demonstrate that the petitioner's claimed ancestors comprised a distinct community that has existed from historical times, as required by criterion 83.7(b). For instance, an analysis of the petitioner's family descendant charts from the 1986 submission reveals the petitioner's claimed ancestral families began moving to Vermont over many years in the early 19th century, in a disconnected fashion. These families continued moving to Vermont in a very gradual fashion until well into the 20th century. Many came from unknown places in Quebec or separate locations in the province like Waterloo, Saint Regis, Saint Gregoire, Iberville County, Saint Hyacinthe, Saint Dominique, or Saint Armand. Others came from Massachusetts, New York, Connecticut, or Rhode Island (Appendix A: Information Chart on Petitioner's Claimed Ancestors; see also VER 2002-12.00-2003.01.00 Response, 133-136). There is no available evidence showing these families interacted with each other as part of a community in Canada or the United States before they took up residence in Vermont, or as part of one distinct in some way from the wider society after they arrived in Vermont.

If the petitioner intends to use vital records from its genealogical research to demonstrate community under criterion 83.7(b), it is encouraged to submit photocopies of marriage licenses, birth certificates, and death records, and to use those documents as part of a marriage-rate analysis, perhaps arranged by decade, for its claimed ancestors and current members from historical times to the present (see for example, the Jena Band of Choctaw Proposed Finding 1995). Under criterion 83.7(b)(2)(ii), evidence that at least 50 percent of the marriages in the group are between members of the group shall be considered sufficient evidence of community at a given point in time. If the rates of marriage within the group fall below 50 percent but are still significant, then they may provide supporting evidence of community under criterion 83.7(b)(1)(i).
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Conclusion on Evidence of Community from 1800 to 1900

The evidence does not support the petitioner's claimed ancestors evolved from a Missisquoi Abenaki community that remained in northwestern Vermont after 1800. The available evidence does not demonstrate that the petitioner's claimed ancestors from the 19th century descended from a Western Abenaki Community that originated in Canada and later migrated as a group to Vermont in the 19th century. The available evidence does not demonstrate those claimed ancestors were part of a community distinct in some way from the wider society in northwestern Vermont. Nor does the available evidence show a predominant portion of petitioner's claimed ancestors during this time maintained consistent interactions and significant social relationships. Thus, the petitioner does not meet the requirements of criterion 83.7(b) from 1800 to 1900.

To demonstrate that a predominant portion of the petitioner's claimed ancestors did comprise a distinct community that existed during the 19th century, the petitioner is encouraged to provide analyses based on primary evidence, copies of primary documentation, and other evidence that shows those claimed ancestors meet the definition of community as set forth in criterion 83.1.

The submission of primary documentation is crucial in order to establish that the petitioner's claimed ancestors are indeed their ancestors. Further, the petitioner is encouraged to review criterion 83.7(b)(1) and (2) for examples of what types of evidence might be useful. The petitioner needs to demonstrate that the group's claimed ancestors lived in a community that others viewed as distinct from other populations during the 19th century. In general, what is missing from the petition is a discussion of how the claimed ancestors interacted with each other as a group during this time. The petitioner needs to show these claimed ancestors were participants in a continuously existing group and doing things together, such as making decisions, having and resolving disputes, perhaps marrying one another, maintaining property such as a cemetery, or any number of other activities that show them acting together. These might include, but are not limited to, discussions of the group's sacred or secular rituals, kinship ties, group meetings or projects, land management activities, and specific examples of social interaction between members. The petitioner needs to show its claimed ancestors interacting with each other, in addition to describing activities and events. Moreover, the analysis and evidence should address interaction across the claimed ancestral families and not just interaction among members of a single family.

Comments Regarding the Petition, 1900-1940

The petitioner's 1982 petition narrative makes several claims to the presence of a distinctly Native-American community in and around the Swanton/Highgate/St. Albans area in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Evidence presented by the petitioner includes, but is not limited to, numerous excerpts from oral histories and interviews, abstracts of local church records and birth certificates, a videotape of a television show in which some group members are interviewed, and a collection of objects purported to have been manufactured during the early 20th century by the petitioner's ancestors. The State disputes the petitioner's claims and has submitted evidence including, but not limited to, copies of birth, death, and marriage certificates of individuals identified by the petitioner as ancestral to the group copies of Federal census
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records, an analysis of specific birth certificates cited by the petitioner, World War I draft records, and newspaper and scholarly articles.

The petitioner has submitted many claims about the composition of the group in the early part of the 20th century, which it argues demonstrates there was a community of Abenaki living in the Swanton area. However, another major flaw of this claim is the number and type of documents that have been referenced or quoted in the SSA petition, but not submitted. These documents include (but are not limited to) at least four interviews and oral histories referenced in the petitioner's 1986 Response to the Letter of Obvious Deficiencies ("1986 Response"), (50.) the field notes of one of the petitioner's main researchers, and one large, multi-sectioned appendix to the petitioner's 1986 Response. Documents are referred to or abstracted, but copies are not included in the petitioner's submission. A document included with the group's 1995 petition submission stated that these documents were being intentionally withheld by the group "...because of the incident involving the Attorney General of the State of Vermont obtaining membership and other sensitive information on Abenaki members in the late 1980's . . ." (SSA 1995.12.11 [Second Addendum], 5). (51.) However, abstracts of documents compiled by the petitioner are inadequate. Departmental researchers need to examine documents for what they contain, not just what the petitioner claims they contain. The State has submitted copies of some of the original documents which the petitioner did not include, and when these records are examined, they do not support the petitioner's claims. The problems related to the petitioner's documents are not simply matters of interpretation of the meaning of document texts; rather, the petitioner's arguments are often demonstrably erroneous when the original documents are examined.

The problems associated with the petitioner's arguments can be demonstrated by the following example. On pages 81 to 82 of the 1982 Narrative, (52.) the petitioner states the following: "The 1870 census for that town [Grand Isle] lists William and Mary Cowin, both twenty-eight years old, as basketmakers, and they appear again in the 1880 census as William and Mary Obumsawin, a well known Abenaki name from Missisquoi. . . ." (53.) In this instance, the petitioner did not submit any copies of the census for examination. However, the 1870 and 1880 censuses were located and examined by Department researchers. The original documents demonstrate that the petitioner's assertions cannot be supported. The 1870 census of Grand Isle does not list any "Mary Cowin" in 1870, only a "William Cowin, 28, Male, Indian, born in Canada."(US Census 1870, Grand Isle County, Vermont) The 1880 census of Grand Isle, Vermont, lists "William Bomsawin, Male, Married, Indian, 46, born in Canada." His wife was listed as "Mary Bomsawin, Female, Married, Indian, 39, born in Canada." (US Census 1880, Grand Isle County, Vermont) The petitioner attempts to identify the "Mary Obumsawin" on the 1880 census as "Mary Maurice [Moritz] from Missisquoi" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 82), without any marriage certificates, birth records, family Bibles, or other documentation giving the maiden name of
FOOTNOTES:
50. See FAIR Image File SSA-PFD-VO05-D00 I.

51. For more information about this case, see the Administrative History.

52. See FAIR Image File SSA PFD V002-D0021.

53. This name is also spelled "Obomsawin," and "Obomsawin." It is a well-known Abenaki name among people who trace their ancestry back to the Odanak, or St. Francis, reservation in Canada.
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"Mary Bumsawin." The petitioner also offers no explanation as to why, if the two men were the same person, the names "Cowin" and "Bumsawin" changed so drastically in a 10-year period. Cowin was recorded as being 28-years old in 1870 and therefore should have been recorded as age 38 on the 1880 census; Bumsawin was recorded as age 46 in 1880. Although it is possible that these men were the same person, the discrepancies in their names and ages do not support this argument.

According to the petitioner, William and Mary "[0]Bunsawin" were remembered by a few older residents of Grand Isle, and the narrative stated that "[t]he information regarding the older Obumsawins from Grand Isle was recorded in interviews with John and Irene Baker and Clifford and Pearly Dubuque in 1978 and 1979" (SSA 1982.10.00 Petition, 82). None of the interview subjects' names appears in genealogical data submitted by the petitioner, and it seems they are not members of the group. It is not unusual to cite multiple interviews with both members arid non-members of a group regarding certain individuals, but the text references only interviews conducted with non-members. There is no explanation as to whether this is because the Obomsawins had lived at the end of the 19th century, before the oldest group members had been born, or for some other reason. Most crucially, the interviews themselves are not included with the petitioner's submission. According to the bibliographic citation, the information was taken from a manuscript written by John Moody and in the possession of the Abenaki Self-Help Association, the petitioning group's social service organization (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 230). Although the manuscript was submitted, the interviews were not, and therefore could not be examined in their entirety. The petitioner is encouraged to submit this document and others like it to support its contention that the Obumsawins were members of a community of Abenaki descendants in and around the town of Swanton.

Another example of the petitioner's interpretation of the data not conforming to the actual documentation is the assertion that a woman named Cordelia (Freemore) Brow (1843-1923) was "a popular midwife in her later years, and many of the children whose births she assisted around 1900. . . were listed as Indian-white [sic] in the town birth records" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 74-5). This ethnic categorization is credited to the intervention of Mrs. Brow. The group submitted no documentation or local histories naming Cordelia Brow as a midwife. Federal census records from 1910 do indicate that a 65-year old "Delia" Brow was living with her 73-year-old husband John on upper Fourth Street in Swanton, but with no indication of an occupation (US Census 1910, Franklin County, Vermont). The petitioner has not submitted any documentation produced during her lifetime identifying Mrs. Brow as a midwife. The group also generated and submitted a list of the 20 children it claims were listed as "Indian-White" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 211-12), but did not submit any copies of their actual birth records.

The State did submit photocopies of each of the birth certificates, as well as those of some siblings of people on the list (Birth Certificates [BC] 1904-1920). Upon examination of these documents, it is clear that the petitioner's claims are not supported by the evidence. The original documents are often ambiguous in their recording of any person's ethnic identity. Each form contained five qualifiers and instructions to strike out the ones that did not apply to the person being recorded. Some of the "strikes" are ambiguous, and do not appear to extend fully through a category, other times, they appear to extend through only by accident. For example, no specific category of "Indian-White" exists; instead, the other qualifiers "Black (Negro or
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mixed)," "Japanese," and "Chinese" would be stricken, leaving the categories of "Indian" and "White" on the page. Four certificates appear to indicate that the children were "White" and or as "Indian," while another six could be interpreted either as "White" or as Indian" and "White" depending on the interpretation of the strike marks. Four children appear to be "Indian-White Chinese," an obvious error, given the known information about the petitioner. One record has every identifier crossed out, while three have none crossed out. One has all the qualifiers except "Black" clearly stricken. One child is identified only as"White." Several copies of the record are difficult to read. Additional birth certificates and records provided by the State indicate that many times, full siblings were recorded differently, even when the informant was the child's father. Neither the State nor the petitioner included other birth certificates from other people in the area to demonstrate whether other children's ethnic identities were recorded in the same fashion.

Further, the petitioner maintains that Cordelia Brow was an active midwife in the area at the time, and was at least "partly" responsible for the recording of these individuals as "Indian." However, this theory is not demonstrated by the evidence presented in the documents. Three medical doctors are identified on the birth records as providing information for the birth certificates (A. Parenault is recorded on three certificates, C. E. Allen on two, and E. R. Lape on one). Two other individuals (A. L. Cross and H. H. Pierce 54 ) are also listed as informants on one certificate each. Mrs. John Brow (Cordelia Freemore Brow) is listed as the informant for one child, Emma St. Francis (St. Francis, Emma 1916.04.24[BC]). (55.) The other eleven informants were the children's fathers, including three sons of Mrs. Brow who were listed as the informants for their own children. Therefore, the only documentary evidence presented regarding any involvement of Mrs. Brow in the delivery of a baby was her name on the birth record for one child.

There is no other information in the submission that attributes the ambiguous recording of the ethnicity of these 20 children to any involvement by Cordelia Brow. Although she may have delivered the occasional baby (which would not have been uncommon for a rural woman in the United States), there is no information identifying Mrs. Brow as an active midwife responsible for the recording of births in the town records.

Indians in Vermont, 1900-1940

The petitioner has presented descriptions and photographs of several items that it maintains demonstrates the vitality of its ancestral community during the early 20th century. These items are included in a "catalog" of artifacts in the petitioner's museum that it maintains were made by Abenaki Indians. It is not clear, however, that anyone other than the petitioner has identified these articles as "Abenaki." However, the petitioner has not demonstrated these items originated in a Swanton-based community, rather than a collection of objects manufactured by Abenaki
FOOTNOTES:
54. A "Dr. Pierce" is named in the excerpt of an interview with a former midwife (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum 13], 111).

55. Genealogical information included in the petition indicates that Emma was Cordelia's first cousin, thrice removed.
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Indians who visited the area. Identifications of Abenaki Indians were not necessarily identifications of the petitioner or its claimed ancestors.

The petitioner submitted a copy of a picture postcard of a man fishing from a small boat. The photograph is undated, but the petitioner has estimated that it was taken around 1900. The postcard is inscribed with the caption "Chief of the Wabanacus, Highgate Springs, Vt." (Catalog, Wiseman, 2005, npn). The petitioner maintains that this document is "a Euroamerican technology (postcard) explicitly listing a status position (chief), cultural identifier- (`Wabanacus, a mis-hearing of an indigenous pronunciation of 'Abenaki'), and a northwestern Vermont location" (Wiseman 2005.00.00, npn). However, there are several problems with the petitioner's interpretation, namely that the postcard's meaning for purposes of determining tribal status is, at best, vague, and cannot be linked with any surety to the petitioner or any particular Indian tribe or individual. Therefore, the title of "chief' on a souvenir tourist postcard without any other documentation supporting the identity of the person in the photograph cannot be taken as an indicator of political status. Many tourist items from all over the country used (and still use) the term "chief' to describe any male Indian, just as they might use the term "princess" to describe any young female in tribal regalia. Further, the postcard appears as if the name of the individual had been scratched out, and the petitioner has offered no identification of this man, even though his face is visible. If this man was a "chief" of a Highgate Springs Abenaki community, then the petitioner should be able to provide a name for him, and describe at least some of the actions carried out under his leadership. The petitioner has offered no such information regarding this individual.

The petitioner includes a reference to an interview with a non-Indian, non-member named Alice Roy of Barre, Vermont. In this interview, Ms. Roy is said to have remembered her father describing a visit to "the Indians in northern Vermont, with descriptions of clothing and housing ... about 1910-1912." According to the petitioner, this demonstrates "that the Abenaki community was widely known, at least to the Vermont francophone community, or Alice Roy's father would not have known where it was located" (Wiseman, 2005.00.00, npn). Again, the petitioner did not submit a copy or transcript of the interview. (56.) Regardless, the petitioner's description of the interview is unpersuasive. The petitioner says only that Ms. Roy's father visited "the Indians" in northern Vermont, without giving the name of any particular town in the area, or any tribal identification for the Indians he is supposed to have visited. Without any explanation of where in northern Vermont this supposed community was located, it is not possible to state that Ms. Roy was referring to the petitioner's claimed ancestors.

The contention that the Roy interview demonstrates that "the Abenaki community was widely known, at least to the Vermont francophone community," is unsubstantiated. No interviews, newspaper articles, or other documents in French or English submitted by the petitioner
FOOTNOTES:
56. The "catalog" also makes reference to another interview, also not included with the petition, in which Ms. Roy and Professor James Petersen "share personal and family stories of Vermont's Gypsies in the 1920's and 1930's. Roy indicated that the Franco-Vermont community knew the Gypsies were Indians" (Wiseman, 2005.00.00, npn). Without the text of the interview, there is no way to know just what Ms. Roy actually said. Further, there is no explanation of just how it was that the "Franco-Vermont" community obtained this information, or why there are no references to this in any additional interviews or in any documents submitted by the petitioner.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Vermont Abenakis: Proposed Finding--Summary Under the Criteria--That This Group Does Not Exist As A Indian or Abenaki Tribe: Pages 44 to 52:

St. Francis/ Sokoki Band of Vermont Abenakis:
Proposed Finding - Summary Under the Criteria

Page 44
Criterion 83.7(b) requires that
a predominant portion of the petitioning group comprises a distinct community and has existed as a community from historical times until the present.

Introduction

Criterion 83.7(b) requires that a "predominant portion of the petitioning groupcomprises a distinct community." The term "predominant" establishes the requirement that at least half of the membership maintains significant social contact (59 FR 9287). This means at least half of the membership of the petitioner must participate in the social relationships, interaction, or institutions used to demonstrate community, and the remainder of the membership should be connected to those who participate.

The Federal acknowledgement regulations provide a specific definition of community.

Definition (83.1): Community means any group of people which can demonstrate that consistent interactions and significant social relationships exist within its membership and that its members are differentiated from and identified as distinct from nonmembers. Community must be understood in the context of the history, geography, culture, and social organization of the group.

To meet the requirements of 83.7(b), the petitioner must be more than a group of Indian descendants with common tribal ancestry who have little or no social or historical connection with each other. Sustained interaction and significant social relationships must exist among the members of the group. Petitioners must show interactions have occurred continuously since first sustained contact with non-Indians. Interaction should be broadly distributed among the membership, not just small parts of it.

The regulations also require the petitioner be a community distinct from other populations in the area. Members must maintain at least a minimal social distinction from the wider society. This requires that the group's members are differentiated from and identified as distinct in some way from nonmembers. The existence of only a minimal distinction provides no supporting evidence for the existence of community among the membership.

As the following analysis shows, the available evidence does not demonstrate a predominant portion of the SSA petitioning group's members or claimed ancestors have maintained consistent interaction and significant social relationships throughout history. Instead, it shows the petitioner is a collection of individuals of claimed but not demonstrated Indian ancestry with little or no social or historical connection with each other before the early 1970's. The evidence also establishes that the petitioner's claimed ancestors did not maintain at least a minimal distinction from nonmembers in the northwestern Vermont area and Lake Champlain region from historical times until the present.
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Evidence of Community before 1800

The available evidence does not demonstrate the petitioner has a historical or social connection to any Western Abenaki entity in existence before 1800. The petitioner has not provided evidence to show that a predominant portion of its claimed ancestors were interacting as a group before 1800, and therefore does not meet the requirements of criterion 83.7(b). There is no evidence to the support the petitioner's assertion that its claimed ancestors never left (or "hid out" in) Vermont. In fact, it is not known from the available evidence what the petitioner's claimed ancestors were doing before they took up residence to Vermont in the 19th century (see the following portions of criterion 83.7(b). For a discussion of this process). For additional discussion see the earlier section of the PF entitled Overview of the Petitioner and its Claimed Connection to the Historical Tribe.

Evidence of Community, 1800 to-1900

The Petitioner's Claims

In the petitioner's 1982 submission, it advanced the following theory about its claimed ancestors during the post-1800 period and relation to the present-day petitioner:

While precise figures will probably never be known for certain, it is clear by now that a number of Abenaki families never left Vermont, and that by 1830, many had begun to reestablish communities in Swanton, St. Albans Bay and Grand Isle which have a documented existence down to the present day. Some families ... adapted differently. They maintained a well hidden yet traditional pattern of subsistence, a way of life that continued at least until World War I, largely disappearing only when automobiles and telephone lines penetrated Vermont's backwoods in the years following the war. Other families adopted still a third pattern of accommodation, a more transient mode of existence that took them from town to town, traveling like gypsies (with whom they were often confused), horse trading at county fairs, settling down only briefly and then moving on. Oral histories collected in the past few years have provided evidence of these three modes of adaptation or accommodation to white settlement. All of these families maintained a flexible network of communication and intermarriage, and many have re-emerged in recent years to claim their rightful identity as the Abenaki Nation of Vermont.... (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 9-10)

This theory was originally developed by the petitioner's researcher John Moody in a 1979 unpublished manuscript, and further developed in the group's 1982 and 1986 petitions. (31.)

Regarding the evidence to support this claim, the petitioner described four categories of records: The first was a "handful of accounts from local historians written after the Civil War which describe the sort of small parties [of Indians] in the region." The second contained "[c]hurch and town records that provide more direct confirmation of families in the area." The third included "U.S. Census Data that reveal the range of dispersed inhabitants which continued in the
FOOTNOTES:
31. See "Missisquoi Abenaki: Survival in Their Ancient Homeland," by John Moody (Moody 1979).
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nineteenth century." And the last was "genealogical research and research on Abenaki family names from the Missisquoi area" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 53).

In its 1982 petition, the group submitted charts for about 15 claimed family lines from the Swanton, Highgate, and St. Albans areas of Franklin County. According to those charts, some of these family lines from unidentified origins began arriving in or establishing these "neighborhoods" around the 1850's (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 219, and Family Charts 1-8). But their point of origin is unknown and the limited available evidence does not demonstrate that these families were previously connected to one another as a group.

By 1986, the petitioner had expanded the number of claimed family lines from the 19th century to hundreds in as many as three dozen "neighborhoods" from about a dozen towns in the Franklin County area of Vermont (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 132, 133, also SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix IA). The total number of ancestors claimed by the petitioner ranged from 378 (or possibly as many as 3,000) in 1790 to 1,623 in 1910 (SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix 1A). (32.) The petitioner also indicated that many of the "neighborhoods" containing its claimed ancestors were in place as early as 1800. In its 1986 petition submission, the group concluded that the 1982 Petition's "basic position that the Abenaki Nation at Missisquoi lived a dispersed, family band existence from 1790 to 1840" had been "confirmed" (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], xiv). According to the petitioner, their research had confirmed "the perspective of a large, tenacious network of families and neighborhoods which remained centered around [sic] Missisquoi in the 1800 to 1920 period" (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 1). These two conclusions seem contradictory, as the petitioner has not clearly explained the social processes that maintained both a "dispersed, family band existence" and a "large, tenacious network of families and neighborhoods" centered in the vicinity of the Missisquoi delta during overlapping time periods. However, the petitioner further explained in its 1986 petition narrative: "The distinctions between neighborhoods and the lifestyles of certain families reflected in Moody (1979) and the [first] Petition has fallen away to accomodate [sic] the commonly heard statement in the contemporary Abenaki community that 'we are all related"' (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 21).

The State's Comments

In its comments, the State disputed the petitioner's argument that the group's claimed ancestral families constituted a distinct community during the 19th century. It argued as follows:

The lifestyle and migration pattern described by the petition is not evidence that these families are Indians. The movements of these people are the same as the travel patterns of the French Canadians who were migrating into and through
FOOTNOTES:
32.
The petitioner provided no membership figures for its membership from 1910 to 1980, and has not explained this gap. Census population schedules for 1920 and 1930 were not available at the time of the 1982 and 1986 submissions, but were accessible for the petitioner's 2005 submission. Presumably there is other available documentation, such as local, church, and school records, newspaper accounts, oral histories, and genealogical materials for this 70-year period that could be used to provide population data. The petitioner is encouraged to submit such evidence supported by as many copies of primary documentation as possible.
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Vermont during the same time. There is nothing in the evidence of the lifestyles that distinguishes the petitioner's relatives from the French Canadians. (VER 2002.12.00-2003.01.00 Response, 61)

Elsewhere, the State cast doubt on the petitioner's documentation of its claimed ancestral family lilies:

The petitioner has submitted various charts and lists of people who it claims are Abenaki-Indians of the Franklin County area: These lists have the quallty of shifting sands ever changing and impossible to grasp. In the 1982 submission, petitioner included family charts of approximately fifteen extended families. Petitioner also provided a small group of names from the federal censuses from the first half of the nineteenth century to demonstrate the presence of Abenakis in northwestern Vermont. In 1986, petitioner vastly expanded it's submission and included names of hundreds of families from the early nineteenth century (and into the twentieth) who it claimed were Abenakis. The 1986 list of names from the 1800 to 1830 censuses was over five times as large as the previous list submitted in 1982. The number of names that petitioner gleaned from the 1840 census and labeled as Indians grew fifteen fold between its 1982 and 1986 submissions. (VER 2002.12.00-2003.01.00 Response, 162-163).

The Problem of Using Family-Name Variations to Demonstrate Community

The petitioner identified the surnames of its claimed ancestral family lines based on variations of family names found mainly on 19th-century lists of St. Francis Indians at Odanak in Quebec. As best as can be determined, the group took the family names of present-day members and searched for variations of those surnames that appeared on these lists of the Saint Francis Indians at Odanak. The group next searched for further variations of those surnames in local church, town, land, school, and census records from the 19th century in the Franklin County area of Vermont, or from the "oral traditions" of current members. Once the petitioner perceived similarities between the surname of a current petitioner family line and surnames on these records, it designated the family line on the record part of an "Abenaki" community in the Franklin County area during the 19th century.

The use of such a methodology to demonstrate consistent interactions and significant social relationships for the group's claimed ancestral family lines under criterion 83.7(b) is unpersuasive. (33.) Using such a process means that these families were identified as part of a claimed ancestral community based mainly on the assumption that individuals with similar surnames had shared social interaction, and not because the record actually demonstrated consistent interactions and social relationships among them.

In addition, the petitioner has not submitted the primary documentation it used to create these lists of claimed ancestral family lines. While the petitioner described the contents of various town, church, and census records, and abstracted lists of unconnected surnames of claimed
FOOTNOTES:
33. The problem of using family-name or surname variations to demonstrate descent from the historical tribe is discussed in criterion 83.7(c).
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ancestral lines from there, it did not submit them. Nor did it provide most of the field notes, or genealogical materials referenced in its narratives. The petitioner is encouraged to submit copies of as many of these documents as possible for verification and analysis.

Finally, the petitioner has not provided evidence to demonstrate the claimed ancestral family lines which shared these surname variations were consistently interacting in a way that could be used to meet the requirements of criterion 83.7(b). For example, the petitioner has submitted little or no primary documentation from the 19th century to show these claimed ancestral faintly  had significant marriage rates within the group, significant social relationships, formal or informal, connecting individual ancestors, important cooperative labor or other economic activities among claimed ancestors, or noteworthy sacred or secular behavior involving most of the claimed group. These forms of evidence may be useful in satisfying criterion 83.7(b). It is also unclear if all the claimed ancestral family lines from the 19th century actually have descendants in the current group.

For the most part, the petitioner in both its 1982 and 1986 narratives relied on routine residency and biographical information to describe its claimed ancestors. This process involved using lists of family names abstracted from Federal censuses and local records to show that claimed ancestors belonged to a certain family line that lived in the Franklin County area, sometime between 1790 and 1910, or that they had a particular occupation, or attended a specific school (see, for example, SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 67-86). But the petitioner did not provide evidence of what the claimed ancestors were doing together as a group during specific time periods in the 19th century to give some chronological orientation to their possible activities. The petitioner is encouraged to review criterion 83.7(b)(1) and (2), and to submit additional evidence and analyses, perhaps arranged by decade, to demonstrate that its claimed ancestors meet the definition of community during the 19th century as defined in 83.1.

The Problems of Using the Four Categories of Evidence to Show Community

In its 1982 submission, the petitioner claimed four categories of evidence demonstrated the continued existence of an Indian community of its claimed ancestors in the Lake Champlain area after 1800 (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 53). The available documentation, however, does not demonstrate that these four evidence groups, accounts by local historians, church and town records, Federal censuses, and genealogical research on "Abenaki" surnames, as described in the petition narratives, show evidence of consistent interactions and social relationships among a predominant portion of the group's claimed ancestors during the 19th century.

Accounts by Local Historians and Other External Observers

The difficulty with using the accounts of local historians, mostly described but not submitted by the petitioner, is that they were typically brief sketches of widely dispersed, unidentified Indians who are not connected to the group's claimed ancestors by any evidence submitted by the petitioner (see, for example, SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 53-56). In the main, they depicted one or two individual Indians or small groupings of migratory Indians, often portrayed as being from St Francis in Quebec or an unknown place of origin. Some of these sightings were actually
St. Francis/ Sokoki Band of Vermont Abenakis:
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recollections of events which happened long before, in one case, almost 60 years earlier. They do not demonstrate that these individuals were part of all Indian community in Vermont or, more importantly, part of a distinct community from which the current petitioning group descended. In addition, they do not show the types of consistent interactions and social relationships among members of a community that would be useful in establishing the requirements of criterion 83.7(b), even if these individuals could be connected to the petitioner's claimed ancestors in the 19th century. What follows is an analysis of these accounts by local historians or chroniclers referenced by the petitioner. Also included are descriptions by other external observers who were actively looking for Indian communities in New England during the 19th century, and who might have been expected to describe the petitioner's ancestors, given their claimed numbers in northwestern Vermont during the time. Almost all these documents were submitted by the State. None described the petitioning group's claimed ancestors or any consistent interactions or social relationships among them.

In 1809, Edward Augustus Kendall described in six-volumes his travels throughout the northern regions of the United States. In the third volume, he related some of his travels in New England. He stated the Indians of Saint Francis and Becancour in Quebec still occasionally passed "between the Saint Lawrence and the Penobscot [northeastern Maine] and Saint John's [New Brunswick, Canada]" (Kendall 1809, 67-68). He also discussed some brief encounters with these Indians, none of whom were described by name or origin. Elsewhere in the volume, he recounted his travels in Rutland, Burlington, St. Albans, and Swanton, Vermont (Kendall 1809, 276, 304). While he provided an explanation of the Indian name of the Missisquoi River in this portion, he did not describe a group of the petitioner's claimed ancestors in the Franklin County area or any other Abenaki Indian entity that had remained in Vermont. For that time, the petitioner contends its claimed ancestors numbered 591 in the Franklin County area of northwestern Vermont, with 100 in Swanton and 81 in St. Albans." In 1810, the population of Franklin County was 16,427 (US Census Bureau 1872). The population of Swanton at the time, according to the website of the Swanton Historical Society, was 858. Assuming that the petitioner's figures and the Historical Society's figures are both correct, Kendall failed to mention that Swanton's population was 12% Indian. It is highly unlikely that the author would have overlooked or neglected to mention a concentrated population of Indians in Swanton.

In its 1982 submission, the petitioner quoted from but did not provide a copy of an 1820 account from the Burlington Free Press of a "strolling party of Indians consisting of nine persons," which had camped out near the town of Rutland in Rutland County, Vermont, about 80 miles south of Swanton. The newspaper described these unidentified Indians as "squatters" from an unspecified area who intended to "remain during the winter" (SSA 1982. 10.00 Petition, 56). While this account may show that some unidentified, migratory Indians were present in Rutland, Vermont, in 1820, it did not provide any specific tribal affiliation for these Indians, name any of the petitioner's claimed ancestors, or describe any social interaction among these Indians and the petitioner's claimed ancestors that would demonstrate community under criterion 83.7(b). In 1822, Jedidiah Morse compiled a report for the Secretary of War on Indian groups in the United States based on Ills 1820 travels, in which the listed the numbers of Indians cast of the Mississippi. Some of these Indian groups came from isolated areas similar to northwestern
FOOTNOTES:
34. For the petitioner's population estimates of its claimed ancestors please see SSA 1996.01.17, Appendix IA, 9-10.
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Vermont, and, in several cases their numbers were quite small (Morse 1822.00.00, 64-69, 361365, 375). He did not, however, list or describe the petitioner's claimed ancestors or any other Indian entity in Vermont. For that time, the petitioner claims its ancestors numbered 316 In the Franklin County area of Vermont. (35.)

Six years later, F. S. Eastman produced an early history of Vermont and its "original Indian inhabitants." Following a discussion of those original Indian he stated not "a vestige of them" remained as "the encroachments of the whites" pushed "them farther and farther on" (Eastman 1 828.00.00, 20). He also discussed the "application" of "some of unidentified Indian Chiefs from Canada, claiming a large tract of land in the northwest part of the state" (Eastman 1828.00.00, 78-79). These were representatives from the so-called "Seven Nations" (see criterion 83.7(c) for a full discussion of these land claims). There is no available evidence that the petitioner's claimed ancestors were involved with these land claims. Eastman did not describe the claimed ancestors of petitioning group, who, at the time, according to the petitioner's calculations, numbered about 700 in the Franklin County area. (36.)

In April 1835, the Green Mountain Democrat of Vermont published an article called "An Indian Encampment in Connecticut." The article described a party of 15 Indians encamped for the winter at Windsor, Vermont, on the Connecticut River, which is about 100 miles southeast of Swanton, Vermont. It portrayed the Indians as "part of the tribe of the Missisquoi," which lived "a wandering life on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain." The group was traveling to Hanover, New Hampshire, "for the purpose of entering a member of the family in Dartmouth College" (Green Mountain Democrat 1835.04.03). The 17-year old potential scholar ("Say-so-saph Saba-tese Al unum") was the only Indian identified by name. This description of these Indians provided here does not indicate that they were part of an Indian community composed of the petitioner's claimed ancestors in the Franklin County area, who, according to the group's statistics, numbered about 700 people in 11 towns at the time. The petitioner loosely translated the young boy's name as "St. Joseph St. John Baptiste Alanum," but admitted the Alanum family name had not been identified in either the present Odanak community in Quebec or the petitioning group. Nonetheless, the petitioner made tenuous connections to some members of the group who have claimed "St. John" ancestors, and then concluded this account was "a major confirmation of the continued Abenaki community in the Champlain Valley after 1800" (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 311-312). A close reading of the document does not warrant such a claim, since it is only a brief, first-time sighting of a small group of mostly unidentified Indians, sighted far away from Lake Champlain, who then disappeared from the record.

In its 1986 submission, the petitioner described a July 1835 letter by Amable Petithomme, a French missionary from Burlington, Vermont, in which it claimed he made the statement: "'I sleep in the poor cabins of the Indians' when traveling along the eastern shore of Lake Champlain" (SSA 1986.05.23 [Addendum B], 312-313). The petitioner did not provide a copy of the letter, and the State claimed the archives which housed the letter reported it "missing from their files" (VER 2002.12.00-2003.01.00 Response, 35). As the State correctly observed, the petitioner's quoted portion of the letter did not actually describe the location of these Indians
FOOTNOTES:
35. In 1820 the population of Franklin County was 17,182 (US Census Bureau 1872).

36. Two years later, in 1830, the population of Franklin County was 24,525 (US
Census Bureau 1872).
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cabins. In addition, the State provided a copy of R. P. Mouly's 1960 biography, written in French. The State claimed that the biography quoted from a portion of the 1835 letter, and argued the quoted portion actually read: "une vie difificile et qu'il loge habituellement dans des cabanes," (37.) or essentially that the missionary's life was a difficult one, and he often found lodging in cabins, without mentioning any Indians or an exact location (Vermont 2002.12.00-2003.01.00 Response, 35; Mouly 1960.00.00, 44). Even if the missionary's letter had indicated he slept in the cabins of some unidentified Indians, such a vague statement would not be a description of the petitioning group's claimed ancestors in the Franklin County area of Vermont. Nor does it provide evidence of social interaction among a predominant portion of those claimed ancestors.

In 1845 Samuel G. Drake's Book of the Indians was published, in which he provided a history of the Indians of North America since first discovery. In it, Drake supplied an alphabetical listing of Indian groups in the United States. Under "Abenakies, he stated they were "over Maine [sic] until 1754, then went to Canada; 200 in 1689; 150 in 1750" (Drake 1845.00.00,v). He listed several Eastern Abenaki groups in Maine and New Brunswick, Canada, but it is unclear at times if he believed all these were still extant or not. He stated that there were a small number of Passamaquoddies in Maine. Other small groups from New England described were the Wampanoag of Herring Pond, Mashpee, and Gay Head (Drake 1845.00.00, vi-xii). He did not describe the petitioning group's claimed ancestors or any Indian entity in Vermont. At the time, the petitioner's claimed ancestors, according to the group's estimates, numbered 912 people in 37 neighborhoods from 10 towns around the Franklin County area. (38.)

From 1848 to 1857, several works by Henry Schoolcraft were published. Schoolcraft wrote extensively on and traveled among numerous Indian groups during his life (1793-1864), starting as early as 1806. In his writings, he described and gave population estimates for many New England Indian groups, large and small. In none of these accounts did he describe the petitioning group's claimed ancestors in the Franklin County area, who by 1860, according to the group's statistics, numbered about 1,282 people in 32 neighborhoods from 8 towns. (39.)
FOOTNOTES:
37. The claimed quote in Mouly read "Ainsi va le missionaire, Le Pere reconnait lui-meme qu'il une vie difficile et qu'il loge habituellement dans des cabanes" (Mouly 1960.00.00, 44).

38. In 1840, the population of Franklin County was 24,531 (US Census Bureau 1872).

39. See The Indian in His Wigwam or Characteristics of the Red Race of America (New York, 1848). This book contained only one reference to "Abenakee" on page 234 in a section entitled "Ethnology." It referred to the group as "Eastlanders, a distinct people, consisting of a plurality of tribes, who formerly occupied the extreme north eastern part of the United States." See Personal Memoirs of a Residence of Thirty Years with the Indian Tribes on the American Frontiers: with Brief Notices of Passing Events, Facts, and Opinions, A.D. 1812 to 1842 (Philadelphia, 1851). In this work there was no mention of any contemporary Abenaki group in his journeys from 1812 to 1842. See American Indians, Their History, Condition and Prospects, Original Notes and Manuscripts (Buffalo, 1851; reprint New York, 1977). This was an expanded version of the 1848 book. It included the same reference to the Abenaki cited above. See Historical and Statistical Information Respecting the History, Condition, and Prospects of the Indian tribes of the United States; Collected and Prepared under the Direction of the Bureau of Indian Affairs per Act of Congress of March 3rd, 1847, Volumes 1-6 (Philadelphia, 1851-1857). Volume 1 of this work on page 524 gave an 1847 census of Indians. No Vermont or New Hampshire Indians were listed. Volume 3 on page 583 also provided a census of Indians groups in 1825. Schoolcraft listed 200 St. John's Indians in New Brunswick, Canada; 379 Passamaquoddies and 277 Penobscots in Maine; 320 Mashpee, 40 Herring Pond Indians,
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In 1853, Edwin H. Burlingame, an instructor at Barre Academy in Barre, Vermont, just outside of Montpelier, 50 miles southeast of Swanton, described in his journal an encounter with some Indians. On October 22, during a walk with a friend, he came across "an encampment" of Indians "about a mile above the village," who were "stopping ... for a few days." The Indians had pitched their tents "near the river." The author claimed they were from "a couple of distinct tribes, one from St. Francis in Canada, and the other from Maine," and their tents were filled "with basket stuff and material for bows and arrows" (Burlingame 1853). He did not describe any of the petitioner's claimed ancestors from the Franklin County area in this account.

Seven years later, Samuel Sumner produced a local history of the Missisquoi Valley, which detailed the Franklin County area in northwestern Vermont. On pages 26 to 27, Sumner described an encounter in the winter of 1799-1800 between sonic of the early settlers near Troy, Vermont, about 30 miles east of Swanton, and a "small party" of nomadic Indians led by a Captain Susap (Sumner 1860.00.00. 26). One of the Indians was a medicine woman named Molly Orcutt. They were selling baskets and trinkets, and, according to the author, left in the spring and never returned (Sumner 1860.00.00. 26-27). Other evidence demonstrates that these Indians were probably originally from Maine. (40.) Sumner did not describe the petitioning group's claimed ancestors, who, at the time, according to the group's statistics, numbered about 1,282 in the Franklin County area, or any social interaction among them. (41.)

In 1863, John Perry wrote a history of Swanton, Vermont, which was published in 1882 in the Vermont Historical Gazetteer. In it, Perry described the origins of the St. Francis Indians of Quebec and the Missisquoi village near Swanton. According to Perry, the Missisquoi began moving to Canada after the American Revolution, as their sympathies lay with the British, and

340 Gay Head Indians, and 50 Troy Indians in Massachusetts; 420 Narragansett in Rhode Island; 300 Mohegan, 50 Stonington [Pequot], and 50 Groton [Pequot] in Connecticut. No Indians were listed for Vermont or New Hampshire. It also included a Table G on page 590, which indicated in 1829 there were 6,273 Indians in states from South Carolina to Maine. Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island were all listed as having Indians. Vermont and New Hampshire were not. Volume 5 provided the totals of Indians in 1825 for Maine (956), Massachusetts (750), Rhode Island (420), and Connecticut (400). No Indians were noted for Vermont or New Hampshire. Volume 6 on pages 686-689 contained a census for 1857. It listed 420 Narragansett in Rhode Island, 379 Passamaquoddles and 297 Penobscots in Maine. No Indians were included for Vermont or New Hampshire. The State quoted from Volume 4 (1851-1854, page 542), claiming Schoolcraft asserted the Abenaki were now "seated at the St. Francis Village" [Quebec] and inhabited territory "situated on the south of the St. Lawrence, between the St. John's of New Brunswick and the river Richelieu, Canada."
FOOTNOTES:
40. See the Autobiography of a Criminal, A Narrative of the Life, Adventures, Travels and Sufferings of Henry Tufts. This 1807 book chronicled Tufts sojourns among the Abenaki of Maine from 1772 to 1775. On page 60, he claimed to be in Sudbury, Canada, which Gordon Day in his article, "Henry Tufts as a Source on Eighteenth Century Abenakis," identified as actually being Bethel, Maine (Day 1974, 191-192). Tufts apparently traveled around visiting various Abenaki camps, and contended the "entire tribe" was "in number about seven hundred of both sexes, and extended their settlements, in a scattering, desultory manner, from Lake Memphremagog [southeast Quebec just north of Newport, Vermont] to Lake Umbagog [Maine near the far northern New Hampshire border], covering an extent of sonic eighty miles" (Tufts 1807, 60, 64). Day believed these were Western Abenaki from (Day 1974, 192). During his visits, Tufts encountered the Molly Orcutt mentioned in the Sumner book. The petitioner's current members claim no descent from Molly Orcutt.

41. In 1860 the population of Franklin County was 27,103. No Indians were listed (US Census Bureau 1872).

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