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Sunday, January 2, 2011

Final Determination Against Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont Pages 32 to 42:

[32.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

Criterion 83.7(c) requires that the petitioner has maintained political influence or authority over its members as an autonomous entity from historical times until the present.

Summary of the Proposed Finding
The PF concluded, based on the available evidence, that the petitioner did not meet criterion 83.7(c) at any point in time. The PF evaluated the petitioner's case over four distinct periods: (1) 1600 through 1800; (2) 1800 through 1900; (3) 1900 through 1975; and (4) 1975 through the present.

For the period before 1800, the PF concluded that the available evidence did not demonstrate that the petitioner's members or its claimed ancestral family lines were part of any Western Abenaki Indian tribe in either Quebec or Vermont. Additionally, the petitioner lacked evidence that its ancestors were part of the group led by the colonial period's known Western Abenaki chiefs, like Grey Lock and Joseph-Louis Gill. Furthermore, the petitioner did not provide evidence that its specific claimed ancestors were a group exercising political influence before 1800 (Abenaki PF 2005, 93-94). Consequently, the available evidence did not demonstrate that the petitioner's ancestors maintained political influence or authority over its group before 1800.

For the period from 1800 to 1900, the available evidence did not demonstrate that the petitioner's claimed ancestors were a group from 1800 to 1875, exercising political influence or authority. During this period there were several land claims made by Iroquois Indians who claimed land in northern Vermont. However, the available evidence does not show that an Abenaki group from northern Vermont was a party to these land claim activities. Furthermore, the accompanying discussions did not mention the presence of an Abenaki group residing in northern Vermont who might also have claim to lands in the northern part of the state.
The PF concluded, "no Western Abenaki entity containing the petitioner's claimed ancestors existed in northwestern Vermont in the 19th century capable of exercising political authority or influence," but encouraged the petitioner to provide evidence demonstrating how its claimed ancestors exercised political influence or authority as a group during this period (Abenaki PF 2005, 95).

Later in the 19th century, in particular, for the period from 1875 to 1900, the petitioner claimed that Nazaire St. Francis provided food and clothes to children, and that Cordelia (Freemore) Brow was a midwife; consequently, the petitioner argued, these two ancestors served as informal leaders of a community of its claimed ancestors. The PF concluded, however, that these activities alone did not constitute an exercise of political authority, but encouraged the petitioner to investigate the activities of these individuals further (Abenaki PF 2005, 95-96). Neither the petitioner nor any other party submitted comments that addressed this request by the Department.
[33.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

For the period from 1900 to 1975, the PF concluded that the petitioner "presented little evidence demonstrating informal leadership among any group of the petitioner's claimed ancestors" (Abenaki PF 2005, 107). Although the petitioner provided a few examples of individuals who allegedly exercised political influence, the PF found this evidence insufficient and requested more substantive evidence that these individuals influenced members of a distinct group and evidence that their authority extended beyond their family members. Furthermore, the PF encouraged the petitioner to provide information documenting how the group's ancestors responded to the Vermont Eugenics Survey or the Iroquois land claims of the 1950's, two events that would have been likely to elicit a political response from the petitioner's ancestors.

For the period since 1975, the PF noted the creation of the SSA as an active political organization, particularly as evidenced by the leadership of Homer St. Francis and Leonard Lampman. During this period, the SSA engaged the State of Vermont in several legal disputes, started its pursuit of Federal acknowledgment, and instituted several social and cultural programs. However, the PF concluded that the available evidence was not sufficient to demonstrate widespread participation by the group's members in these political processes; instead, the available evidence suggested the "political influence is limited to the actions of a few group members pursuing an agenda with little input from the membership" (Abenaki PF 2005, 108). Political influence should exist bilaterally between leaders and followers . 20. The PF recommended that the petitioner submit additional evidence, including meeting minutes and sign-in sheets, which might help clarify the nature of the political processes and the group's participation in those processes (Abenaki PF 2005, 102-103, 106).

In summary, the PF concluded that the available evidence was insufficient to show that the petitioner met the requirements of criterion 83.7(c) at any time during the period from early historical contact to the present.

Comments on the Proposed Finding
On May 15, 2006, the Department received a letter from the petitioner, signed by April St. Francis-Merrill and six additional council members that included four brief essays by Frederick Wiseman that constituted a partial response to the PF. Only one of these four essays, an essay about a "chief' in a souvenir postcard, addresses criterion 83.7(c).

On May 17, 2006, the Department received comments from Lester M. Lampman and several individuals associated with the petitioning group. These comments consisted of a photograph of Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont with Leonard Lampman, a photograph of the "Grandma Lampman Site," and 11 pages of additional documents. Some of these comments apply to criterion 83.7(c) for the modern period.
_________________
FOOTNOTE:
20. The Department has interpreted the regulations in past decisions that, "[i]t must be shown that there is a political connection between the membership and leaders and thus that the members of a tribe maintain a bilateral political relationship with the tribe .... If a small body of people carries out legal actions or makes agreements, ... the membership may be significantly affected without political process going on or without even the awareness or consent of those affected" (Miami FD 1992, 15).
[34.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

On August 22, 2006, the Department received comments from the governing body of the petitioner, including a set of photocopied treaty documents, four Internet essays entitled "Abenaki History," and a collection of meeting minutes from the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's. Much of this material applies to criterion 83.7(c).

John Moody submitted a set of comments that the Department received on May 15, 2006. His submission included 9 pages of comment and discussion; and 10 pages of photocopies of primary sources. Some of his comments apply to criterion 83.7(c).

The petitioner did not submit any additional information, as the PF requested, describing how its ancestors responded politically to the Iroquois land claims in the 19th century, or the Vermont Eugenics Survey (Abenaki PF 2005, 107). Similarly, the petitioner did not provide any further evidence, as the PF requested, describing the activities of Nazaire St. Francis and Cordelia (Freemore) Brow, the two women whom the petitioner alleged were informal political leaders (Abenaki PF 2005, 107). Moreover, although the petitioner submitted a collection of meeting minutes from the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's, the petitioner did not submit any information, as the PF requested, demonstrating bilateral political influence between the SSA leaders and the broader membership.

Analysis for the Final Determination
For clarity, the FD will present its findings using the four periods of analysis that that the PF used. These four periods are: (1) first contact through 1800; (2) 1800 through 1900; (3) 1900 through 1975; and (4) 1975 through the present.

Political Influence, First Contact through 1800
In its August 2006 submission, the petitioner included comments that apply to the Abenaki Indians before 1800. These comments include the set of Internet essays from the "Manataka American Indian Council" on Abenaki history and culture during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. These Internet essays, as described above under 83.7(b), are entitled to little weight as evidence within the meaning of the regulations. These essays provide some evidence in support of the PF's conclusion that there was an Abenaki entity in or around northern Vermont before 1800 that exercised political authority. However, the available evidence does not show that the Internet essays are discussing the petitioner's ancestors, and therefore these Internet essays do not help demonstrate that the petitioner's ancestors exercised political influence within a group in or around northern Vermont.

In the same August 2006 submission, the petitioner submitted several treaty and proclamation documents from the 18th century. These documents are described above under criterion 83.7(b). These documents speak of Indians in non-specific, generic terms and do not link the petitioner to any specific Abenaki Indians from northwestern Vermont. Therefore, these documents do not provide evidence that the ancestors of the petitioner exercised political influence within a group in northwestern Vermont before 1800.
[35.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

In his May 2006 comments, Moody discusses two sets of documents that were allegedly created in the late 18th century but, at present, either are not locatable or do not exist. Moody speculates that, if found, these documents might help describe Abenaki leadership in northwestern Vermont during the 18th century in a manner that would satisfy criterion 83.7(c). Moody's speculations, however, cannot be verified and thus do not provide evidence for the purposes of this criterion. As this FD discusses elsewhere, the Department makes its decisions based on available evidence (see criterion 83.7(e) for a further discussion of these documents and their unavailability).

Political Influence, 1800-1900
For the period from 1800 to 1900, there is one piece of information submitted in the comment period that pertains to criterion 83.7(c). This is a copy of the Treaty of Ghent, submitted by the petitioner in August 2006. This treaty, signed in 1814, secured peace between the United States and Great Britain following the War of 1812. As discussed under criterion 87.3(b) above, Article IX of the treaty discusses matters pertaining to Indians, but uses only the generic terms "Indian," "tribe," and "nation" to refer to Indian entities. The treaty makes no specific reference to an Abenaki entity or an Indian community in northwestern Vermont. Therefore, the Treaty of Ghent does not provide evidence to help the petitioner meet criterion 83.7(c).

Political Influence, 1900-1975
Although the petitioner provided a few examples of individuals who allegedly exercised political influence during this period, the PF found that this evidence did not demonstrate political influence as described by the criterion. The PF requested more substantive evidence that these individuals influenced members of a distinct group and evidence that their authority extended beyond their family members. Furthermore, the PF encouraged the petitioner to provide information documenting how the group's ancestors responded to the Vermont Eugenics Survey or the Iroquois land claims of the 1950's, two events that would have been likely to elicit a political response from the petitioner's ancestors. The petitioner did not submit any of this requested additional evidence during the comment period.

During the comment period, the petitioner resubmitted a black and white postcard picturing an unidentified "chief' to support its claim of political influence of an historical Abenaki Indian tribe in Vermont in the early 20th century. The PF stated the "chief' depicted on the souvenir tourist postcard did not provide evidence of political influence connected to the group's claimed ancestors. The petitioner's "Against the Darkness" video presentation contains the same black and white postcard showing a man sitting in a small boat. The photograph is undated, but the petitioner estimates that it dates to around 1900. The provenance of the postcard is unclear, but the petitioner stated earlier that "[t]he postcard was purchased from the Internet from a California collector" (Wiseman Catalog 2005). The postcard contains the caption "Chief of the Wabanacus, Highgate Springs, VT." In "The Case of the 'Chief of the Wabanacus' Post Card," Fred Wiseman states:

The BAR/BIA requires Euroamerican evidence of historical political activity and/or status by Vermont Abenakis to document political continuity. There is no
[36.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

more important signifier of Native political status in turn-of-the-century Anglo-America than the term "chief," especially when closely tied to an ethnic identifier.


One of the more interesting misinterpretations by the BAR/BIA of the Missisquoi documentary record is the case of the ca. 1900 postcard with a picture of a dark-complexioned man in a boat.... BAR/BIA attacks this simple, common sense evidence of political status by Euroamericans, making an implausible argument that the postcard does not mean what it says.


The specific term "Chief' was applied to the individual in the boat through a negative-incised legend at the bottom of the postcard. This postcard inscription was reinforced by the Ben Gravel memoir (e.g. Voice of the Dawn, page 144) that refers to a chief during the same general period in Swanton. (Wiseman 5/15/2006)

The name of the "chief," however, is scratched out, making identification of the individual impossible. If this man was a "chief' of any Abenaki community, the petitioner needed to provide a name for him, and describe at least some actions carried out under his leadership to be meaningful evidence under 83.7(c). The petitioner provided no documented information regarding this individual. This souvenir postcard does not provide evidence of political influence under 83.7(c) for the petitioner during this time.

Political Influence, 1975 to the Present
The PF analyzed ASHAI meeting minutes for the years 1978-1984 and 2001-2005. The petitioner censored some of the original ASHAI meeting minutes. The PF requested that the petitioner submit uncensored copies of the censored minutes, along with copies of meeting minutes for the years not yet submitted. The PF also analyzed SSA council meeting minutes for 1976-1984 and 1996-2005, but requested meeting minutes for the 1985-1996 period (Abenaki PF 2005, 102).

In its August 2006 submission, the petitioner submitted additional meeting minutes. There are three types of meetings for which the petitioner submitted minutes: council meetings, ASHAI meetings, and joint meetings of the council and ASHAI. During the comment period, the petitioner responded by submitting 293 pages of minutes of ASHAI meetings for the years 1987 to 1995, along with minutes from 15 joint meetings of the ASHAI and the council that spanning 1988 to 1997. The new submissions also included 600 pages of council minutes for 1976 to 1996.

With the previously submitted minutes, the petitioner's "tribal council" minutes cover a span from 1976 to 2005. The new and previously submitted ASHAI and joint minutes span from 1988 to 1995. There are some months for which the petitioner did not submit meeting minutes, indicating that there may not have been meetings during those months, or that the minutes were unavailable for submission; the petitioner did explain why certain months had no meeting minutes. As requested, the new submissions contained names of those who participated in the
[37.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

meetings. The comments, along with previous materials, support the PF's finding that the petitioner first created its political organizations in the 1970's.

The group began recording meeting minutes in the 1970's. In 1975, with the encouragement of Ronnie Cannes, a non-Abenaki, the group founded the ASHAI (SSA 10/1982 Petition, 105). It formed the "Abenaki Tribal Council," in late 1976 or 1977 (ATC 1977, 1). The two organizations often shared board members and overlapped in their activities. As a whole, the organizational minutes of ASHAI and the council showed some attempts by the group to seek support or to establish relations with Indian organizations, State agencies in Vermont, and Federal agencies. The group also became interested with tribal recognition issues beginning in the 1970's and continuing to the present. Their pursuit of tribal recognition issues brought them into contact the Native American Rights Fund, the State of Vermont, and Federal agencies.

Since 1995, most of the petitioner's political activities within its organizations were mainly the product of the St. Francis family and its limited number of supporters. The PF stated:

In 1995, he [Homer St. Francis, 1935-2001] led a successful drive to change the group's constitution to make the position of "Chief" a lifetime appointment limited to members of his family, a move that many in the group disagreed with and which contributed to a split within the group (Walsh 11/7/1995). When he became too ill to handle the daily responsibilities of the group, he named his daughter "Acting Chief' and then became the "Grand Chief" He remained in this position until his death in 200[1], and his daughter April (St. Francis) Merrill currently serves as "Chief." Two of St. Francis's sons served on the group's governing body with their father and sister for many years, as did a number of nieces and nephews.


... [A newspaper report from 1979 stated that] St. Francis's "authoritarian style" and his disregard for the opinions of others led to the formation of the breakaway group. This would not be the last time that a portion of the group split away from the main body nor would it be the last time that St. Francis's leadership was cited as the reason. (Abenaki PF 2005, 104)

The PF also stated:

The September 27, 1998, general meeting includes the information that 14 people were in attendance, but does not say whether those 14 included the people who were already serving on the council, or if all 14 of those people were eligible to vote. Nominations were made for members to serve on the ASHAI board and on the group's governing body, but instead of ballots being cast, the minutes indicate that ... the Chief cast one ballot, to elect Tribal Council and ASHAI board of directors by acclamation (SSA 1998.09.27, 1). Further, the minutes read as follows: "We don't have to have an election. You are all now all Tribal Council and ASHAI board of directors. . . ." (Abenaki PF 2005, 103)
[38.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

The petitioner did not provide evidence that the membership as a whole cared about, agreed, or disagreed with the decisions and actions of its leaders. An important task for the petitioner during the comment period was to provide evidence of bilateral political influence between the council members and ASHAI officers on the one hand, and the broader membership on the other.

The available minutes from the council, ASHAI, and joint meetings did not show that members participated in the decision-making process or that they expressed concern about the importance of political issues. That is, the minutes do not show bilateral influence between the council members and ASHAI officers on the one hand, and the broader membership on the other. For example, on March 12, 1977, a special membership meeting called to adopt a "Constitution for the Abenaki Nation/Vermont" had only 19 members present.

Another example that suggests a low degree of participation in the SSA's political process can been seen by examining the attendance at nomination meetings. The petitioner's nomination meetings represented one of the few times that the general membership could nominate and vote for candidates to run for offices of the petitioner's organizations. Yet, the SSA had only limited attendance at these meetings. While petitioner's membership during the late 1970's and early 1980's varied between 300 and 1,670 members, the attendance at the nomination meetings were very limited. The following is a list of the SSA's nomination meetings and the number of people who attended them:

On September 26, 1977, 39 people attended.
On August 13, 1979, 18 members attended.
On August 5, 1981, 37 people attended.
On September 30, 1982, 19 people attended.
On December 7, 1982, 17 people attended.
On August 30, 1983, 24 people attended.
On September 27, 1984, 10 people attended.
On September 2, 1985, 13 people attended.
On September 17, 1986, 9 people attended.
On August 27, 1987, 16 people attended.

During this 10-year period, an analysis of the 120 members attending the nomination meetings demonstrated:

85 members attended only one meeting.
14 members attended two meetings.
5 members attended 3 meetings.
2 members attended 4 meetings.
4 members attended 5 meetings.
3 members attended 6 meetings.
0 members attended 7 meetings.
1 members attended 8 meetings.
0 members attended 9 meetings.
2 (Homer St. Francis and Leonard Lampman, Sr.) attended all 10 meetings.
[39.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

After 1987, council minutes of nomination meetings are not available.

The minutes show the group first created its political organizations in the 1970's, but they engaged only a few members of the petitioner's group. The evidence does not demonstrate a bilateral political relationship between the rest of the members and the group's leadership. For example, on September 11, 1978, 24 people attended the meeting. Homer St. Francis spoke about "having more people attend meetings and having more volunteers instead of the same ones all the time." The PF commented that this low rate of participation in the group's decision-making process and elections showed a lack of a bilateral relationship between the group's leadership and the broader membership (Abenaki PF 2005, 103). Between August 1976 and October 1996, a review of 194 council meetings and the number of participants revealed that the average attendance of council meetings was between 8 and 9 individuals of whom 4 to 8 were board members. The available information reveals that attendance at council meetings did not represent an attendance high enough to demonstrate the involvement of a substantial portion of the group's members. High levels of meeting attendance are not required to demonstrate the existence of political processes, and this final determination has evaluated the evidence about meeting attendance together with other evidence of political participation for this period. However, the evaluation of that other evidence for both the proposed finding and the final determination does not show that the group's political activities involved a signification portion of the group's membership or that a bilateral relationship existed between the members and the group's leaders.

Since the 1970's, the petitioner has claimed, to varying degrees, as many as 1,500 to 2,000 members in its group. However, as indicated by the minutes, the petitioner lacks a clear understanding of the numbers of its claimed members. As discussed above in criterion 83.7(b), at a September 10, 1996 "tribal council" meeting, "potential citizens" had been "selected more-or-less at random from the genealogy computer and the phone book" (ATC 9/10/1996). Recruiting "potential citizens" from the Internet and a phone book demonstrated that the petitioner lacked a community over which to exercise political authority. Moreover, the minutes clearly demonstrate that only a fraction of the members participated in political decision-making processes regardless of the actual number of members. Attendance at meetings is only one way that a group may document political processes. In this case, however, the petitioner did not provide other evidence to show that the members were aware or involved in issues of concern to the governing body.

Based on the available evidence, the petitioner's political influence is similar to that maintained in social clubs, nonprofit groups, or other voluntary organizations. Generally, a small number of the petitioner's members carried out political actions affecting the political interests of only a small number of active members, but the available evidence shows that the rest of the claimed members had little or no participation in the council's actions. Under the acknowledgment regulations, a petitioner must be a distinct political body, able to exercise significant formal or informal influence over its members, who in turn influence the policies and actions of the leadership as defined under criterion 83.7(c)(1)(iii). The available evidence demonstrates that participation in the group's political processes was not widespread across the claimed members.
[40.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

Lester Lampman's comments indicated his concern about the process to achieve Federal recognition and attempted to provide some support for the group's petition. Lampman's cover letter included a short history of his family and the petitioning group. His comments included: (1) A letter from Congressman Leahy to Chief Leonard Lampman, (2) Picture of Grandma Lampman's Plaque [See discussion in criterion 83.7(a) above], (3) Internet descriptions of a few corporations, associated with the petitioner and (4) other materials. Mr. Lampman's letter referred to oral tradition materials, but during an extended comment period, he did not submit these materials. Mr. Lampman's comments generally lacked supporting documentation and explanation of the political processes of the petitioner as defined under criterion 83.7(c).

John Moody also submitted comments regarding political influence for the petitioner for this period. He stated:

... leadership among the Missisquoi Abenaki has clearly been a matter of following by example rather than by an imprimatur granted by a Euro-American sovereign. This Missisquoi leadership pattern is found extensively from the 19th and 20th century with both women and men. Although Homer St. Francis and Blackie Lampman were major leaders, and chiefs, in the 1970's to 1980's Missisquoi re-emergence, their daughters Chief April St. Francis Merrill and Louise Lampman Larivee, are major leaders in the current time period.


... Even in the 20th century, when all non-Native institutions and law inveigh against it, there are still some examples of matrilinearity at Missisquoi. There are also numerous examples of women in major leadership roles, including the role of community leader. (Moody 5/5/2006, 4)

Moody did not provide additional names of leaders nor did he document his claims of the political leadership for the petitioner. Moreover, he did not demonstrate the group had maintained political influence over its members throughout history as an autonomous Indian entity.

For the period since 1975, the petitioner did not demonstrate its leaders could influence and mobilize the claimed membership. The petitioner did not show that there was widespread knowledge, communication or involvement in political processes by most of the group's members or that its members considered issues and actions by the leaders to be of importance. The council's activities did not show that a bilateral political relationship existed. The available evidence for both the PF and the FD does not demonstrate that the claimed membership as a whole was aware of or affected by council activities in significant ways.

Final Determination's Conclusions on Criterion 83.7(c)
The PF concluded that there was an Abenaki entity in or around northwestern Vermont through the late 18th century. The PF also concluded that the available evidence did not show that the petitioner's ancestors had a historical connection to these 18th-century Abenaki Indians. During the comment and response periods, the Department received no additional evidence showing that the petitioner's ancestors belonged to an Abenaki Indian entity living in Vermont prior to 1800.
[41.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

The petitioner submitted documents that discussed 18th-century Abenaki Indians, but no evidence that these Abenaki Indians were the petitioner's ancestors. John Moody alluded to 18th century documents that were allegedly missing; however, Moody's speculations cannot be verified and thus do not provide evidence for the purposes of 83.7(c). The Department makes its decisions based on available evidence. Therefore, the FD affirms the PF's conclusions and determines that petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(c) before 1800.

For the period between 1800 and 1900, the PF concluded that the record did not contain any evidence that demonstrated the exercise of political influence as required by criterion 83.7(c). In particular, the PF noted the lack of political activity on the part of any Vermont Abenaki group to dispute claims made by the Iroquois Indians to lands in Vermont. The petitioner mentioned two ancestors, Nazaire St. Francis and Cordelia (Freemore) Brow, who provided food to children and served as a midwife, respectively. However, the information provided about these women does not constitute sufficient evidence to demonstrate that the two were "exercising political authority or influence" as required by criterion 83.7(c). The PF encouraged the petitioner to submit more information on the activities of these two ancestors during the comment period (Abenaki PF 2005, 96); however, the petitioner did not do so. During the comment period, the Department received only one document that referred to political activity in the 19th century, a copy of the 1814 Treaty of Ghent. This document does not specifically refer to the petitioner and is too vague to assist in addressing the criterion. Therefore, the FD concludes that the available evidence is not sufficient to satisfy criterion 83.7(c) between 1800 and 1900.

For the period since 1900, the PF encouraged the petitioner to submit evidence that its ancestors maintained political influence or authority over each other as an autonomous entity from historical times to the present. Similarly, the PF asked the petitioner to provide documentation of the political authority of "family bands" and political leaders before the formation of its 1970's council. The petitioner's comments did not demonstrate what its claimed ancestral leadership or families were doing to exercise political influence or authority, nor did the petitioner show its claimed ancestors exercised political influence or authority over each other as an autonomous entity since 1900. Petitioner did not offer evidence of its general membership acknowledging the heads of petitioner's recent organizations as leaders. The petitioner's comments did not contain sufficient evidence to remedy the deficiencies noted by the PF. For the period from 1900 to the present, the petitioner did not demonstrate political influence and or authority as an autonomous entity. Therefore, this FD affirms the PF's conclusion that the petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(c).

Based on the available record, the FD concludes that there is insufficient evidence to demonstrate that the petitioner maintained political influence or authority over its members as an autonomous entity at any point in time. Because the available evidence does not demonstrate that the petitioner maintained political influence or authority over its members as an autonomous entity from historical times until the present, the petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(c).
[42.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)

Criterion 83.7(d) requires a copy of the group's present governing document including its membership criteria. In the absence of a written document, the petitioner must provide a statement describing in full its membership criteria and current governing procedures.

Summary of the Proposed Finding

The PF found that the petitioner satisfied criterion 83.7(d) by submitting a copy of its governing document, a document entitled "Constitution of The Sovereign Republic of the Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi." This constitution "was presented to the citizenry at a Special General Meeting on November 5, 1995" and "ratified at a Special General Meeting" on February 25, 1996 (SSA Constitution 02/25/1996, 11). This document described the group's membership criteria and current governing procedures. The petitioner also submitted a copy of a superseded 1982 constitution and meeting minutes. However, the PF noted several minor issues with the 1996 constitution and suggested that the petitioner remedy these issues. (Abenaki PF 2005, 110-112).

Summary of the Comments on the Proposed Finding
The Department received no comments, from either the petitioner or any other party, on the PF's conclusions under criterion 83.7(d).

Final Determination's Conclusions on Criterion 83.7(d)
The Department's PF concluded that, based on the available evidence, the petitioner satisfied criterion 83.7(d). Although the petitioner did not respond to the Department's suggestions in the PF, the available evidence satisfies the criterion. Therefore, the FD affirms the PF's conclusion that the petitioner meets criterion 83.7(d).

FASCINATING-ENLIGHTENING-INFORMATIVE ISN'T THIS DOCUMENTATION? THERE IS MORE TO BE POSTED.....

Final Determination Against Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont Pages 14 to 31:

[14.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
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.

Summary of the Proposed Finding
The PF determined that the available evidence did not show that a "predominant portion" of the petitioning group comprised a "distinct community" that has existed from "historical times to the present." Instead, based on the available evidence, the PF concluded, "the petitioner is a collection of individuals ... with little or no social or historical connection with each other before the early 1970's." The PF also concluded that these claimed ancestors' 12. did not maintain at least a minimal distinction" from the population of northwestern Vermont and the surrounding area from historical times until the present (Abenaki PF 2005, 44). Consequently, the petitioner did not satisfy criterion 83.7(b) at any point in time.
The PF evaluated the petitioner's case under criterion 83.7(b) over five distinct periods: (1) first contact to 1800; (2) 1800 through 1900; (3) 1900 through 1940; (4) 1940 through 1970; and (5) 1970 through the present (Abenaki PF 2005, 45-90).
During the first of these periods, from first contact to 1800, the PF concluded there was an Abenaki entity in or around northwestern Vermont through the late 18th century. However, the available evidence did not demonstrate that these 17th and 18th century Abenaki Indians were the petitioner's ancestors. 13.

During the second of these periods, 1800-1900, the PF concluded that the available evidence did not support the petitioner's contention that an Abenaki community, comprised of the petitioner's ancestors, remained in northwestern Vermont after 1800, or that the petitioner descended from an Abenaki group that migrated from Canada to northwestern Vermont in the 19th century.
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FOOTNOTES:
12. The Department uses the term "claimed ancestors" because of continued uncertainty over what constitutes the petitioner's claimed historical community. In its 1986 petition submissions, the petitioner claimed its historical community in the 19th century included 25 "central" families, 30 "other" families, 131 "small" families, and 93 "ancestral" families, for 279 families overall. According to the petitioner, "[a]ll of the Central families, half of the Other and one quarter 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 Abenaki community" (SSA 1/17/1996 [Part B Appendix 1A]). The petitioner did not identify what those origins or ties were, nor did it explain why only 50 of the 93 ancestral families had those connections. In 1995, the petitioner, however, claimed only 20 "core" families for purpose of descent and not 93 as claimed nine years before (SSA 12/11/1995 [Second Addendum], 10, see criterion 83.7(e) for further details). See also Abenaki PF 2005, 56, 113, 128-132. The PF and the FD generally refer to those 20 "core" families as "the petitioner's claimed ancestors."

13. For further explanation of the how the petitioner did not connect to any pre-1800 Abenaki Indians in Northwestern Vermont, see the discussion of the register at Fort Saint-Frederic and the 1765 "Robertson's Lease" on pp. 44-45 of this FD and pp. 17, 93, 117-119, and 132 of the Abenaki PF.
[15.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
Instead, the PF concluded that, based on the available evidence, the petitioner's claimed ancestors did not move to Vermont as a group. The PF concluded that the petitioner's ancestors came to Vermont "as individual, unrelated families from different or unknown origins over an extended period of time" (Abenaki PF 2005, 62). Additionally, the petition relied upon an unpersuasive "family-name variation" methodology developed by the petitioner and John Scott Moody to identify "Abenaki" Indian families in northwestern Vermont in the 19th century. The PF concluded that this methodology is not acceptable for identifying 19th century individuals of Abenaki descent. 15. One of the problems with this methodology as it pertains to criterion 83.7(b) is that it uses "unsupported family-name variations to construct a historical community rather than evidence of actual consistent interactions and significant social relationships" (Abenaki PF 2005, 61). In other words, the petitioner's description of its alleged 19th century community is speculative; the facts from the documentary records do not support it., the available evidence did not demonstrate the petitioner's claimed ancestors who lived during the 19th century comprised a community that was in any way distinct from the wider society in northwestern Vermont. Furthermore, the available evidence did not demonstrate that a "predominant portion" of the petitioner's claimed ancestors maintained "consistent interactions and significant social relationships" as required by the definition of community in the regulations. 14. Finally,
The PF evaluated school records, church records, Federal census records, and vital records and, in contrast to the petitioner's claims, concluded that many of the petitioner's variously claimed ancestral families:

... 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. (Abenaki PF 2005, 56.)

The PF noted that much of the available evidence from the 19th century demonstrated that the Abenakis of Northern Vermont left the state by around 1800, it did not support the petitioner's assertions about the existence of its claimed 19th century community. Many ofthe 19th-century documents discussing Abenaki Indians referred to 18th-century Abenaki Indians, who moved to Canada, not Abenaki communities that existed contemporaneously with their 19th century authors. The following is an example of how the PF evaluated a document that the State of Vermont submitted:

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
____________________
FOOTNOTES:
14. The term community is defined as follows in 25 CFR83.1: "[c]ommunity 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."

15. This problematic "family-name variation" methodology is discussed as it applies to 83.7(b) on pp. 47-48, 58-61 of the Abenaki PF, and in general on pp. 133-139 of the Abenaki PF and pp. 46 of this FD.
[16.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
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, 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. (Abenaki PF 2005, 54.)

The PF also noted that the population of Franklin County in 1880 was 30,225 but, in contrast to the petitioner's claims that 1,000 of its "Abenaki" ancestors lived in the area, the 1880 Federal census of Franklin County, Vermont, identified no one as "Indian" (US Census Bureau 1901). Much of the evidence in the petition suggests that the Abenaki Indians of northwestern Vermont migrated to Canada in the late 18th century and that there was no distinct "Abenaki" community in the 19th century in or near Swanton, Vermont.
For the period 1900 to 1940, the PF concluded the available evidence did not demonstrate that a distinct community composed of the petitioner's ancestors existed in or near Swanton, Vermont. The petitioner submitted various claims about the character of its early 20th century community. The petitioner alleged that it based its claims on the documentary record, but often submitted abstracts of documents to support those claims, rather than copies of the documents themselves. The PF encouraged the petitioner to submit photocopies of original documents, rather than abstracts of the documents (Abenaki PF 2005, 62). The State of Vermont., in contrast, submitted copies of original documents, and the PF observed that, "when these records are examined, they do not support the petitioner's claims" and that "the petitioner's arguments are often demonstrably erroneous when the original documents are examined" (Abenaki PF 2005, 64)
For this same period, the petitioner submitted a "catalog" of "artifacts" that the petitioner claimed helped demonstrate the existence of an early 20th century "Abenaki" community in and around Swanton, Vermont. The PF rejected the claims associated with these artifacts for lack of supporting evidence. One of these objects was a picture postcard of a man fishing in a boat. The postcard was captioned "Chief of the Wabanacus, Highgate Springs, Vt." However, the PF concluded that the provenance of this postcard was uncertain and the available evidence did not show that this man was an ancestor of the petitioner. The petitioner also submitted materials that discussed the manufacture of "Abenaki" baskets. The PF noted that the available evidence showed that other Indians or non-Indians might have made the baskets. In particular, the PF stated that "Western Abenakis from Odanak and Passamaquoddy and Penobscot [Indians] from Maine traveled to the large summer resort hotels throughout the region, selling baskets and other crafts to tourists," and that by the 1880's, these Indians "were beginning to manufacture baskets specifically for the summer tourist trade" (Abenaki PF 2005, 68). The PF also stated the available evidence did not show that "the baskets were made by members of a Swanton-based Abenaki community" (Abenaki PF 2005, 69). The PF also discussed evidence that the petitioner submitted describing a pocket watch with the inscription, "Presented to Arthur Stevens May 16
[17.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
1918 from the Abenaki Tribe for Faithful Work." The petitioner claims this watch indicates the presence of an "Abenaki" tribe in the early 20th century. However, the PF noted the uncertain provenance of this pocket watch and the possibility it was a commemorative item from the Improved Order of Red Men (IORM) voluntary association, which had chapters throughout the United States, including "Abenaki" chapters in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and New York (Abenaki PF 2005, 70-71). The PF concluded the petitioner did not demonstrate that the material culture objects in its "catalog" are "necessarily indicative of a community, Abenaki or otherwise, populated by its claimed ancestors," and encouraged the petitioner to submit evidence that would strengthen its case (Abenaki PF 2005, 71).
The petitioner also claimed that social and economic relationships linked its claimed ancestors during the early 20th century, but the PF concluded that the petitioner needed to substantiate these assertions with additional evidence74). The petitioner further claimed that its ancestors were victims of discrimination; however, these unsubstantiated claims did not demonstrate that the alleged discrimination occurred because its ancestors were Indian, or that the petitioner's ancestors comprised a community that received treatment distinct from other people in the area. In particular, the petitioner claimed that the Vermont Eugenics Survey persecuted its ancestors, calling them "river rats," "pirates,"and "gypsies," and even targeting them for sterilization because they were Indians. However, the PF concluded that these claims "are unpersuasive because there is no evidence in the materials that the claimed ancestors of the petitioner were targeted because they were Indians" (Abenaki PF 2005, 79). (Abenaki PF 2005, 79).

 
Finally, the PF observed a contradiction that repeatedly presented itself in the petitioner's documents. On the one hand, the petitioner claimed that its ancestors hid "underground" to avoid anti-Indian discrimination in the early 20th century; this, the petitioner argues, explains the paucity of documents attesting to the presence of an "Abenaki" community in or near Swanton, Vermont. On the other hand, however, the petitioner also claims that "many people" in the area knew and acknowledged a separate "Abenaki" community (Abenaki PF 2005, 67-68, 78).
For the period 1940 to 1970, the PF concluded the available evidence was insufficient to demonstrate that the petitioner or an antecedent group comprised a distinct community, or that others regarded them as distinct from other residents of Swanton, Vermont. The petitioner claimed that the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) club bar in Swanton became an "Indian bar" after World War II. However, the available evidence did not substantiate this claim (Abenaki PF 2005, 81)., and the Department encouraged the petitioner to submit additional information demonstrating the "Indian" character of the bar and the social functions associated with it (Abenaki PF 2005, 81).

 
The petitioner also made claims regarding the social importance of a wildlife refuge and the Swanton "hemp yards." Because the available evidence did not sufficiently support petitioner's claims, the Department encouraged the petitioner to submit additional evidence and explanation (Abenaki PF 2005, 81-82).

The petitioner also submitted four oral interviews it claimed showed the existence of a distinct "Abenaki" community. The PF noted these interviews identified a few people as informal leaders and discussed some of the activities people engaged in, such as hunting, fishing, and berry picking. However, the PF pointed out that the petition did not contain discussions of other
[18.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
activities attended by a wide range of group members, such as birthdays or holiday gatherings (Abenaki PF 2005, 82), and, in general, did not provide sufficient evidence of a community as required by the regulations. Furthermore, the petitioner submitted a "catalog" of material objects, arguing that the existence of these objects, like baskets, a fish spear, a beaded headband, a cradleboard, and a toy canoe, attested to the existence of an "Abenaki" community in Vermont during this period. However, the PF stated that the petitioner must submit "much more information regarding the social context of the creation and usage of these objects if it wishes to demonstrate that they are indicative of the material culture of a Swanton-based American Indian entity" (Abenaki PF 2005, 84). A few objects of material culture that have unknown provenances and questionable relevancy do not demonstrate the existence of a distinct community. The PF concluded that the available evidence did not demonstrate that the petitioner met criterion 83.7(b) between 1940 and 1970.

For the period 1970 to the present, the PF noted that, there "is no question that, after 1975, the group now known as the 'St. Francis-Sokoki Band of Abenaki' became active socially" (Abenaki PF 2005, 84). People from the SSA organized a number of activities, including "fish-ins," "Heritage Days" celebrations, a "College of Missisquoi" program at Burlington College, "Harvest Suppers," an "Operation Santa Clause" program, and a pageant. SSA members worked with the University of Vermont to rebury skeletal remains and grave objects. They also obtained funding to establish new headquarters and then [sic] opened a small cultural museum. In addition to establishing an SSA "council" in the early 1970's, members of the SSA established an organization called the Abenaki Self-Help Association, Incorporated (ASHAI), in 1975. This organization remained active at the time of the PF, and has provided various services such as tax preparation assistance and a food pantry. The SSA even established a relationship with the St. Francis Abenakis at Odanak in Quebec, Canada, although the nature of that relationship is uncertain (Abenaki PF 2005, 84-87). The PF requested further evidence from the petitioner about the structure and scope of these activities. In particular, the PF noted that the petition was missing 17 years of meeting minutes from the ASHAI, and requested that the petitioner submit these meeting minutes and other ASHAI documents (Abenaki PF 2005, 85).
The PF also noted that "[o]ne of the most consistent problems with the SSA petition is the lack of a definition of community membership" (Abenaki PF 2005, 87). When the SSA group formed in the 1970's, the membership criteria were apparently very open. The available evidence did not show how the SSA organization vetted claims of Indian ancestry. Instead, membership was "based on the approval of prospective members by the group's governing body" (Abenaki PF 2005, 87).
The number of SSA members also varied without explanation. In 1982, the petitioner claimed 1,685 members, and in 1995, the petitioner claimed 1,248 members. The petitioner did not submit its membership rolls from 1975 and 1983 in time for the Department to evaluate them for the PF. The petitioner did not explain the circumstances and criteria that influenced the composition of its membership lists. Consequently, the PF concluded that it was "nearly impossible to determine continuity for the group since 1975," and that the "lack of a consistent standard of membership and the difficulties in identifying members on the group's membership lists make it impossible to define what the petitioner means when it refers to 'the community'" (Abenaki PF 2005, 88-89). The PF encouraged the petitioner to provide more information that
[19.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
would allow the Department to understand the nature and composition of its "community" (Abenaki PF 2005, 89).
For the period following 1970, the PF noted that despite the SSA's various activities, the available evidence was insufficient to demonstrate that the group within the meaning of criterion 83.7(b). The PF concluded that the SSA's "social and cultural activities are of recent introduction, and there is not enough information to indicate that these events are of more than symbolic value to the group as a whole, rather than to a few involved members" (Abenaki PF 2005, 90). The PF also reported that although the SSA arranged events that allowed members to congregate, "the petitioner has not demonstrated that a significant portion of its membership regularly associate with each other" (Abenaki PF 2005, 90).

Comments on the Proposed Finding
On November 1, 2005, the Department received copies of two additional membership lists from the petitioner. One list is labeled as a 1975 list, and the other labeled as a 1983 list. The petitioner did not certify either of these lists as a submission. The Department received these documents too late to incorporate into the PF and instead considered them for the FD.
On May 15, 2006, the Department received a letter from the petitioner, which April St. Francis-Merrill, the leader of the SSA petitioner, and six additional council members signed. The letter requested an extension of the comment period, but also included four brief essays that constituted a partial response to the PF. These four essays came from Fred M. Wiseman, who is identified as the chair of the Department of Humanities at Johnson State College, are principally about 20th century material culture, and Wiseman addressed them to criterion 83.7(b). The essays are entitled: "The Case of the Missisquoi Abenaki Baskets," "The Case of the Missisquoi Tapered-Lead Fish-Spears," "The Case of the Abenaki Pocketwatch," and "The Case of the `Chief of the Wabanacus' Post Card."
On August 22, 2006, the Department received comments from the governing body of the petitioner, many of which relate to criterion 83.7(b). These comments included a set of four Internet essays entitled "Abenaki History," the DVD video entitled "Against the Darkness," an unannotated map of Swanton, Vermont, and a collection of meeting minutes from the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's.
On May 15, 2006, the Department received comments from John Moody. His submission included nine pages of comment and discussion. He also submitted ten pages of photocopies of primary sources, more specifically, an excerpt from the Journals of the Continental Congress, an 1835 newspaper article from the Green Mountain Democrat, an excerpt from a 20th century Vermont Eugenics Study "Pedigree" file, and three letters from Dr. Gordon Day, an ethnologist at Canada's National Museum of Man. Two of these letters do not address the PF, but the third appears to do so.
[20.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
Analysis for the Final Determination
For clarity, the FD will present its findings for criterion 83.7(b) using the five periods of analysis in the PF. These five periods are: (1) first contact through1800; (2) 1800 through 1900; (3) 1900 through 1940; (4) 1940 through 1970; and (5) 1970 through the present.

Social Community, First Contact through 1800
In its August 2006 submission, the petitioner included comments that pertain to the Abenaki Indians in the period before 1800. These comments include the set of Internet essays from the "Manataka American Indian Council"' on Abenaki history and culture during the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. Despite the fact that these essays contain much specific information, they contain no citations or bibliographies. The only attribution on the documents states: "From the Archive of Little Mother," and "Our thanks to Blue Panther, Keeper of Stories." These essays do not contain standard citations or bibliographic information that identify their sources. The Department issued a notice on March 31, 2005, which, among other things, provides guidance for how acknowledgment researchers should handle evidence. The notice, "Office of Federal Acknowledgment; Reports and Guidance Documents; Availability, etc.," says:

Section 83.6(a) of the [25 CFR Part 83 Federal acknowledgment] regulations states that a petition may be "in any readable form that contains detailed, specific evidence." In some instances, materials submitted by the petitioner or a third party are poorly organized, do not identify the sources or even the nature of the documents provided, or cannot be identified from the source cited in the text submitted by the petitioner or third party. The Department may consider such materials, either in whole or in part, as not being in a "readable form" within the meaning of the regulations, and acknowledgment researchers shall not expend more than a reasonable amount of time attempting to identify the source or sources of the document materials. (70 FR 16515)

Because these "Manataka American Indian Council" essays do not identify their sources, the Department can afford them only little weight within the meaning of the regulations.
Furthermore, these essays are not annotated in any way to assist the Department in interpreting them. More important, these essays focus on the Abenaki Indians in general, such as those who moved to Canada and the Abenaki Indians of Maine, rather than Indians from whom the petitioner demonstrably descends. These documents do not discuss any of the petitioner's known ancestors, and the documents do not connect the petitioner to the historical Abenakis of the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries. Consequently, these essays appear to support the PF's conclusion that there was an Abenaki entity in or around northern Vermont prior to 1800, but the available evidence does not show that the petitioner's known ancestors were among those 18th-century Abenaki Indians. Therefore, these essays do not provide evidence for this petitioner under criterion 83.7(b).
________________
FOOTNOTE:
16. The petitioner did not provide any information about the character, history, mission, organizational structure, or institutional credentials of the "Manataka American Indian Council." A review of the manataka.org website suggests that this "council" is located in Arkansas.
[21.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
In the same August 2006 submission, the petitioner included several copies of treaty and proclamation documents from the 18th century. For the most part, the petitioner did not annotate these documents and did not discuss how these documents relate to specific Indian individuals from whom the petitioner demonstrably descends. Furthermore, most of the Indians mentioned in these documents belong either to other Indian tribes or are mentioned as a generic "Indian" ethnic or political category, rather than as specific Indian tribes or groups as in the case of the Treaty of Amity, Commerce, and Navigation, for example. The one exception to this is in an 1859 book by Frederic Kidder. It stated that "[t]he Sokokis," which is one of the names the petitioner has applied to itself, "inhabited the country bordering on the Saco River," and after a "sanguinary battle" in 1725, "the remainder of the tribe, dispirited by their misfortune, retired to Canada" (Kidder 1859, 235-236). The available evidence not demonstrated that the petitioner descends from a historical Indian tribe, and therefore has not demonstrated that the particular Sokoki Indians who fled to Canada were its claimed ancestors . 17.
In his May 2006 comments, Moody discusses two sets of documents that were allegedly created in the late 18th century but, at present, either are not locatable or do not exist. Moody speculates that, if found, these documents might help describe an Abenaki entity in northwestern Vermont during the 18th century that constitutes a community as required by criterion 83.7(b). Moody's speculations, however, cannot be verified and thus do not provide evidence for the purposes of 83.7(b). As this FD discusses elsewhere, the Department makes its decisions based on available evidence (see criterion 83.7(e) for a further discussion of these documents and their unavailability).

Social Community, 1800-1900
For the period from 1800 to 1900, there are two pieces of information related to criterion 83.7(b). One is a copy of the Treaty of Ghent, which the petitioner submitted to the Department in its August 2006 letter. This 1814 treaty secured peace between the United States and Great Britain following the War of 1812. Article IX of the treaty discusses matters pertaining to Indians, but uses only the generic terms "Indian," "tribe," and "nation" to refer to Indian entities. The treaty makes no specific reference to an Abenaki entity or an Indian community in northwestern Vermont. Therefore, the Treaty of Ghent does not provide any useful evidence to help the petitioner meet criterion 83.7(b).
The second piece of evidence submitted for this period is an April 3, 1835, newspaper article "An Indian Encampment in Connecticut," from the Green Mountain Democrat of Fayetteville, Vermont. The PF fully discussed the article. Nothing in John Moody's comments regarding this article specifically addresses or rebuts any of the Department's concerns that this article describes "only a brief, first-time sighting of a small group of mostly unidentified Indians, sighted far away from [the petitioner's claimed ancestral homeland], who then disappeared from the record" (Abenaki PF 2005, 50). Furthermore, although the article does suggest that a "part of
____________________
FOOTNOTE:
17. This historical text appears to misidentify the Eastern Abenaki on the Saco River as Western Abenaki who were Sokoki. For a discussion of scholarly views on Western Abenaki group names, see the Abenaki PF, pages 11-16. The Kidder document also discusses the St. Francis Indians, but they, too, went to Canada, as was discussed in the PF.
[22.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
the tribe of the Missisquoi" led a "wandering life on the eastern shore of Lake Champlain," neither Moody nor any other party has demonstrated that these wandering Missisquoi are ancestral to the petitioner. This submission does not address the deficiencies with this article noted by the PF, and therefore it does not provide any useful evidence to help the petitioner to satisfy the criterion for this period.

Social Community 1900 to 1940
During the comment period, the petitioner submitted only a few documents related to criterion 83.7(b) between 1900 and 1940. The petitioner's "Against the Darkness" video made some claims of social community. The petitioner also submitted four essays written by Fred M. Wiseman: "The Case of the Missisquoi Abenaki Baskets," "The Case of the Missisquoi Tapered-Lead Fish-Spears," "The Case of the Abenaki Pocketwatch," and "The Case of the `Chief of the Wabanacus' Post Card."
The "Against the Darkness" video and Wiseman's essays contend that a few items of apparent Abenaki material cultural demonstrate that an Abenaki community composed of the petitioner's ancestors existed in the Swanton area during between 1900 and 1940. The PF analyzed an earlier "Against the Darkness" video presentation and other submissions, and advised the petitioner to substantiate its claims regarding these items by submitting supporting documentation. The PF stated:


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. (Abenaki PF 2005, 66)

The PF stated, "a few Indians described by external observers in Vermont from 1800 to 1975 were usually isolated individuals or groups traveling seasonally to the area to hunt, fish, or to sell baskets and crafts. These Indians are usually unidentified by name or point of origin, and the petitioner did not establish a connection to these people" (Abenaki PF 2005, 18). The petitioner discussed some members of the Obomsawin and Phillips families making and selling baskets, but did not document these families as being associated with a local community as defined under criterion 83.7(b).
Cultural artifacts, or items of material culture, like those described by the petitioner, such as surviving baskets, paddles, and other materials, are not usually significant evidence of social interaction and relationships. While such evidence may show that Indians with a certain kind of material culture lived in a particular area, they provide little evidence to demonstrate social community among the claimed ancestors of a petitioning group. The petitioner did not demonstrate their claimed material culture showed the existence of a historical community that with significant evidence of social interaction among its members.
[23.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
Wiseman states that one of the petitioner's claimed ancestral family lines, the Lapans, made Abenaki baskets (Wiseman 5/15/2006). In his paper, "The Case of the Missisquoi Abenaki Baskets," Wiseman states:

Abenaki basketry has been long known to be very important signifier of native status.... When I was a child, an extended Swanton Abenaki family, the Lapans, was known for both their fishing prowess and their quality basketry.... There remains an extensive oral history in Swanton of the Lapans, which can be directly tied to their material culture production.... I believe that these data refute the unfounded assertions on p. 69 of the BAR/BIA summary. (Wiseman 5/15/2006)

Wiseman's statements did not establish any provenance for the baskets, and this FD emphasizes that a few individuals making and selling baskets do not show the existence of a community as required by the regulations. The petitioner did not document that these cultural objects or basket-making constituted "a significant degree of shared or cooperative labor or other economic activity among the membership" as defined under criterion 83.7(b)(1)(v).
Other comments related to this period focused on descriptions of fish-spears as evidence of community. In his essay, "The Case of the Missisquoi Tapered-Lead Fish-Spears," Wiseman states:

Although the oral history accompanying the fish spear is unclear as to the maker, Mr. Hakey was a skilled woodworker in the native style, who made a canoe cup for the author in the 1950's, so it is entirely possible that he made the spear. Even if Mr. Hakey did not make the fish spear, the distinctive trident style with the lateral "leads" requires an entirely distinct and native tradition-based spearing style;. . . The Highgate spear, which descended in the Franco-Abenaki Beor family, is based on the same double lead/central spike, only translated into metal, requiring the same distinctive (and Native) gross motor movements. This practice is operationally different from the Euroamerican strike and remove technique used with the five-tined "pike spear" also used during the first half of the 20th century. Such operational differences would be considered good ethnic identifiers to intellectually unbiased scholars.


... In discussing the Hakey and Highgate fish spears with Nicole Obomsawin and Patrick Cote of the Musee des Abenakis at Odanak, they pointed out that there are no extant Odanak Abenaki fish spears with which to compare the Abenaki examples.... Therefore, without comparative material or even any documentation of their use at Odanak, the BAR/BIA is intellectually disingenuous to assert that the fish spears are of Odanak origin. (Wiseman 5/15/2006)

The available evidence for both the PF and the FD does not demonstrate these fish-spears were Abenaki in origin or that they came from a historical community. The available evidence did not demonstrate that these fish spears were the product of cooperative labor that involved significant
[24.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
social interaction on the part of its ancestors. Furthermore, the available evidence did not demonstrate that these fish-spears were unique to a distinct historical community Abenaki or otherwise.
The essay, "The Case of the Abenaki Pocketwatch," by Fred Wiseman, was a response to part of the PF's conclusions regarding this artifact. The pocketwatch was "purchased from a New Jersey estate sale" (Wiseman Catalog 2005).
The catalog of artifacts submitted for the PF states that this watch probably is:

... the most important object in the collections from this time period. The fact that the watch is an American Waltham Watch Co., and the engraved message is in English is indicative of an American, rather than Canadian origin. Furthermore, the included elaborate American Flag watch-fob has a fringe type that was commonly made by Native People in the late 19th and early 20th Century. This indicates both the presence of an "Abenaki Tribe" and the collective resources to purchase a 14k gold watch to give to the bearer of a Euroamerican name. (Wiseman Catalog 2005)

The watch was inscribed "Presented to Arthur Stevens May 16, 1918, from Abenaki Tribe for Faithful Work." In his essay that commented on the PF, Wiseman stated:

I believe that rather than accept the logical possibility that the watch may be what it seems, an Abenaki tribal gift; the Bureau of Indian Affairs researchers distorted data and inference to discredit the inscription and provenance, perhaps without really understanding the data that they were using to question the watch's inscription. (Wiseman 5/15/2006, npn)

The PF concluded the "petitioner offered no explanation regarding who 'Arthur Stevens' was or why he would have received such an elaborate gift from the alleged 'community' in and around Swanton.... The petitioner also did not include any interviews or oral histories describing Stevens or the awarding of the watch" (Abenaki PF 2005, 70).
"The Case of the Abenaki Pocketwatch" essay also disputed the PF's suggestion that the watch may have come from a non-Indian fraternal group known as the Improved Order of Red Men.
Despite some of the issues raised in the PF, the petitioner did not provide new evidence to identify Arthur Stevens or explain why he might have received such a gift. The petitioner did not provide newspaper articles or other documents that described any ceremony or social setting presenting the watch, or what "faithful work" Stevens did. Furthermore, the petitioner did not submit interviews or oral histories describing Stevens or the awarding of the watch. Without corroborating documents to support the petitioner's claims, the watch by itself does not provide evidence of a community of the petitioner's ancestors as defined under criterion 83.7(b), and without further information, the watch's origin is speculative. The watch does not provide significant evidence of social interaction and relationships among the claimed ancestors of the group for this period.
[25.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
The available evidence from the comments also suggests material items may not have actually come from petitioner's members. Included in the April 9, 1996, "tribal council" minutes was a March 28, 1996, newspaper article concerning Mr. Wiseman (ATC 4/9/1996). Part of the story stated that Wiseman: ". . . has converted part of his home into the Wobanakik Heritage Center. ... Some of the artifacts [Abenaki] were handed down by his parents, but many were purchased from antique dealers.... The displays also include replicas [Abenaki] made by Wiseman's students" (Country Courier 3/28/1996). During the comment period, the petitioner did not submit documentation on whether the material items discussed in the submissions for consideration in the petition came from antique dealers or were replicas.
The petitioner's "Against the Darkness" video presentation includes an interview with a non-Indian, non-group member. This interview applies to criterion 83.7(b). In the material reviewed for the PF, the petitioner included references to an interview with "Alice Roy" of Barre, Vermont. The PF encouraged the petitioner to provide the transcript of this interview, along with other documentation that would identify the "Abenaki community" that the petition referenced, their location, and an explanation of how they related to the petitioner's claimed ancestors (Abenaki PF 2005, 67-68). In the interview, Mrs. Gerard Roy of Barre, Vermont, recalled a day trip sometime between 1910 and 1918, during which her father and grandfather allegedly visited "Indians in Vermont" and saw their "wigwam." However, Mrs. Roy did not name any of the Indians visited or the town(s) where the Indians lived, nor did petitioner provide supporting documentation of this visit to the "Indians in Vermont." The interview provides no evidence that the "Indians in Vermont" were the petitioner's ancestors. See the FD's discussion of the Alice Roy interview in criterion 83.7(a) for further discussion of this interview. The petitioner's contention that the Roy interview demonstrates that "the Abenaki community was widely known, at least to the Vermont Francophone community" remains unsubstantiated (Abenaki PF 2005, 67). This claim seems contrary to the petitioner's assertion that its ancestors hid "underground" to avoid anti-Indian discrimination in the early 20th century." By itself, the interview does not provide evidence of a community in the early 1900's as defined under criterion 83.7(b), and, when read with the available evidence, it does not demonstrate the existence of a community of the petitioner's ancestors as required by 83.7(b).
In the material it submitted for the PF, the petitioner claimed that a sterilization program associated with the Vermont Eugenics Survey affected the members of its claimed historical community. The petitioner argued the VES deliberately targeted and sterilized petitioner's ancestors because they were Indians, and that the group's ancestors hid their ancestry to avoid detection by the VES (Abenaki PF 2005, 79). During the comment period, John Moody made several comments concerning the VES in the mid- 1920's.

The eugenics records of Vermont, or any other state, are definitely not considered reliable sources of unbiased genealogical or ethnohistorical data. I am sure that the BIA OFA staff must have read the racist cant written in the same time period about virtually every other Native community in the east!


... However, the reference to 'St Francis Indians' in the St Francis family `pedigree' in the Vermont eugenics records [see here below and copy appended],
__________________
FOOTNOTE:
18. See the Abenaki PF, pp. 67-68, 78, and p. 17 of this FD for further discussion of this point.
[26.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
which the OFA team quoted and is missed [SUTC p 27], also could, in fact, be a telling comment about the Abenaki ethnicity ofthe St. Francis family and other, related Abenaki families living in the well-documented Back Bay, neighborhood in Swanton, Vermont during the 1920's and 1930's as required by 25 CFR PART 1 [sic], 83.7(a), (b), & (c). (Moody 4/20/2006)

Moody alleges that the VES statement "could" be a "telling" comment about the "ethnicity" of the "St. Francis family" and other "related Abenaki families." However, criterion 83.7(b) focuses on social community, as defined by the regulations, rather than the ethnic backgrounds of families. Neither Moody's comments nor the particular VES statement he referenced provides additional evidence that helps demonstrate that the petitioner's ancestors were a community as defined by the regulations."

Social Community 1940 to 1970
The PF requested additional documentation describing how the petitioner and the petitioner's ancestors functioned as a community during the middle of the 20th century. In its submissions reviewed for the PF, the petitioner claimed that its ancestors formed roaming bands of families traveling the roads of Vermont or were a part of communities distinct in some manner from non-Indians in northwestern Vermont. The petitioner also described its ancestors hiding themselves to survive and preserve their identity by avoiding outsiders. The PF stated the petitioner did not explain adequately the social processes that maintained both a "dispersed, family band existence" and a "large, tenacious network of families and neighborhoods" centered in the Missisquoi delta as the petitioner alleged (Abenaki PF 2005, 46). The petitioner did not respond to the PF's request to document the composition of these family groups during different periods nor did it submit comments to explain how such groups of Indians could have entirely escaped the notice of non-Indians.

In its submissions for the PF, the petitioner referred to the local VFW club in Swanton as an "Indian bar," and an important social place for the local "Abenaki" Indians during this period. The PF advised the petitioner to document its claim of a VFW "Indian bar" existing in Swanton. The documentation needed to include the names of members and/or their claimed ancestors who frequented the club, descriptions of members holding any official leadership positions in the VFW organization, and to cite any oral histories and other sources describing how and when the VFW became an "Indian bar" (Abenaki PF 2005, 81).
In its August 2006 comments, the petitioner stated:

We are working on getting the VFW, Post 778 Frank DaPrato in Swanton materials to send. We have an appointment to see if we can get copies of their Charters (Post, Ladies Auxiliary, and the Sons of the VFW) which have several Abenaki names on them. Also, we are asking for the information on Past & Present Post Officials to show how the Abenaki are involved in the VFW. (Merrill 8/11/2006)
___________________
FOOTNOTE:
19. See p.12 of this FD fora transcription and discussion of the VES statement about the St. Francis family.
[27.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
The petitioner did not submit any further documentation to support the claim of a VFW "Indian bar" in Swanton, Vermont.
In its August 2006 comments, the petitioner also claimed that unnamed outside observers described a Back Bay enclave in Swanton, Vermont. The petitioner stated:

We are sending a map of Back Bay. The work on this continues as we are finishing up on Title Searches for said area. So that we can show the Abenaki families that lived in the Back Bay area from 1900 to present time. More time is needed to finish up this part of the petition. (Merrill 8/11/2006)

The petitioner submitted black and white map that had numbers assigned to various houses; however, the materials did not explain the meaning of the numbers, or what the numbers are supposed to indicate. This unannotated map did not demonstrate the petitioner's claim of an "enclave" in the part of Swanton known as "Back Bay." Neither the petitioner's comments nor the map provided evidence of a distinct community within Swanton consisting of the claimed ancestors of the group, or that those ancestors constituted a "community-within-a-community" among the Catholic families in the town of Swanton.

Social Community, 1970 to the present
In the 1970's some individuals formed a non-profit organization and council, which later became the SSA petitioner. These organizations provided social services to potential members, and they attempted to establish social relations with other unrecognized groups and recognized Indian tribes. The available evidence indicates that the petitioner introduced these social activities only after the creation of these organizations. Other evidence for both the PF and the FD shows the petitioner began recruiting its membership after the 1970's. The available evidence, particularly council minutes submitted as comments, does not indicate the petitioner existed as an entity before the 1970's.
At several early 'tribal council" meetings, the petitioner sought to increase its membership. On June 8, 1982, with six members including the group leader and four council members in attendance, applications for membership became the first order of business (ATC Minutes 6/8/1982). The group approved 54 individuals for membership and rejected 39 until they provided further proof of ancestry. On May 18, 1983, those in attendance, seven council members and group leader Homer St. Francis, declared, "our tribe is made up of 6 tribal council members and a chief." They stated that one of its goals was to reach out to "Native Americans who are members of the Abenaki Nation" through "mail outs and canvassing." They also defined membership as: (1) a person who is "registered on a band or tribal list," (2) a person being "of the full age of 18 years" [changed to 15 years in January 12, 1984, minutes], and (3) person who was "not disqualified from voting at band, tribal, or national elections." They estimated a potential 1,500 members as children came of age (ATC Minutes 5/18/1983).
The council met on December 7, 1995, with 11 people in attendance: seven council members, the group leader, and three guests. Carol Nepton, a guest, stated she was "not comfortable" with the "lack of documentation" on some of the petitioner's families. She stated, "[w]e recommend to

[28.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
you that we go with all the core families, the social core and at this point the Abenaki families whether we got good documentation or not in hopes that we have when we get reviewed. We are doing this for a couple of reasons [sic]to establish that we are the Abenaki families and send them down later we will get our statement on the social core. I believe if we go for broke and send as many people down right now we're taking a risk because some of those people ... [sentence becomes unreadable]" (ATC Minutes 12/7/1995).
The council met on March 12, 1996, with 10 people in attendance: seven members, the group leader, and two guests. Those in attendance conducted a discussion of reauthorizing the membership of thirty families occurred. According to the Abenaki Research Project (ARP) report presented at the meeting, these re-authorizations were necessary because many membership cards had been "issued to people who are clearly not Abenaki Others were "clearly Abenaki" but lacked "substantive support that would be required by the BIA." According to the report, the petitioner had numerous new applications arriving, or "coming out of the woodwork" (ATC Minutes 3/12/1996). During the next meeting, held on April 19, 1996, members discovered that several people were not Abenaki, and that they had broken from the group and were spreading "misinformation" (ATC Minutes 4/19/1996).."
The council met on September 10, 1996, with nine people in attendance: seven members, the "chief," and a guest, Carol Nepton. At the meeting, the council "re-authorized" 39 families and mailed letters to fifty "potential citizens." These "potential citizens," Nepton stated, had been "selected more-or-less at random from the genealogy computer and the phone book. I tried to hit several parts of families rather than everybody in the family hoping that talk with the families will do some of our work for us. There are still a lot of potential citizens to contact" (ATC 9/10/1996).
On July 8, 1997, a joint meeting of ASHAI and the "tribal council" occurred. The ARP report stated:

As of this date we have 2,128 adults, and children on our Citizenship Roll. Of these 1,514 adults. Of this number, only 573 files are considered complete with the remaining 941 files in need of birth certificates, new forms or both. Some of the difficulty in completing these citizens' files continues to be the lack of current address. One hundred sixty-one (161) citizens sent letters have had the mail returned to us. This large number of "missing" citizens will cause us problems when we are under active review. (ATC and ASHAI 7/8/1997)

These minutes provide evidence the group first created and organized itself in the 1970's, and established its membership rules after that period. They also show the group lacked a clear understanding of its membership or knowledge of who its members were.
In November 2005, the petitioner submitted two older membership lists, one from 1975 and one from 1983 (see the discussion under criterion 83.7(e) of this FD for a complete description of these lists). The 1975 list contains the names of 308 individuals of unknown age, mainly from the Swanton area of Franklin County. The petitioner provided no explanation of the membership rules used to include these people as its group members. The Department conducted an analysis
[29.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
of this list that revealed that 96 of the 308 names, or 31 percent, were not part of the groups' current genealogical database (SSA Membership List 1975). The petitioner provided no explanation as to what happened to these members.
The 1983 list contains the names of 1,670 adults and children who were members of the group. These individuals came from throughout Vermont and the surrounding states, a broader geographic distribution than appeared on the 1975 list. The petitioner provided no explanation for this rapid expansion both in the number of members and in their geographical location. The Department conducted an analysis of this list that revealed that 610 of these 1,670 individuals, or 36 percent, were not part of the group's current genealogical databases (SSA Membership List 1983). The petitioner supplied no explanation as to what happened to these members.
These large fluctuations in the group numbers, and difficulties in identifying members over time, as discussed in the PF and as demonstrated by the new evidence, make it impossible to define what the petitioner refers to as "the community" (Abenaki PF 2005, 89). The evidence provided did not support the petitioner's claims of community.
In the PF, the Department encouraged the petitioner to document changes in the composition of the group, such as submitting a list of people who have withdrawn voluntarily from the SSA and the date these withdrawals took place. It also asked the group to compile a list of people removed involuntarily from the group's roll, the date of removal, and the reason for the removal (Abenaki PF 2005, 89). The petitioner did not submit such documentation.
Generally, the petitioner was able to document some activities of the ASHAI and the group council, but did not document the existence of an interacting social community. The fluidness of its membership, the lack of evidence of social interaction, the claiming of hundreds of individuals whose Abenaki connection remain unproven, and the inability to define the location of its claimed community, demonstrate that the petitioner does not have a social community as defined by the regulations. The regulations in 25 CFR 83.3(c) do not allow for the acknowledgment of associations, organizations, incorporations, or groups of any character, such as the SSA petitioner, which formed in recent times.
The PF reviewed the history of the Missisquoi, Sokoki, and the St. Francis Abenaki of Odanak, Quebec, Canada by Gordon Day. Gordon Day was an ethnohistorian at the National Museum of Man, in Quebec, Canada, and an authority on the Western Abenaki. Day estimated the pre-contact population of the Western Abenaki was about 5,000 before plague and wars severely reduced their numbers (Day 1978a, 152-153). Day states:

A small village still existed at Missisquoi in 1786 after the war. Only some twenty persons remained in 1788, and these may have stayed on to contribute to the present-day Indian group at Swanton, but most of the Missisquoi had left by 1800 (Day 1981, 65).

John Moody submitted a copy of an 1986 letter by Gordon Day regarding Abenaki Indians at Swanton. Day's letter stated:
[30.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
It is indeed my opinion that the Abenakis of Swanton meet the requirement of "a virtually unbroken chain of occupation and use of land from before white settlement to the present." I may add that I agree with the statement of Christine A. Doremus in the Vermont Law Review, volume 10, page 417, which states that "Abenaki Indians have lived in the area on a permanent basis since before the arrival of Europeans." (Day 2/27/1986)

Neither Day nor Moody provided an explanation or delineated the evidence to support Day's statement. As described in detail in the PF, Day's published works argued that "most" of the Western Abenaki had migrated to Canada by 1800 (Abenaki PF 2005, 14). Day's statement does not demonstrate that a group of Abenakis stayed in Vermont and remained a distinct community, comprised predominantly of the petitioner and its ancestors, from historical times until the present. This letter does not provide evidence of a community, or significant social interaction among identified persons. Its lack of specificity limits its usefulness to help the petitioner meet the criteria.
For criterion 83.7(b), the petitioner generally did not follow the requests for additional information and clarification made in the PF and did not support its claims with relevant new evidence or documentation during the comment and response periods. Overall, the available evidence does not demonstrate the petitioner had a historical or social connection to any American or Canadian Abenaki Indian entity. As stated in the PF, from the 19th century until the 1970's, the petitioner did not show that a community made up of petitioner's ancestors existed distinct from the surrounding population in the Swanton area, nor did it demonstrate the continuous existence of a historical Abenaki group in Vermont. Instead, the available evidence for both the PF and the FD shows the petitioner is a collection of individuals who had little or no social connection with each other before the early 1970's. After 1975, the group now known as the "St. Francis- Sokoki Band of Abenaki" started some social organizations, but these did not evolve from a social community as defined under criterion 83.7(b). The submitted comments reinforced the PF's conclusion that the petitioner is limited to a small group of members who became active in recent times and do not represent a social community that continued to exist historically to the present.

Final Determination's Conclusions on Criterion 83.7(b)
For the period prior to 1800, the PF concluded there was an Abenaki entity in or around northwestern Vermont through the late 18th century. The PF also concluded the available evidence did not show that these 18th-century Abenaki Indians were the petitioner's ancestors. During the comment and response periods, the Department received no additional evidence showing that the petitioner's ancestors belonged to an Abenaki Indian entity living in Vermont prior to 1800. The petitioner submitted documents that discuss 18th-century Abenaki Indians, but provided no evidence that these Abenaki Indians were the petitioner's ancestors. John Moody alluded to documents that were allegedly created in the late 18th century and are either not locatable or do not exist. The Department makes its decisions based on available evidence, and his assumptions about the documents cannot be verified. Therefore, the FD affirms the PF's conclusions and determines, based on the available evidence, that petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(b) before 1800.
[31.]
St. Francis/Sokoki Band of Abenakis of Vermont (Petitioner #68)
For the period between 1800 and 1900, the PF concluded that the available evidence was insufficient to show that there was an Abenaki community, comprised of the petitioner's ancestors, which remained in northwestern Vermont after 1800, or that migrated to northwestern Vermont from elsewhere. Furthermore, the available evidence was insufficient to demonstrate that the petitioner's ancestors maintained a "distinct community" as required by 83.7(b). The petitioner used an unreliable methodology for identifying "Abenaki" family names in the 19th century. This methodology led to speculative assumptions rather than supportable conclusions based on the documentary record. The comments received during the comment period did not remedy these problems. During the comment period, the Department received a copy of the 1814 Treaty of Ghent; this document did not specifically discuss any Abenakis and was too vague to assist the petitioner in any way. The Department also received a comment from Moody disputing the Department's interpretation of an 1835 article from Vermont's Green Mountain Democrat; however, Moody did not provide any additional evidence that specifically linked the article with the petitioner's ancestors. Therefore, the FD affirms the PF conclusions and determines that, based on the available evidence, the petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(b) between 1800 and 1900.

For the period since 1900, the PF concluded that the petitioner did not satisfy the criterion. During the comment period, the Department received four essays on material culture; a DVD copy of the "Against the Darkness" video; an unannotated map of Swanton, Vermont; a comment on the Vermont Eugenics Survey; a statement from a scholarly authority on Abenaki history and culture; and a collection of meeting minutes from the 1970's, 1980's, and 1990's. These pieces of evidence, when read together with the rest of the available record, do not demonstrate that a predominant portion of the petitioner's membership had significant social interaction within a community at any time since 1900. The available evidence suggests the group created and organized itself in the mid-1970's but did not constitute a distinct community as required by the regulations.

Based on the available record, the FD concludes, as the PF did, that there is insufficient evidence to demonstrate that, at any point in time, a predominant portion of the petitioning group comprised a distinct community or has existed as a community from historical times until the present. Therefore, the petitioner does not meet criterion 83.7(b).

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