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Friday, February 18, 2011

APPLICANT REVIEW AND DECISION OF THE ALLEGED AND RE-INVENTED "ELNU" "ABENAKI" 'TRIBE" OF VERMONT:

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APPLICANT REVIEW AND DECISION
APPLICANT: ELNU ABENAKI TRIBE

The following review and decision is based upon the findings of the Vermont
Commission on Native American Affairs and the expert review of a panel of three scholars; David Lacy, Fredrick Wiseman, and Elouise Beil.

The Elnu Abenaki Tribe is a small tribe located in southeast Vermont, headquartered in Jamaica. Elnu presented a lengthy narrative spanning over three centuries of documentary, ethnobotanical, and pictorial information concerning an enduring community of interrelated Native-practice families centered in and around Windham County. Elnu's application is arranged nicely and directly responds to each of the nine criteria in S.222. Supporting materials are appended as attachments. A great deal of work has gone into this
well-sourced document.

DECISION:
The Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs and the Scholar's Review Panel concur that the Elnu Abenaki Tube has met the criteria outlined in S.222 (Act 107).
Therefore, in accordance with the procedures of Act 107, we recommend to the General Assembly and the Honorable Governor of the State of Vermont that the Elnu Abenaki Tribe be granted State Recognition as a Native American Indian Tribe.

Attachments
Commission Review Report
Expert Panelist Bios
Expert Panelist Reviews
Applicant's Narrative & Supporting Documents
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853 (c)(1) A majority of the applicant's members currently reside in a specific geographic location with Vermont.

The Elnu Abenaki Tribe presented a list of members with names and street addresses. Currently, Elnu has 43 enrolled members. 23 of those members live in the towns of Jamaica, Townsend, and Westminster in southeast Vermont. This qualifies as a majority residing in a specific geographic location.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(2) A substantial number of the applicant's members are related to each other by kinship and trace their ancestry to a kinship group through genealogy or other methods. Genealogical documents shall be limited to those that show a descendency from identified Vermont or regional Native people.

Since the Elnu Tribe is perhaps the smallest band in the State of Vermont, with less than 50 citizens, and it is established from a core group of people who are closely related (for example, the various branches of the Sheehan family with auxiliary families who are related more distantly through Julia Patnode), a great majority of Elnu's citizens are related to each other by blood. The scholars have affirmed that these kinship groups descend from identified Vermont or regional Native people through genealogy and historic Native practice.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
 
HIGHLIGHTED IN YELLOW IS WHAT WAS SUBSEQUENTLY in the "Public EDITED/REDACTED version" of this Application.
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853 (c)(3) The applicant has a connection with Native American Indian tribes and bands that have historically inhabited Vermont.

For example, Vera Schulmeisters' 3rd Great Grandmother, Julia Patnode-Loncto ("an old Indian woman") lived some of her life at Missisquoi. Elnu, Missisquoi, and Koasek all have members who descend from the Patnode/Patenaude line. Some Elnu and Missisquoi members also share Charles Partlow as an ancestor. He was listed as one of "four Indians" in the October 1863 Civil War conscription list from the Alburgh, VT Land and Miscellaneous Records Book. Alburgh is only a few miles from Missisquoi. Charles Partlow's sister, Eliza, had a daughter, Jenny Covey, who had a son, Herbert Hilliker, who had a daughter, Doris Hilliker, who had a daughter, Betty Reynolds, whose daughter, Cathy Cline, is the mother of Melody Walker Brook.

Also valuable to this section is a piece of oral family history handed down to John Sheehan who recounted the story of an Indian village that came under attack, "...The village our family lived in was attached because we are Indians. Everything was being burned and people were getting killed. Our grandmother, your grandmother and her brother were put down in a well to hide. They must have been too small to run. They tried to stay quiet and clung to each other. They could smell the smoke from everything burning and hear the cries and screams of their family and friends. They didn't know for how long [they were in the well for]. Time passed, the screams quieted. Your grandmother and her brother slowly came out of the hole. Their home and village was destroyed, ashes smoldered; many people were killed. The ground and rocks near the river was stained with blood. There was more but I don't remember..." (John Sheehan, 2010). This main very well be a memory, passed down through generations, of the Missisquoi raid or possibly the Roger's Rangers raid on St. Francis.

The language of this criterion, "The applicant has a connection with Native American Indian tribes and bands that have historically inhabited Vermont", is very broad. Elnu undoubted has political, familial, social, and/or cultural 'connections' with Missisquoi, Koasek, and Nulhegan.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(4) The applicant has historically maintained an organizational structure that exerts influence and authority over its members that is supported by documentation of the structure, membership criteria, the names and residential addresses of its members, and the methods by which the applicant conducts its affairs.

According to Wikipedia, "In anthropology, bands are the tiniest societies, consisting typically of 5-80 people, most or all of them close relatives by birth or by marriage. In effect, a band is an extended family or several related extended families." Bands are organizational structures. There is no question that Elnu is a Band.

To document "influence and authority over its members" and "the methods by which the applicant conducts its affairs", Elnu presented a section of its governing constitution which details the duties and authority of the Chief and Council, as well as the procedures for selecting the Chief and Councilors. This is followed by a section that describes the process by which members who have committed offenses against the tribe or in violation of their bylaws are handled.

The tribe's membership criteria and the names and residential addresses of members are presented. Acceptable forms of documentation for membership include a combination of genealogical, adoption, historical, DNA, and other records; family and oral traditions; pictures and artifacts; etc. Also detailed in the membership criteria are various reasons for denial or revocation of membership.

This clearly shows a maintained organizational structure that exerts influence and authority over its members.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(5) The applicant has an enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that is documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, folklore, or any other applicable scholarly research and data.

Lyman Simpson Hayes pointed out in some detail in his 'History of the Town of Rockingham, VT 1753-1907' that there was a large ancient Indian town in the area. Especially important to local history was a "large Indian village of wigwams extending from the south end of Mount Kilburn, where the Fitchburg station of Cold River now is, nearly a quarter of a mile south, and that it was a sub-tribe of the great Abenaquis..." A village almost a quarter mile long would have been home to hundreds of indigenous people. Recently, Robert Smith noted, "Reliable sources indicate that dozens of Abenaki skeletons and graves have been unearthed in downtown Bellows Falls, along with many times that number of Native artifacts."

Above is just an example of the mountain of evidence that Elnu has presented to satisfy the antecedent Indian presence of the 1600's and 1700's. The identity of the people who inhabited Elnu's region and also to the south, are what historians would call the Sokokis (named for the Squakeag Village at Northfield, MA. Calloway noted that "They (the Sokokis) occupied the region ... to the great rapids at Bellows Falls." Elnu's M'Sadoques family has direct family tradition of a Sokoki connection and also a connection to the Longto line through the Patenaudes. Norman M'Sadoques was told by his grandfather that his surname meant the "big river people" in the Abenaki, a direct reference to the Connecticut River. In addition, he was told that he was of the "turtle clan" from the old Sokoki region. In Colin Calloway's book, his research uncovered the "return from Canada" of Sachem Sadochquis and 156 men, women, and children to Schaghticoke in 1685.

During the 19th and much of the 20th century, the regional ancestors of Elnu citizens, like other Vermont indigenous people of the time, functioned as loosely organized multi-family kinship based communities bonded by blood, cultural practice, and marriage. Colin Calloway pointed out with regards to the 19th century, "This community (the Vermont Abenakis) was not a single unit with one physical residence; it was a fluid network of family bands, of which only the edges were visible to non-Indian observers."

This community also used material indicative symbols of ethnic distinctness. Julia Patnode Longto was described as wearing "Indian clothes" and accessories with beaded and ribbon detail. A close look at Julia's daughter, Nellie Longto, in an image presented in Elnu's application reveals a necklace shows a long thin claw. Nellie's photo (ca 1873) leaves little doubt to her ethnicity.

Colin Calloway also noted in 1990, "But the reported disappearance of Abenakis from Vermont and New Hampshire (during the 19th century) was illusory, and the notion that the sad remnants moved en masse to Canada was a convenient distortion that belied the reality of Abenaki survivals behind the frontier."
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Elnu referenced more recent (late 19th and early/mid 20th century) examples of "enduring community presence" in their region such as miscellaneous records, census's, and gravestones of relatives in the area which is archival evidence of local residency. Memories of John Sheehan pounding ash to make basket splints, memories of relatives conversing in the "old language", and memories and photos of Elnu ancestors in Indian apparel are presented in great detail from multiple sources.

Another ethnic identifier that is very pertinent to this report is the practice of mound gardening and the specific techniques and minor details that accompany the custom. Mounds of corn, beans, and squash, often referred to as the Three Sisters; fertilizer of sucker fish; the timing of the planting; the spiritual significance, prayers of thanks, and offerings of tobacco; the practice of growing and harvesting tobacco — are all ethnic identifiers specific to indigenous culture. The technique of using fish eyes for bait and keeping them warm under the tongue is common in every native community that we are aware of including Elnu. Basket making is also common in these communities. The art of twining, however, lives on only at Elnu. Twining is a practice that involves collecting plant fibers and spinning them to make cordage from which to twine bags.

In this criterion's lengthy presentation, Elnu citizens share the knowledge that was passed to them in regards to spirituality and healing plants; the practice of tattooing as a way of signifying personal spiritual status, totem, or clan; rituals and ceremonies that are still practiced today; and the trials and tribulations of maintaining their Indian identity in the 20th century. The description of the late 20' century renaissance of the community now known as Elnu adds great value to this criterion's satisfaction.

In this section, Elnu presented 42 pages of sourced data, oral testimony, images, and history. There is no doubt that the people of Elnu are the descendants of the Tolba (Turtle) Clan and that their small community has endured, for the most part, within the boundaries of Vermont. The people of Elnu are among the most traditional of indigenous people in Vermont. Their history and contemporary existence is deep and priceless to our state.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(6)(A) The applicant is organized in part: to preserve, document, and promote its Native American Indian culture and history, and this purpose is reflected in its bylaws.

Preamble from the Constitution of the Elnu Abenaki Tribe: "Elms is and will forever be culturally identified as Wabanaki, a tribe of western Abenaki people by our history, our traditions, our language and our ceremonies that we will strive to pass on to our children and the future generations to come. This constitution was written in keeping with the tradition of the Wabanaki people in accordance with the Wampum Traditions of our people."

853 (c)(6)(B) The applicant is organized in part: to address the social, economic, political or cultural needs of the members with ongoing educational programs and activities.

Social & Cultural needs: The preamble (above) from the Constitution of the Elnu Abenaki Tribe addresses the social and cultural needs of members through educational programming. Elnu is well known among the greater Abenaki and Native communities as a valuable social and cultural resource at powwows, gatherings, sporting events, presentations, and celebrations such as the Lake Champlain Quadracentennial and countless others. Elnu is indisputably and actively organized to address social and cultural needs and revitalization.

Economic needs: Elnu has made a commitment to encourage the economic and entrepreneurial aspects of Abenaki culture, especially in the craft arts, and this is accomplished by individual mentoring activities and multi-person teaching by Elnu's elders at events as presented by various hands-on examples in their application as well as resources on their website.

Political needs: Quoted from Elnu's website, "We limit ourselves in inter-tribal politics; however we will not be forgotten." Since 2008, Elnu has been an active member of the Vermont Indigenous Alliance along with fellow Vermont tribes, Missisquoi, Nulhegan, and Koasek. Elnu has represented it's citizenry at various legislative hearings and VCNAA meetings since 2007. Fairly recently, Elnu participated in an attempt to repatriate two Seven Nations wampum belts that were held in New York City, thereby dealing peripherally with other Wabanaki Nations who are stakeholders in the repatriation.
 
THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(7) The applicant can document traditions, customs, oral stories, and histories that signify the applicant's Native American heritage and connection to their historical homeland.

Elnu's presents many traditions, customs, oral stories, and histories that signify their Native American heritage and connection to their homeland. Testimony of relatives wearing Native clothing around the time of World War II and other relatives who spoke an Indian language; an Elder maintaining a traditional cultivar of tobacco; the continued maintenance of "Three Sisters" mound agriculture fertilized with sucker fish; the Elnu constitution that was, until recently, a living document memorized by the tribe's leadership and signified by strands of wampum; the description of the spiritual connection to the section of the Connecticut River adjacent to the petroglyph site at Bellows Falls as well as other spiritual beliefs and stories that focus around the Bellows Falls area; an old story passed down about an Indian village that was attacked; a description of the passing down of the art of twining (weaving bags from cordage that is made from plant fibers); stories of the unfortunate but all too common necessity to maintain a low profile; as well as discussion of basket making and much more.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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853 (c)(8) The applicant has not been recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation.

Elnu has not been recognized in any state, province, or nation.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.  
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853 (c)(9)(A) Submission of letters, statements, and documents from: municipal, state, or federal authorities that document the applicant's history of tribe-related business and activities.

Included in the application are letters from Bruce Hyde, Vermont Department of Tourism & Marketing; Senator Hinda Miller, D-Chittenden; Charles Delaney-Megeso, Former Chairman, Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs; Professor Frederick M. Wisemen, Ph.D, Johnson State College; Albert Garlick, Travis Native American Heritage Council.

853 (c)(9)(B) Submission of letters, statements, and documents from: tribes in and outside Vermont that attest to the Native American Indian heritage of the applicant.

Included in the application is a statement of recognition from the Vermont Indigenous Alliance; a letter from Chief Don Stevens, Nulhegan Abenaki Tribe; notes from a Haudenosaunee Standing Committee in New York City; letters from Marketa Fisher, IMST Sales Manager and Choctaw Nation member; Chief Nancy Millette-Doucet, Koasek Abenaki of the Koas; Representative Kate Webb, Chittenden 5-1, Shelburne; Former Lt. Governor, Brian Dubie, etc.

THE VERMONT COMMISSION ON NATIVE AMERICAN AFFAIRS AND THE EXPERT REVIEW PANEL CONCUR THAT THE APPLICANT SUCCESSFULLY MEETS THIS CRITERION.
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United States Forest Green Mountain & Finger Lakes
Department of Service National Forests
231 North Main St.
Rutland, Vermont 05701

Agriculture Supervisor's
Office Tel. (802) 747-6700 FAX
(802) 747-6766
www.fs.fed.us/r9/mfl 

Date: December 20, 2010
Subject: Review of the Elnu Tribe's Application for Vermont State Recognition
To: Luke Willard, Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs

Dear Chairman Willard and Commissioners:
This letter contains my findings and opinions after reviewing the Elnu Tribe's Application for Vermont State Recognition. My conclusion is that the applicant meets the criteria set forth by the Act (S.222). My more specific comments areas follows.

Criterion 1: A majority of the applicant's members currently reside in a specific geographic location in Vermont.

Yes, it is reasonably established that the majority of members of the Elnu Tribe reside in the far southeastern corner of Vermont.

Criterion 2: A substantial number of the applicant's members are related to each other by kinship and trace their ancestry to a kinship group through genealogy or other methods. Genealogical documents shall be limited to those that show descendancy from identified Vermont or regional native people.

Within the section of the Application dealing with this criterion and elsewhere throughout the rest of the document, as well as in the separate genealogical addendum, modem/current connections among and between many tribal members are well established; connections to key Vermont-wide kinship networks in the historical (19th c) past are documented; and descendancy from Native people is demonstrated.

However, I would note that (from an "editorial" if not substantive point of view) I found the presentation to be disjointed at times and required several readings to grasp the meaningful connections between the specific, limited genealogical sample and the narrative about the core family histories in the main document. For example, the "Patenaude" connection seemed to me to be key (especially for the Longtoe-Sheehan branch), but to actually understand the connection one is required to mine for references spread throughout the document. For future reference, this might be a case where the balance between confidentiality on the one hand (limiting the amount of specific information revealed), and the applicant's ability to articulate their case convincingly on the other, could use some fine tuning.

Nevertheless, I find that the information provided in the application allows me to say that the applicant meets the criterion.
 
Criterion 3: The applicant has a connection with Native American Indian tribes and bands that historically inhabited Vermont.
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Familial/genealogical connections to Missisquoi are clearly established, and in combination with links to other locales and Abenaki groups demonstrate antecedent Elnu members' presence in Vermont, which is the core requirement. Coming from an archaeological perspective, my initial reading of the Application left me with questions about the tenuous nature of what one might call "deep-historical" (i.e., pre-18th century) connections to the modern Elnu Tribe's territory. However, since the standard established in the law is an "historic" presence in Vermont I believe that the standard is met by the applicant.


Criterion 4: The applicant has historically maintained an organizational structure that exerts influence and authority over its members that is supported by documentation of the structure, membership criteria, the names and residential addresses of its members, and the methods by which the applicant conducts its affairs.

I am no doubt guilty of over-thinking this criterion, but I felt that the undefined use of the word "historically" creates another case of vague direction. One possible reading is that the applicant must demonstrate that the tribe's "organizational structure" has existed (and evolved) more-or-less continuously since some time in the distant historic past. The other is that a current, documented organizational structure meeting appropriate standards has been in existence for some undefined period of time. Of course, it would be inherently more difficult to "prove" the former, while relatively straight-forward to document the latter.

In what I took to be a good faith attempt to meet the first 'reading' of the criterion, the narrative thread presented in the Application was that the demise of "Indian towns" in the southern Connecticut River Valley by the 19th century led to a dramatic change in the organizational structure of area tribes (i.e., since complexity and hierarchy are a function of the shifting size of the community); that this town-level organizational structure was replaced by a smaller, looser family/kinship-based organizational model scaled to the interrelated/extended family communities that were present across the landscape in the latter 19th and early 20th century; and that by the late 20th/early 21st century a constitutional organization more in keeping with an economic non-profit model evolved to meet the expectations/requirements of the Indian Reorganization Act. I found this evolutionary trajectory both logical and historically accurate. However, discussion of how the intermediate (19th-20th c) family/kinship-based organization actually operated —i.e., how it meets the criterion's requirement of having a "structure with influence and authority over its members" - is implied, not specified. While I appreciate that factually specific records from 19th century family life are hard, if not impossible, to come by, referencing models derived from anthropological and/or ethnographic literature, or relevant anecdotes from local oral historical accounts, might have been used to add substantial elaboration of this point.

However, having said all that, and taking into consideration the vagueness of the criterion, I conclude that the applicant does a good job of establishing the relative antiquity and continuity of some form of organizational structure, and that the specification of the current/modern organization and its membership roster and rules for membership is more than sufficient to meet the criterion.
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Criterion 5: The applicant has an enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that is documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, folklore, or any other applicable scholarly research and data.

Demonstration of a 'community presence' linked directly to the modern Elnu Tribe was strongest for the period since the beginning of the 20' century. If one grants that the term "enduring" can suggest a time-frame that is somewhat less than "historical", then the applicants meet this Criterion.

Criterion 6: The applicant is organized in part:

(a) To preserve, document, and promote its Native American Indian culture and history, and this purpose is reflected in its bylaws.


(b) To address the social, economic, political or cultural needs of the members with ongoing educational programs and activities.

Yes, the Elnu clearly are organized appropriately to meet both aspects of this criterion; in fact, outreach and education appear to be a hallmark of the tribe.

Criterion 7: The applicant can document traditions, customs, oral stories, and histories that signify the applicant's Native American heritage and connection to their historical homeland.

Yes, there are ample examples of traditions, customs and oral histories connecting Elnu members to their homeland.

Criterion 8: The applicant has not been recognized as a tribe in any other state, province or nation.

So noted.

Criterion 9: Submission of letters, statements, and documents from:

(a) Municipal, state or federal authorities that document the applicant's history of tribe-related business and activities.


(b) Tribes in and outside Vermont that attest to the Native American Indian heritage of the applicant.

Several of the writers provide positive corroboration of tribe-related activities and the strong educational mission of the Elnu. Others clearly recognize the Elnu as a Native American Indian tribe. It is encouraging to see the mutual respect and support offered by members of the Vermont Indigenous Alliance. I was also impressed by the direct and forceful language in re: Elnu's tribal status in Sen. Hilda Miller's letter. And I note that in
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an application by another Tribe, the Elnu are also acknowledged and mentioned in a very positive light in correspondence from former Lt. Gov. Dubie.

Overall, I find that this Application presents a good and convincing case for recognition. I also believe there are some points that the Commission may wish to discuss as part of their deliberations about making recommendations to the legislature.

First, as I discuss above, I had difficulty clearly teasing out the various genealogical connections, no doubt in part because of the inherent difficulty of finding verifiable records, and in part because of a reluctance to reveal confidential information. Combined with some confusing organization of the document and in the narrative I was left feeling (initially) that the sample genealogy reaching 'vertically' back in time was largely separate from the core membership of the modern Elnu and the lateral connections linking the modern Elnu to one another. It seems evident that what struck me as fragmentary references could also have been a by-product of a desire to ensure confidentiality; as I eventually dug deeper I came to a clearer view of the connections. I mention it here as a way to suggest that the Commission re-visit this topic before providing advice and direction to subsequent applicants. Specifically: what other mechanisms can be put in place to ensure confidentiality so that applicants are more comfortable about being forthcoming with critical information that allows them to make their case more forthrightly?

Secondly, while this may be a minor point, I think a better – if speculative - analysis of the ways in which extended families provide an organizational structure with "influence and authority" over members would have been helpful in building the case that the evolution of ways of organizing a tribal entity could involve change while still reflecting continuity. I don't believe this is a "fatal flaw" in the application, but for future reference (and because nearly all eastern Native groups likely suffer from some variation of this same discontinuity) it is something that would enhance the historical narrative of any Tribe's long trail from past to present.

Finally, the depth of the connection of the antecedent Elnu to the current territory/tribe is necessarily tenuous, due to the inherent difficulty of demonstrating a one-to-one link between prehistoric and early historic settlement to modern groups. I think it is important and true that there was a Native presence throughout Southeastern Vermont for millennia, and that there are known sites which have been investigated archaeologically, documented in histories, and in some instances referenced through oral history. Citing this context was appropriate in the application. But the link between these sites and the specific family-based tribal entity that exists today is nearly impossible to demonstrate convincingly (or perhaps I should say, "convincingly to an archaeologist"). Thus, it was a wise and/or fortuitous decision that the word "enduring" was used in this criterion –thus conferring paramount importance to the well-documented late 19th and 20th century connections.

In summary, I find that the applicants meet the criteria set out by S.222 and have demonstrated that they are a coherent, inter-connected, geographically specific, Native community of Abenaki descent, who are embedded in the community and organized for the benefit of their membership as well as other citizens of Vermont. My opinion is that the Commission should recommend the Elnu Tribe for recognition by the legislature.

I acknowledge and appreciate that the applicants felt that the process, in some ways, intruded on their privacy, and I'd like to confirm that I have maintained the confidentiality of the information
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contained in the application and addendum. The genealogical material has been sent to Commission member Melody Walker as of the date of this memo.
Thank you for granting me the honor of participating in this process. Sincerely,

/s/ David Lacy
DAVID LACY
Forest Archaeologist

cc: Fred Wiseman
Eloise Biel
Melody Walker
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Evaluation of the Elnu Tribe's Application
for Vermont State Recognition
as an Indian tribe.
By
Frederick M. Wiseman, Ph.D.
Chair, Department of Humanities,
Johnson State College, Johnson, VT 05656
Office: (802) 635-1353
Home (802) 868-3808

As a scholar of and participant in Abenaki recognition since 1993, I must say that I was very pleased with the Elnu's application, in both its clarity and depth of information. The revelation of endangered cultural-ecological and technological tradition was 1.) gratifying, because it shows heretofore unknown richness of the Vermont Abenaki experience, 2.) chastening because some of my published inferences were incorrect, and 3.) daunting, because, Elnu tradition bearers are, in at least one case, very old and in poor health, and there is a possibility that additional data may soon be lost. Below, for clarity, I have added brief comments that are applicable to each criterion listed in the 5.222 bill. I have added in capitals, my professional opinion as a scholar of the Vermont Abenaki experience, whether the response meets the criterion (they all do).

Therefore, after a review of the application and a certain amount of external fact and citation checking, I am happy to support the Elnu Tribe's application for Vermont State Recognition.

853(c) (1) The tribal rolls data which applies to both this section and the 853 (c)(4) section below indicate that the majority of Elnu's citizens reside in southeastern Vermont. In order to confirm addresses in this and in section 853 (c)(4), I took a random sample of 10 adult citizen addresses and checked them with Verizon 411 and online people search sites and confirmed that the people listed in the application have a verifiable street address. (MEETS THE CRITERION)

853 (c) (2) Assuming that the supporting genealogical data are correct, there is a remarkably high rate of endogamy (in-marriage) within the Elnu Tribe. This may be accounted for by the fact that the core Patenaude/Longto/Sheehan line contains most of the members, but the discovery of genealogical connections between that line and a recent addition to the Tribe, Melody Walker from the Missisquoi area, is noteworthy. The descendency data was relatively confusing for a non genealogist to grapple with, but I do believe that they made their case that the modern Elnu Tribal citizens are descended from "identified Vermont or regional Native people." I am unimpressed with lineages that stretch back to the 1600's and 1700's to find a "paper Indian" in someone's genetic background. That may be interesting for those attracted to genealogical minutiae but has little to do with an Indian identity. The Elnus were able to show in a logical way, that 19th century ancestors were described in Euroamerican documents as "Indian" (I was already familiar with the Alburg [1863] and Wyman [1963] references from my own
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research), but more importantly, retained cultural practices (revealed through the oral-historical and artifact records) that any anthropologist would identify as Native practice. These two independent data sets, when combined with the genealogy show me that most modern Elnu citizens are directly descended from and participate in a native-practice community with historically documented continuity. (MEETS THE CRITERION)
853 (c) (3) The genealogical relations with "other American Indian tribes and bands that have historically inhabited Vermont" is notable, especially with Missisquoi. I have discovered through their research that my Missisquoi-area ancestors were related to the modern Elnus through the Patenaude line, as is VCNAA Commissioner Shirly Hook, who is from the Koasek Band. The oral historical anecdote about the attack on the Indian village, when tied to a Missisquoi-resident line, may be a living memory of the Missisquoi Raid. Ongoing political and cultural relations are acknowledged among at least four bands in Vermont, as acknowledged in the letters of support included in with the application. I know from personal experience that Elnu participated in the Koasek, Nulhegan and Missisquoi pow-wows, and for a time, was a "sub-group" of the Koaseks. Therefore, I believe that the Elnus have cultural ties to the other three Vermont bands and seem to be acknowledged by the other bands as a legitimate Indian tribe. Lastly, from my personal observation, the Elnu's participation along with the other bands in concerted political action such as showing a unified front for Vermont state recognition in legislative hearings from 2006-2010, and so this activity documents a political unity as well. (MEETS THE CRITERION)

853 (c) (4) I particularly liked the "history of organizational structure," given my professional interests in the social history of the Vermont Abenakis. The referents to the antecedent "Tolba" regional totem was very exciting, as was understanding exactly what the Elnus operate the way they do. The documentary sections, which are basically a rehashing of sections of the constitution, fulfill the requirements of the criterion, and the "names and addresses" criterion, was merely a reworking of the tribal rolls which I discuss in 853 (c)(1). (MEETS THE CRITERION)

853 (c)(5) For me as an archaeologist and historian, and as having worked on rebutting the preliminary negative finding by the BIA that led to the failed Missisquoi federal tribal recognition petition; this would be the most difficult criterion to satisfy. Basically, there would have to be evidence from a variety of sources that the Elnu homeland was continuously occupied by a community from the contact period to today. Thus this section was the longest and most detailed in the application (other than the auxiliary genealogical data). Although I was already familiar with much of the original source material (except for the more recent newspaper articles etc.), I had to double check a couple of sources to be refresh my memory. There were a couple of typos and bibliographic problems, but they were not germane to the meeting of the criterion. The Euroamerican documents showed two things that were important. They first indicated a generalized Indian presence in the area, and made a case for these Indians being at least in part, local rather than visitors from Quebec, New York, or the East. People who for one reason or another have a personal or political disdain for the Vermont Abenakis will assert that all observations of Indians in Vermont are from elsewhere, and I believe that the Elnu application brought several lines of evidence (including some of my research!) to show that there were at least some local Indians in the region according to the Euroamerican documentary record. The second documentary data set placed the direct ancestors of the Elnus in the Windham county area. To connect the observations of Indians
 Page [19.]
with the documented residency data, the application went into great detail through oral history showing a nineteenth and early 20th century Native culture in Windham County, VT. Much of this information was exceedingly subtle and would be very difficult for anyone to fake. For example, in another context, I was asked to authenticate a necklace in the Nellie Longto photograph. A high resolution scan was provided. Although the Longto chain and crucifix were not ethnically distinctive, I discovered a weasel-family claw attached, which would probably not have been widely used by non-natives. (Please note: In full disclosure, I was involved with providing artifact data on the Bellows Falls wristband, Brattleboro tintype and the Vernon basket to Elnu that ended up in the petition, and so will not comment on them due to a potential conflict of interest.) The most extraordinary and most historically definitive data was the huge corpus of oral history that was listed in this section. Technologies I thought were never in Vermont, such as mound agriculture and milkweed-fiber twining are still practiced within the Sheehan family. The "Old Language," apparently a Wabanaki tongue, was spoken until the early 20th century, and people continued to make and wear Indigenous style clothing also into the mid 20th century. Fishing and hunting data were also quite unique and point to a persistence of Indigenous style bow and arrow making, and the "warming fish-eyes under the tongue" that seems definitive of Native style ice fishing. Most importantly for me as a scholar of the Abenaki renaissance, after reviewing the 19th-mid 20th century historical data, I can now understand many questions that I had about the Elnu tribe, why the Elnus named their tribe with a Micmac name, and why they never needed to go through a "pan-Indian" phase of using Plains Indian regalia to promote their Native Identity, as was done at Missisquoi and Odanak, and why they chose a more regionally appropriate way of using a "living history" approach to identity rather than a pow-wow approach. It is my professional opinion, that while some of the oral history could be coincidental, little of it could be faked or manipulated without a profound knowledge of 19th and 20th century Abenaki culture, a branch of study that has had little published documentation, except my own Voice of the Dawn. The Elnu experience is profoundly different from Missisquoi, and in many ways has more ethnic richness in the record that comes from Missisquoi. This was the section that, in my mind, had to meet the test -- to prove to me that these people were carriers of deep-time Abenaki tradition. Given the necessary brevity of the response to the criterion, in order to make a coherent application package, I believe that they did an admirable job. (MEETS THE CRITERION)
853 (c) (6) The quotes from the Elnu constitution preamble and website, quickly and easily meet most of the subsets of this criterion. The choice of the tribe to do economic development through the promotion of traditional arts is unique in my experience with Wabanaki peoples, but definitely is a true economic development model. The political needs section was the weakest section -- in that it was only hinted at in the Constitution, and so auxiliary data was provided to prove that the Elnus, who seems particularly wary of political activity, nevertheless do participate when at need, as in the Vermont Indigenous Alliance, recognition (the recognition application document itself is prima facie evidence of that), and the wampum belt repatriation attempt. (MEETS THE CRITERION)

853 (c) (7) This was basically a restatement and augmenting of the data in 853 (c)(5) with additional information arranged specifically to highlight the native heritage in certain sections, and the fact that the Elnu's ancestors have been in the Windham County area for a long time, in other sections. The response was very well thought out and stated. (MEETS THE CRITERION)
 Page [20.]
853 (c) (8) It is obvious that Elnu has not been recognized, or the whole expensive and humiliating recognition application process would be redundant. (MEETS THE CRITERION)
853 (c) (9) Although this was not a necessary criterion, it nonetheless was important to me as a reviewer, because it gave me an independent source of information to answer lingering concerns raised in previous sections. For example, the minutes of the Abenaki Haudenosaunee meeting at Sotheby's in NYC, and the letter from the Vermont Indigenous Alliance, greatly bolstered their argument concerning political activity(853 [c]) [6]) that I believed was somewhat weak by itself. Letters, statements and documents were included and so-- (MEETS THE CRITERION)
 Page [21.]
Elnu Tribe of the Abenaki Application
for Vermont State Recognition
as a Native American Indian Tribe:
Evaluation
Review Panelist: Eloise Beil
M. A. American Folk Culture, Cooperstown Graduate Program
Community Relations Manager, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum
Office: (802) 475-2022 ext. 107
Home (802) 877-6648

After a review of the application materials, I am happy to support the Elnu Tribe's application for Vermont State Recognition. It is my opinion that the Elnu Tribe has met each of the criteria listed in the S.222 bill. Brief comments for each criterion are included below.

853(c) (1) A majority of the applicant's members currently reside in a specific geographic location within Vermont: The tribal rolls indicate that the majority of Elnu's citizens currently reside in the Windham County area in southeastern Vermont.

853 (c) (2) A substantial number of the applicant's members are related to each other by kinship and trace their ancestry to a kinship group through genealogy or other methods. Genealogical documents shall be limited to those that show descendency from identified Vermont or regional native people: The documentation provided by Tribal Genealogist Vera Schulmeisters demonstrates relationships between members of the Sheehan family lineage and the Patnode (Longto) lineage, with descent from Indian ancestors documented in the nineteenth century, and continuity in the geographical location. There is also documentation of "regional native people" within the lineages of this "kinship group." Family traditions of language, clothing, wigwam construction and use, agriculture, hunting and fishing practices, basketry, and twining provide additional evidence of Native cultural practices that were retained by the members of this kinship group.

853 (c) (3) The applicant has a connection with Native American Indian tribes and bands that have historically inhabited Vermont: The Elnu have documented genealogical relationships with families of the Nulhegan, Missisquoi, and Koasek, three of the "other American Indian tribes and bands that have historically inhabited Vermont." They also share social and political relationships with these Abenaki tribes or bands. These relationships are acknowledged in letters of support included with the application.

853 (c) (4) The applicant has historically maintained an organizational structure that exerts influence and authority over its members that is supported by the documentation of the structure, membership criteria, the names and residential addresses of its members, and the methods by which the applicant conducts its affairs: The Elnu provide ample evidence from historic and archaeological sources of organized activities by antecedent Native people in the Bellows Falls and Windham County area. They
 Page [22.]
also provide evidence from oral tradition among Elnu families of an "Indian village" and the "old Tolba" or Turtle region, as well as the period during which the organizational structure of the Indigenous community was primarily expressed through familial relationships; this was followed in the final decades of the twentieth century by participation in the Abenaki renaissance, when the tribal structure mandated by the Indian Reorganization Act was adopted. Sections of the Constitution of the Elnu Abenaki are provided to document the current structure, membership criteria, membership roster, and methods of conducting tribal business.
853 (c)(5) The applicant has an enduring community presence within the boundaries of Vermont that is documented by archaeology, ethnography, physical anthropology, history, folklore, or any other applicable scholarly research and data: The Elnu provide ample and highly detailed evidence of the presence of antecedent Native people in the Bellows Falls and Windham County area from a wide variety of sources: archaeological evidence, historical documents; citations from numerous academic and local histories, and oral traditions from families within the kinship group. The combination of evidence from these various sources, presented chronologically in a timeline which spans the sixteenth through twentieth centuries, indicates the continuity of community presence in this region by the Abenaki families from whom the Elnu are descended.

853 (c) (6) The applicant is organized in part: (A) to preserve, document, and promote its Native American Indian culture and history, and this purpose is reflected in its bylaws. (B) To address the social, economic, political or cultural needs of the members with ongoing educational programs and activities: The preamble to the Elnu constitution, and "About the Elnu Abenaki People" from the Elnu website, provide documentation of the Elnu commitment to the purposes of this criterion. For several years I have observed and talked with members of the Elnu at public events and in private conversations, in which they clearly and consistently express their motivation and commitment to preserving their Native American Indian heritage and history. The documentation in this section, as well as letters of support, substantiate their commitment to ongoing educational programs and activities. The Elnu have chosen to express their Native American Indian heritage through craft traditions, and to encourage craft entrepreneurial enterprise among tribal members; the desire to have Abenaki artisans certified as Native American artists under the 1990 Indian Arts and Crafts Act motivated the Elnu to active participation in the political arena, including Legislative recognition hearings and VT Native American Commission meetings since 2007.

853 (c) (7) The applicant can document traditions, customs, oral stories, and histories that signify the applicant's Native American heritage and connection to their historical homeland:
These points were addressed in great detail in section 853 (c) (5); in this section the applicant summarized major points indicative of Native American heritage through expressed Indian identity, Native subsistence practices, and ethnobotanical information; and major points indicative of connection with the historical homeland such as the Tolba totemic signifier, ritual visits to Bellows Falls, stories of ancestral spirits at Bellows Falls, and the wide network of extended family residing in Windham County communities.
Page [23.]
853 (c) (8) The applicant has not been recognized as a tribe in any other state, province, or nation: The Elnu Abenaki Tribe has never been officially recognized as a tribe by any other state, province or nation.

853 (c) (9) Submission of letters, statements, and documents from Municipal, State, or Federal authorities that document the applicant's history of tribe-related business and activities and attest to the Native American Indian heritage of the applicant:
This section included letters, statements, and documents from a wide range of sources that document Elnu Tribe's extensive participation in Native American cultural and educational activities and tribal business, and attest to their Native American Indian Heritage.
 Page [24.]
David Lacy and Frederick M. Wiseman
BIOGRAPHIES
EXPERT REVIEW PANEL BIOS

Dave Lacy, Archaeologist/US Forest Service
Bio:
David Lacy was born and grew up in eastern Massachusetts. He received his education at Boston University (BA, anthropology) and the University of Massachusetts-Amherst (MA). He has been the archaeologist for the Mountain and ringer Lakes National Forests since 1985, where he is steward for the remains of the many hundreds of historic period sites and the several prehistoric Native American sites on those lands. In his role with the Forest Service Dave has worked with the Missisquoi Abenaki and the Abenaki Research Project for many years to ensure the proper treatment of sites, and to create a dialogue through which we share information and insights. Since 1990 he has lived in Pittsford with his wife Barbara; their older son Jake is an actor living in Los Angeles, and younger son Mack is a freshman at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY.

Frederick Wiseman, Archaeologist/Johnson State College
Bio
Frederick M. Wiseman has his Undergraduate Degree in Archaeology from the Department of Anthropology, and Doctorate from the Department of Geosciences, both University of Arizona. Trained as a geo-archaeologist and ethnobotanist, Dr. Wiseman has done extensive ethnobotanical, paleoenvironmental and archaeological fieldwork in the American Southwest, Northwestern Mexico, Yucatan, Belize, Guatemala and Honduras. Before coming to Vermont, he taught Mesoamerican and Southwestern archaeology, ethnobotany and phytogeography at the undergraduate and graduate levels at Louisiana State University and graduate level archaeological paleobotany at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Center for Materials Research in Archaeology and Ethnology. Within the last two decades, the native experience in the Northeastern United States has become the focus of his scholarly and community activity. During this time, he published many articles and books (i.e. Voice of the Dawn, 2001; Reclaiming the Ancestors, 2005, At Lake Between, 2009, Champlain Tech, 2009 and Baseline 1609, 2010) dealing with the history, craft arts and inter-racial politics of the Vermont Abenakis and their neighbors. In addition to his research, he has served on tribal, community and state boards and commissions, ranging from Chair, Humanities Department at Johnson State College, to the Lamoille County Planning Commission, and Governor's Commission on Native American Affairs. He is an internationally respected native elder and activist, and has been elected to the Abenaki Tribal Council; Ceremonial Historian of the Seven Fires Alliance. He received highest Abenaki Nation tribal honors in 2006 for his eleven-year struggle in pushing Vermont officials toward state recognition of the Abenaki people was director of the Abenaki Tribal Museum and Cultural Center; and is now the director of the Wobanakik Heritage Center, and in this capacity has assisted in the development of native Museums and exhibits, including the Chimney Point (VT) Historic Site and Missiquoi Wildlife Refuge in VT, Musee des Abenakis and Musee Point a Caillaire in Quebec, the Wapohnaki Museum at Pleasant Point (ME) and the Boston Children's Museum. He recently completed events and exhibits projects for the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum (Vergennes, VT) and the ECHO Center (Burlington, . He (St. Francis/Sokoki Band) and appointed as Missisquoi Abenaki Delegate to Wabanaki Confederacy
~
EVIDENCE
of
their "WORKING RELATIONSHIPS"
with each other
=
AFFILIATED WITH THESE GROUPS
i.e.
Vermont Indigenous Alliance
Page [25.]
Frederick M. Wiseman Biography Continued
Eloise Beil Biography
VT) for the 400th anniversary of the European discovery of Lake Champlain. He organized a 2009 conference on the European discovery of Lake Champlain (St. Michael's College Colchester, VT). He is the Native liaison to the Vermont Champlain Quadricentennial Commission, where he received an award ("The QUAD Astrolabe") in early 2010 for his work on that Commission. He has worked as production assistant for award-winning, documentary filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin as production assistant and "talking head" for the National Film Board of Canada's Waban-Aki: People from where the Sun Rises. He has consulted on Mt. Lake PBS productions: The Forgotten War and Dead Reckoning: Champlain in America. Along with Hollywood director Irene Miracle, he produced The Changeling, a movie dealing with Anglo/Abenaki race relations in 1770's Vermont. With award-winning NY documentarian Ted Tirnreck, he produced Before the Lake Was Champlain and The New Antiquarians. Wiseman's videos Against the Darkness and 1609: The Other Side of History have been distributed to VT schools. He is doing research for the second and third books in his trilogy on the Wabanaki (a closely related group of native peoples of Vermont, NH, Maine and the Canadian Maritimes). Wiseman is working on content as well as production for several major film projects including a seven-part video history of the revolution in Northeastern archaeology with NY documentary film maker Ted Timreck. His most recent research activities have focused on understanding the 19th and early 20th century Wabanaki experience, and working with Vermont Indian tribes and policymakers in providing the historical and geographic data necessary in their intellectual and political deliberations concerning state legislative recognition of various Indigenous Vermont Native bands.
Wiseman lives in a restored Victorian house built by his grandfather in Swanton Vermont with his wife Anna, and pursues hobbies of restoring antique furniture and vintage Lionel Trains, and testing the northern Vermont hardiness of subtropical flowering plants such as wisterias, cacti and magnolias.

Eloise Bell, Curator, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum
Bio:
Eloise Bell received her M.A. in American Folk Culture and Museum Studies from the Cooperstown Graduate Program, Cooperstown, New York in 1984, and her B.A. in English and Cultural Anthropology (English Honors Program, Phi Beta Kappa, Magna Cum Laude) from Hunter College, New York, in 1973. As Director of Collections and Exhibits, and Community Relations Manager at Lake Champlain Maritime Museum, Bell helped to develop LCMM's Quadricentennial exhibit on the history of bark canoes (Lake Champlain's First Navigators), and was primary author of Discover 1609 (the Champlain expedition and Champlain's relationship with indigenous people); she has worked with the El-nu Abenaki and Dr. Frederick M. Wiseman to produce LCMM's annual Native American Encampments; and she edited Wiseman's three Quadricentennial publications providing a Native American perspective on Champlain's expedition. She also developed a timeline of lake history for LCMM's Burlington Schooner Project in 2000.

As Director of Collections at Shelburne Museum (1988-1998), Bell oversaw the reinterpretation and reinstallation of Native American collections and the review of the collections for NAGPRA
 
NOTE: Eloise Beil (born February 03, 1951 in Stanton Island, Richmond Co., NY), claims that her grandmother (Eloise's mother's mother) Mildred (nee: Lumbra) Abbott "was an Abenaki."
 
Lisa Brooks also descends from the Lumbra Family of Franklin County, Vermont.
 
How allegedly "un-biased" and supposedly "independent" is scholar Eloise Beil?
 
I don't think or conclude that she is anything but biased and un-independent from these corporate groups seeking state recognition. Heck, she helped the Gottlieb's, and she used to go up to the Swanton-based Pow-Wow's throughout the 1990's according to Carol Gottlieb, who has been friends with Dee Brightstar (Deanne Dudley) and Eloise Beil herself. Carol and Eloise used to ride the school bus together in their younger years! It was Carol Gottlieb that encouraged her son to go buy a Taos, New Mexico made Pow-Wow Drum for the St. Francis/ Sokoki group up in Swanton, Vermont ... only to see the good efforts go to waste due to Ego, Power and Control issues by the 'late' Homer St. Francis Sr. and his daughter April Merrill.
How involved was and is Eloise Beil with the St. Francis/Sokoki bunch up in Swanton throughout the retrospective years is anyone's guess, but it is a lot of involvement than she is letting on, that's for sure to my thinking!
~
MORE EVIDENCE
of
their "WORKING RELATIONSHIPS"
with each other
=
AFFILIATED WITH THESE GROUPS
i.e.
Vermont Indigenous Alliance

MY REVIEW /RESPONSE:
These 3 Member Expert Scholars on this Review Panel are in violation and contradiction of the legislatively-approved S.222/Act 107 VT  law, regarding "Abenaki" recognition, wherein it is written "No member of the Review Panel may be a member of the commission or affiliated with or be on the tribal rolls of the applicant."


David Lacy, as per his own EXPERT REVIEW PANEL BIOGRAPHY [SEE Page 24.], admits "in his role with the Forest Service he has worked with the Missisquoi Abenaki and the Abenaki Research Project for many years."
LINK: http://www.fs.fed.us/r9/forests/greenmountain/htm/greenmountain/links/heritage/originalvermonters.htm

David Lacy is also mentioned (beginning on page 151 onward...) in the book entitled, "Cross-Cultural Collaboration: Native People's and Archaeology in the Northeastern United States" Edited by Jordan E. Kerber, with a Forward by Joe Watkins © 2006 by the Board of Regents of the University of Nebraska. PAGES 150 to 164:


"This chapter reflects on the collaborative work of the GMNF and the Missisquoi Abenaki, the only Abenaki band seeking federal recognition at this time. Efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect sites and to share cross-cultural understandings have been ongoing since the late 1980's. The authors -- David Lacy, the GMNF archaeologist since 1986, and Donna Roberts Moody, the Abenaki Repatriation Coordinator since 1995 -- address the challenges, successes, and prospects for continued collaboration." Page 151.


"When the GMNF first initiated contact with the Abenaki in the 1980's..." Page 155.


"It was important, therefore, for the GMNF to hear from its own archaeologist (i.e., Lacy) that despite the lack of federal recognition for the tribe and the politically charged atmosphere of the times, it was nevertheless true that Native Americans were "here" for millennia; that these indigenous peoples' legacy was reflected in part by known and yet-to-be-discovered sites managed by the GMNF; and that many people still living nearby were, or claimed to be, of Abenaki descent." Page 156.


REMEMBER the group based in Swanton, Vermont which is now led by April A. (nee: St. Francis) Rushlow - Merrill, and supported by advocate Professor Frederick Matthew Wiseman, Ph.D created an ALLIANCE calling itself the "VT Indigenous Alliance" founded in 2008, with these other three alleged and reinvented "Abenaki" incorporation's who are claiming to be "Abenaki Tribes" of Vermont (i.e., Elnu, Koasek, and Nulhegan).


Affiliate means: being in close formal or informal association; to attach or unite on terms of fellowship; to associate oneself; be intimately united in action or interest.
Alliance means: a merging of efforts or interests by persons, families, states, or organizations:


Frederick Matthew Wiseman states in his Biography that, "he has served on tribal, community and state boards and commissions, ranging from Chair, Humanities Department at Johnson State College, to the Lamoille County Planning Commission, and Governor's Commission on Native American Affairs. He is an internationally respected native elder and activist, and has been elected to the Abenaki Tribal Council (St. Francis/Sokoki Band) and appointed as Missisquoi Abenaki Delegate to Wabanaki Confederacy, Ceremonial Historian of the Seven Fires Alliance. He received highest Abenaki Nation tribal honors in 2006 for his eleven-year struggle in pushing Vermont officials toward state recognition of the Abenaki people. He is director of the Abenaki Tribal Museum and Cultural Center [of which he created and directs!]. and is now the director of the Wobanakik Heritage Center, and in this capacity has assisted in the development of native Museums and exhibits, including the Chimney Point (VT) Historic Site and Missisquoi Wildlife Refuge in VT, Musee des Abenakis and Musee Point a Claillaire in Quebec, the Wapohnaki Museum at Pleasant Point (ME) and the Boston Children's Museum. He recently completed events and exhibit projects for the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum (Vergennes, VT) and teh ECHO Center (Burlington, VT) for the 400th anniversary of the European discovery of Lake Champlain. He organized a 2009 conference on the European discovery of Lake Champlain (St. Michael's College Colchester, VT). He is the Native liaison to the Vermont Champlain Quadricentennial Commission, where he received an award ("The QUAD Astrolabe") in early 2010 for his work on that Commission. He has worked as production assistant for award-winning, documentary filmmaker Alanis Obomsawin as production assistant and "talking head" for the National Film Board of Canada's Waban-Aki: People from where the Sun Rises. He has consulted on Mt. Lake PBS productions: The Forgotten War and Dead Reckoning: Champlain in America. Along with Hollywood director Irene Miracle, he produced The Changeling, a movie dealing with Anglo/Abenaki race relations in 1770's Vermont. With award-winning NY documentarian Ted Timreck, he produced Before the Lake Was Champlain and The New Antiquarians. Wiseman's videos Against the Darkness and 1609: The Other Side of History have been distributed to VT schools. He is doing research for the second and third books in his trilogy on the Wabanakis (a closely related group of native peoples of Vermont, NH, Maine and the Canadian Maritimes). Wiseman is working on content as well as production for several major film projects including a seven-part video history of the revolution in Northeastern archaeology with NY documentary film maker Ted Timreck. His most recent research activities have focused on understanding the 19th and early 20th century Wabanaki experience, and working with Vermont Indian tribes and policymakers in providing the historical and geographic data necessary in their intellectual and political deliberations concerning state legislative recognition of various Indigenous Vermont Native bands.

This ELNU Application contradicts (without foundation clearly and convincingly) the Attorney General's Office Response to the Petition for Federal Recogntion by the "St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation" dated December 2002. The ELNU ABENAKI TRIBE APPLICANT and DECISION also contradicts the conclusions of the Office of Federal Acknowledgment conclusions of mid-2007 regarding Charles Henry Partlow.  Judith "Julia" Marie Chevalier born 1805- 1808 at Point Oliver, Quebec, Canada. She married Alexis "Bear" Patenaude on October 18, 1825 at St. Joseph de Chambly Parish in Chambly, Quebec, Canada. For a more complete genealogical study go to these:

LINK:
http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010/06/frank-lawrence-sheehan-ancestors-pages.html
LINK: http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010_07_01_archive.html
LINK:http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010/04/carol-lee-nee-reynolds-matthews.html

I noticed as well that within this applicant's application, that such M'Sadoques through Norman M'Sadoques is a member of this "ELNU" group. I would surmise and conclude as the Office of Federal Acknowledgement did. That simply because one person has definitive Abenaki Ancestors (such as for example, Jeanne Ann (nee: Deforge) Emrick - Brink, having affiliated herself and her family with the St. Francis/Sokoki group of alleged and reinvented "Abenakis" in and around Swanton, Franklin County, Vermont DOES NOT make that group led by April (nee: St. Francis) Rushlow - Merrill an Abenaki Tribe) .... so too, that just because Norman M'Sadoques (and his family?) chose to be a member of the group ELNU does not make the group in and of itself, as a whole, an Abenaki Tribe. I would suspect highly Mr. Norman M'Sadoques' alleged "remembrances" of his grandfather's saying this or that.

NOTICE: Brad Allen Barratt has "reviewed" the above application "review" by this non-independent 3 Member Expert Scholars Panel whom HAVE BEEN and ARE AFFILIATED-to-these-Applicant's (ELNU, KOASEK, NULHEGAN and MISSISQUOI/ST. FRANCIS-SOKOKI).
LINK:
http://vermontnativejustice.wordpress.com/2011/01/20/elnu-application-exposed-with-my-commentary

I will next, post the "Nulhegan-Coosuk" "Abenaki" "Tribe" Applicant's Review documentation by their 3-Member Expert Panel of Scholar's..... 
A few particulars that Frederick M. Wiseman, Ph.D forgot to mention in his BIO:
"At the request of Sen. Hinda Miller (D-Chittenden), Fred met in early September with a group of Vermont legislators and native advocates to arrive at mutually acceptable language for Vermont state legislation recognizing specific Vermont native bands for the purposes of fulfilling the requirements of the Native American Arts and Crafts Act."

Frederick Matthew Wiseman, Ph.D HELPED CREATE AND MANIPULATE THE CRITERION OF S.222 is his advocacy and AFFILIATION with all 4 incorporate's in their concocted and confabulated claims of being "Abenaki Tribes" of Vermont.

"Professor Wiseman was one of two higher educators who served on the Vermont Lake Champlain Quadricentennial Commission over the late spring and summer. He was one of three coordinators of a national symposium on the native world of 1609, held at St. Michael's College in May; he coordinated the 1609 Native Encampment and Commemoration at the Lake Champlain Maritime Museum in June; and he worked with Vera Sheehan to coordinate the five-day Vermont Indigenous Celebration signature event held on the Burlington Waterfront in July. In addition, he participated in 15+ other events through the late spring and summer, including the St. Albans French heritage signature event in June and the Appletree Point (north Burlington) Historical Society meeting in September, for which he was the keynote speaker."
LINK:
http://www.lcmm.org/museum_info/lecture_series.htm
2010 Distinguished Speakers Series

Lectures are included with Museum Admission
Frederick M. Wiseman, PhD: Meet the Author
June 19 & 20
Dr. Frederick M. Wiseman’s research combines European sources, Wabanaki Wampum Records, and the use of replica tools, weapons, and clothing, to provide new insight into the era of initial contact between Native Americans and the 17th century European. Dr. Frederick Wiseman will present his newest publications, At Lake Between, Champlain Tech, and Baseline 1609 (all currently available at our online store) at this year's Native American Encampment, hosted at LCMM June 19 & 20.
LINK: http://www.lcmm.org/images/img_museum_info/img_newsletters/spring_summer_08.pdf Page 06.
Lake Champlain’s First Navigators:
Rediscovering the Birch Bark Canoe
This exhibit, developed in partnership with the Abenaki community, includes the 23 foot long replica 1609 birch bark canoe constructed and launched at the Maritime Museum in 2007, and five interpretive panels. A 20-minute DVD documents the process, including interviews with Abenaki canoe builder Aaron York [Fred M. Wiseman Ph.D's step-son!] and tribal historian Fred Wiseman of the Wobanakik Heritage Center. Page 06.

An El-Nu tribal [Rose Hartwell] member engages a visitor during the Native American Encampment.
Native American

Encampment & Craft Show
July 12 & 13
Join members of the Eastern Woodlands Confederacy, Elnu Abenaki, and others for LCMM’s second annual weekend celebration of the region’s Native American heritage. The weekend will give visitors a Native American perspective on the upcoming anniversary of Samuel de Champlain’s first visit to the lake that now bears his name. Dressed in clothing faithful to 1609, tribal members will
demonstrate singing, dancing, and life skills, joining artisans and tribal dignitaries to celebrate native culture and heritage. Page 09.

Storyteller Marge Bruchac spins a tale in the Roost. Page 10.

Welcome Song by Roger Longtoe Sheehan. Page 12.Workshops were held at LCMM’s Basin Harbor campus and Stafford Middle

School in Plattsburgh, NY. Presentations included Before the Lake Was
Champlain by Abenaki Tribal Historian Dr. Frederick M. Wiseman. Page 12.

Eloise Beil, Curator, Lake Champlain Maritime Museum states in her Biography, that "helped to develop LCMM's Quadricentennial exhibit on the history of bark canoes (Lake Champlain's First Navigators), and was primary author of Discover 1609 (the Champlain expedition and Champlain's relationship with indigenous people); she has worked with the El-nu Abenaki and Dr. Frederick M. Wiseman to produce LCMM's annual Native American Encampments; and she edited Wiseman's three Quadricentennial publications providing a Native American perspective on Champlain's expedition. She also developed a timeline of lake history for LCMM's Burlington Schooner Project in 2000.
As Director of Collections at Shelburne Museum (1988-1998), Beil oversaw the reinterpretation and reinstallation of Native American collections and the review of the collections for NAGPRA compliance.
 
Hmmm, so ALL THREE (3) "Expert Scholar's" David Lacy, Frederick M. Wiseman, and Eloise Beil all appear to have VIOLATED and are in CONFLICT-OF INTEREST regarding S.222's Non-Affiliation portion wherein the 3 Scholars reviewing the applicant's applications ARE NOT TO BE AFFILIATED WITH THE APPLICANT(S).
 
Page 3 (etc.) of this blog posting of this Review of the Applicant "Elnu" group, petitioning for Vermont State Recognition, attempt to USE scant dubious alleged connection(s) to the Abenakis, to prop up their confabulated questionable foundation as being an Abenaki Tribe of Vermont, with historical connection(s) to the Abenakis.

On Page 03, redacted is an indication as to the single ancestor of Roger "Longtoe" A. Sheehan ... that being 
It is their daughter, Julia Mae Patneaude Patnode/Patno whom was born approximately June 1846 in Keeseville, Clinton County, New York and died April 15, 1932 in New York City, New York. She married to Gilbert Loncto on October 28, 1862 in Malone, Franklin County, New York.

1. Julia Mae Patenaude dit Patno
2. Ellen "Nellie" Henriette T. Loncto
3. Frank Lawrence Sheehan
4. John Frank Sheehan
5. Vera Sheehan
(sibling ? to Vera)
5. Roger Anthony "Longtoe" Sheehan

On Page 04 of this Application Review under 853(c)(3), the first paragraph is completely redacted in the "Public version". Herein this particular section, they cite Charles Partlow as an ancestor. He was listed as one of "four Indians" in the October 1863 Civil War list from the Alburgh, VT Land and Miscellaneous Records Book.

I have mentioned in this blog several times regarding Charles Henry Partlow.
LINK:
http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010_10_21_archive.html
121. A Civil War pension record for Charles H. Partlow of Alburgh, Vermont, married to Sophia Partlow, was located by OFA. It does not identify Charles Partlow as an Indian.


I have mentioned in various genealogies of several different person's their ancestor Charles Henry Partlow and/or his siblings.

LINK:
http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010/09/january-18-1995-darrell-larocque.html
LINK: http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2010_04_14_archive.html
LINK:http://www.vtindigenous.com/History.html

These LINKS provide some interesting dynamics regarding the Patnaude and Partlow families ancestries, and at times seem to contradict both the Attorney General's Response Report of Dec. 2002 and the Office of Federal Acknowledgment Findings/ Conclusions of Novmeber 2005 and June-July 2007 regarding "Charles Henry Partlow."

Below is yet another website created by Denise Watso, an Abenaki woman CONNECTED to Abenaki Community (Odanak) in Quebec, Canada who has genealogical, historical, and social CONNECTION(S) to ABENAKI Ancestors. She nor any of her People had to or have to join some created incorporation in Vermont, to be Abenaki.

LINK: http://abenakinews.blogspot.com/2011/02/nulhegan-and-elnu-claims-not-supported.html

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Stephen Laurent - "Atian" Article July 29, 1987 North Conway, New Hampshire; Obituary of Steven "Atian" Laurent; Obituary of Gladys Tantaquidgeon:

The Irregular
Wednesday, July 29, 1987
North Conway, New Hampshire
Keeping Indian Memories Green
By Erma Perry
Contributing writer
Not since the Indians gave away Manhattan for $24 has there been so much for so little as the little Indian Shop in Intervale. If you are a scholar, you can brush right past the trinkets for tourists and pick up rare manuscripts on local Indians.
"This book," said Stephen Laurent, owner of the shop and son of a full-blooded Abenaki Indian, "was printed back in 1859. You could not buy it today for any amount of money."
The book gives the history of the Abenaki Indians, their vocabulary, some information on pronunciation, and the treaties entered into with the British.
Many people ask Stephen if he will sell that book.
"Hell, no," he says, "that is the only one I have, but I'll photocopy it for you."
He did, and now sells the photocopied book in his shop for a modest $3.95.
Books that are hard to find are the ones he copies. For instance, a book on omithology of the Northeastern Indians is very valuable and impossible to obtain. Some of his books are in French, because of his customers are linguists.
"Here is the story of Wonalancet," he says, "I copied that so other scholars could enjoy it."
Stephen's father wrote a book in 1884 called "Abenaki and English Dialogues". Some years ago Stephen recorded the entire book on five reels of tape. These tapes are in the library of the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia among their books on the American Indian.
"Someone heard them there," said Stephen, "and asked if I could read a shorter version of my father's book onto cassettes, explaining the pronunciation of the Abenaki words."
These cassettes are now in the shop, plus a ninety-minute one on Masta's "Book of Indian Legends", giving the etomology of the words. For instance, a white ash is called "a snowshoe tree", because Indians make snowshoes from it. A dog is 'one who runs before".
At the Maine Historical Society, Stephen met a man named Charles R. Huntoon.
"When he heard that I was an Abenaki Indian, he told me he was attempting to translate an Abenaki-French dictionary into English, but his French was not good enough."
A few months later Huntoon brought the famous Rasle dictionary to the post office in Jackson, where Steve was working, and slapped it down on the stamp counter. He wanted Steve to translate it.
Steve was elated. He had never had his hands on a copy before. He had only heard of it. Rasle was a Jesuit missionary at an Indian settlement in Maine from around 1691 to 1724, when it was attacked and burned by the British. Father Rasle himself was killed, but the dictionary miraculously escaped the flames.
"That book is in the Harvard Library now, and you cannot get within half a mile of it," said Stephen.
Continued on Page 2.....
Page 2 - The Irregular - July 29, 1987
FEATURE
Keeping Indian memories green
Continued from page 1:
In 1833 a man named Pickering undertook to have the Rasle dictionary printed, and what they have at Portland is the Pickering book.
Steve translated this book back in 1865, and it is today in the archives of the Maine Historical Society in Portland.
"Nice work," said Huntoon, "now how would you like to translate the Aubery?"
The Rasle has 200 pages. The Aubery, which Stephen is now translating, has 400 and is more like a real dictionary. Father Joseph Aubery was a Jesuit at St. Francis village from about 1705 to 1755. The original of that book is today in the Museum of the Abenaki Indians in Odanak, Quebec.
In the dictionary, Father Joseph Aubery says: "What is written in another handwriting other than the author's is not pure Abenaki. It is Algonquin. The author of this dictionary washes his hands of it."
During his lifetime, Aubery loaned the book to another priest who did not hesitate to annotate it, and he wrote in Algonquin. At the top of each page is a small cross which the Jesuits used to show that the work was done for the glory of God.
As a postscript to the dictionary, it says: "Here at last is the end of this teaching book for the Indians of the village. May it help anyone who studies it, and in their prayers let them remember the one who wrote it. Signed Joseph Aubery."
When the Director of the Museum of the American Indian in New York City visited Laurent, he said, "You know, you could get paid for doing this. You could be funded."
To this Laurent replied like a true New Englander, "I know I could; but if I accepted, I would probably have to devote more time to it than I care to.
"I would rather do it just on my own without pay and go as far as I can and drop it. If you are funded, you have to see it through to the bitter end. I am not i nthe trade for losing my eyesight. You can see how difficult it is to decipher."
The Abenaki Indians had formerly lived here in the White Mountains and in Maine before the white man chased them North from their hunting and fishing grounds. In Quebec, the French, at war with the British, welcomed them, encouraging their raids on the villages in Vermont, New Hampshire and Maine. The British retaliated by destroying the Indian settlement at St. Frnacis in 1759.
This was where Laurent's father was born in 1839. When the Jesuits baptized Indians who had unpronounceable names, they would give them the names of saints or feast days. Stephen's father became Joseph Laurent.
When Stephen was born in 1909, his village was still called St. Francis, but in 1917 the Canadian government decided that the Indians should have their own post office. The Indians chose the name Odanak, meaning "village where people live."
On a plaque outside the Indian Shop, dedicated to Joseph Laurent, tourists wil often question the paternity. How could Stephen be the son of a man who was born in 1839? Because Joseph had two wives and two sets of children, nine by the first and eight by the second. Stephen was the last adn the seventeenth born when his father was 69.
Stephen first went to a school run by the Grey Nuns of the Cross in his village, then on to Nicolet College to study the classics. His wife, Margaret, is a graduate of Adelphi College and Columbia University. She taught French in New York City. Both Laurents are devoted to keeping the memory of the Abenaki Indians alive.
When prestigious institutions like the National Geographic Society want authoritative answers to questions on the Abenaki Indians, whom do they call? Stephen Laurent in Intervale
© Erma Perry

Abenakis Hiding In Plain Sight?

I do not think the 'late' Stephen Laurent or any other Abenakis-connected-to-legitimate-Abenaki-Community, were "hiding" in plain sight or anything of the sort. Comparatively speaking, these "corporate" ALLEGED and REINVENTED "Abenakis" seem to use the Eugenic's Survey Program as a confabulated reason WHY of the lack of their genealogical, historical, and social documented connection(s) to the Abenaki Ancestor(s) of N'dakinna.
The Conway Daily Sun
November 29, 1996
By Edward Parsons
Tales from a musical life
His life molded by Native American and European tradition, multi-talented local Steven Laurent recalls stories from his days as a classical musician
Steven Laurent, 87, of Intervale has seen many sides of life - as son of an Abenaki chief, protector of ancestral land, author, musician, and Jackson Post Office worker. Born on the St. Francis reservation in Quebec, he travelled his first summer with his family down to his tribe's ancestral land in Intervale and continued to come here every summer to the "Indian Camps" next to the Intervale train depot. Eventually, he moved here permanantly.
In 1952 he married Margaret Pfister, and they moved into an ample house off of the main road (now 16A), where he still resides today.
Long ago, Laurent's father published a  Abenaki/English dictionary. Following these practical and diplomatic footsteps, Laurent himself recently finished a unique collaboration that transcends time.
A St. Francis Jesuit missionary named Joseph Aubery (1701-1755), wrote a more complete French/Abenaki dictionary and phrasebook. Laurent has added English translations to this, and completed a French/Abanaki/English dictionary, published in December 1995 (Chisholm Bro. Press, Portland, Maine).
Recently, in a discussion with him, he brought up a part of his life influenced by European tradition, his musical side. We decided it was worth an article, as it effectively portrays an era of the Mount Washington Valley and elsewhere gone by, an era entertwined with this century's two world wars.
Laurent's musical life started when he was a child in St. Francis. In school he played the trumpet. His first paid performance occured one summer while down here in Intervale, when he was asked by Mrs. Merriman to play "Taps" for a play she was putting on. The next day, Mrs. Merriman's son came over to the Indian Camps and gave him two dollars - quite a sum in those days.
When he was 15, he bought a violin from a cousin in St. Francis for $30. This instrument, which he still treasures today, happened to be made in 1726 in Venice by Matteo Gofriller, a student of Stradavari. Laurent didn't take serious lessons on the violin until 1940, when he was living in Intervale year round. His interest at that time stemmed from being part of the Conway Village Orchestra, begun in 1935 and directed by Etta Kennett. They played at commencements, held concerts and practiced every week. Laurent was also a guest player at Sunday classical concerts at the Eastern Slope Inn, given by a Swiss Orchestra in residence at the inn.
This group had come to America at the outset of World War II in order to play at the New York World's Fair. When it was over, it was too dangerous for them....
see PARSONS page CN  3
Cool News Page 3
Continued....
to go home. Harvey Gibson invited them to North Conway, where they remained.
Laurent's violin teacher was Melvin Bryant, a member of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, who had a summer house on the West Side. "He was a great teacher and personality," says Laurent. "He had many stories about the BSO that have stayed with me."
[See article remainer by puting "cursor" over image of article and click, to enlarge the document]
Valley Folks [1995]
Laurent publishes Abenaki dictionary
By Gabrielle Griswold
Intervale resident and full-blooded Abenaki Stephen Laurent is shown above [image] with the French-English-Abenaki-dictionary he had printed last fall. Laurent began work on the dictionary in 1965 and completed it in the summer of 1994. His is the first Abenaki dictionary to feature English translations.
 Article from an Native American Magazine
Regarding Stephen Laurent
Story and Photography courtesty of Brock Dethier
Thursday, May 31, 2001
Stephen Laurent, keeper of Abenaki tradition, dies
Nephew from Quebec will take over maintenance of Intervale camp site.
By Joshua Williams
The Conway Daily Sun
Conway - Stephen Laurent, Abenaki Indian elder, passed away on Sunday. He leaves the traditional Abenaki encampment located in Intervale to be maintained by his nephew, Deny Obomsawin, an Abenaki now living in Quebec.
"It's a sad day for us," Obomsawin said when he learned that Laurent had died at age 92. "He was a great resource for Abenakis and the Abenaki past. It's a sad day."
Laurent was one of the last remaining Abenakis living in the area. Born in 1909 on Odanack Abenaki settlement near the St. Francis River in Quebec, Laurent moved to Intervale in 1940. He was Jackson Postmaster form 1945 to 1975, and played cello and violin in local chamber music
see LAURENT page 10
Laurent Page 10
groups.
Laurent was known and widely respected for his translation of a French-Abenaki dictionary. The original French-Abenaki dictionary is credited to Father Aubery, a Jesuit priest who died in 1755. Laurent worked for 30 years translating Aubery's dictionary into English. In 1995, 500 copies of Laurent's translations were printed. Laurent also recorded the entire book onto tape, to preserve the pronunciation of words as they should be spoken.
Laurent maintained a gift shop and cabins in Intervale.
The Intervale site is now owned by
see next page

from preceding page
the town of Conway. The Peguawket Foundation had purchased the land in 1985, and gave it to the town the same year. There is a walking trail on apporximately two acres of property which is maintained by the twon conservation commission.
The town has an agreement with the Abenaki people to let the Abenaki use the site during the summer.
The site is listed on the National Historical Register.
Although Laurent did not own the land, he has a life estate deed on the property, allowing him to maintain the buildings until his death. Obomsawin received permission from the town in 1995 to maintain the property and buildings after Laurent's death.
The original deed had specified that the property would return to forest land upon Laurent's death, and that the buildings would be taken down. Selectmen decided in 1994 to change the deed to allow the buildings to remain.
"I will take over," Obomsawin said of the Intervale site. "It's important to our people. It will be open. Because I live in Canada, it will mostly be open on weekends."
Laurent's father, Abenaki Chief Joseph Laurent, brought his people from Quebec to Intervale in the summer of 1884, and the Abenaki returned every summer to Intervale for years. Chief Laurent was born in 1839, and died in 1917.
"It was our area, where we started," Obomsawin said. Chief Laurent "went there to go back to where our ancestors are from."
A monument at the Intervale site dedicated to Chief Laurent reads: "In 1884 he led back to the land of their fathers a group of Abenaki and Sokoki Indians and established here in the woods of Intervale a perennial summer settlement of his people." The monument was erected in 1959, "in love and reverence by his children."
THe Abenakis once populated land across New England and up the St. Lawrence River in Quebec.
Many Abenaki fled north to the Odanack settlement in Quebec, where Obomsawin now lives, to escape the diseases and wars brought by English settlers.
Odanak was the site of a 1759 massacre of the Abenaki people that was led by Robert Rogers, in retaliation for a 1745 Abenaki attack that destroyed his Dunbarton homestead.
Today, approximately 400 Abenaki live at the Odanack settlement.
Furber and White Funeral Home of North Conway will be in charge of arrangements for Laurent. Dates and times for any services have not yet been determined.
Obituary
Stephen Laurent
Intervale - Stephen Laurent, 92, died May 27, 2001, in Memorial Hospital, North Conway, New Hampshire.
Born in the Indian village of the St. Francis in Odanak, Quebec, Canada, he was the son of Abenaki Chief Joseph Laurent and Georgianna (Wawanolet) Laurent of the St. Francis Abenaki Indian Reserve.
He attended Nicolet Seminary, Nicolet, Quebec, Canada.
Before retiring in 1974, Mr. Laurent worked many years for the U.S. Postal Service in Jackson. In addition, he and his family operated the Indian Shop in Intervale for many years.
He was a communicant of Our Lady of the Mountains Roman Catholic Church; a member of many historical societies in the Mount Washington Valley.
Mr. Laurent spent the past 25 years translating Father O'Brien's copy of Aubery's French to Abenaki dictionary to English. It was published in December of 1995 by Chisholm Bros. Press, Portland, Maine.
He was married to Emily M. (Pfister) Laurent, who died August 18, 1993.
Family members include a sister, Bernadette Laurent of Odanak, Quebec, Canada; and nieces.
SERVICES: A memorial service is planned for Thursday, June 28, at 10 a.m. in Furber and White Funeral Home, North Conway. Burial will be in Intervale.
Memorial donations may be made to the charity of one's choice.
Obituary
Dr. Gladys Tantaquidgeon
Mohegan Medicine Woman
Gladys Tantaquidgeon began training with her aunt, Medicine Woman Emma Baker, as a specialist in herbal medicine in 1904. From another traditionalist aunt, Fidelia Fielding, she learned the ways of the makiawisug (the sacred woodland little people who guard healing plants).
In 1919, Gladys began studying anthropology with Dr. Frank Speck at the University of Pennsylvania. After completing her research there, she toured among northeastern tribes to conduct field work. Then, in 1934, she was hired by the federal government to administer new educational privileges for northeast Indians under the Wheeler-Howard Act.
Gladys made perhaps her greatest contribution in 1931 when she joined her father, John, and brother, Harold, in founding the Tantaquidgeon Indian Museum, an institution was created for the display of Native artifacts. She worked there until 1935, when Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier offered her a position as an Indian reservation social worker in Rapid City, South Dakota. In 1938 Gladys transferred to the Indian Arts and Crafts Board to serve as a "Native Arts Specialist" under Dr. Rene H'Arnoncourt. Her duties with that newly created agency included organizing Indian cooperatives and researching and preserving ancient Indian artistic techniques.
Gladys concluded her government service in 1947 and returned to Mohegan Hill. Since then she has worked as the fulltime curator of the Tantaquidgeon Indian Museum. During the 1970's and 1980's she served on the Mohegan Tribal Council.
Gladys is the aughter of numerous articles on New England Indians and of the book Folk Medicine of the Delaware and Related Algonquin Indians. She has received numerous accolades for her academic and social contributions. Among them are the Eagle Achievement Aware for distinguished service to New England Indians from Eagle Wing Press, Inc.; the Tiffany Jewel Award from the University of Connecticut; the Friends of Education Award from the Connecticut Education Association; the Wauregan Award from the Mohegan Tribe; the Connecticut River Pow-wow Society's Award; and the Elders Aware from the Institution for American Indian Studies. In 1987 she received the Doctor of Humane Letters degree from the University of Connecticut.

Was Dr. Gladys Tantaquidgeon  "hiding-in plain-sight" too?

I think not.


Monday, February 14, 2011

December 21, 2010 VCNAA Minutes; St. Francis/Sokoki Website Regarding Donald Warren Stevens Jr; February 04, 2010 Newpaper Editorial/ Testimony to Senate Committee sent to Tim Ashe:



Page [1.]
VCNAA Meeting Minutes
December 21, 2010
Members Present:
Luke Willard, Chairman
Melody Walker Brook, Vice Chair
Nathan Pero
Shirly Hook
David Vanslette
Fred W. Wiseman

Staff:
Giovanna Peebles, SHPO

Guests:
Chief Donald Stevens
Chief Nancy Millette-Doucet
Chief Roger Longtoe Sheehan
Professor Fred Wiseman
Jared Pero
Eric Cruger
Munro Brook
Doug Bent

This meeting was brought to order by chairman Luke Willard at 12:24 pm in the Ellsworth Room, Johnson State College, Johnson, Vermont.

1. Approve minutes of November 30, 2010.
Fred Wiseman made a motion to accept the minutes. Shirly Hook seconded. All approved.

2. Scholar's Panel Update
Due to work restrictions, David Lacy, having completed his review of two applications must be removed from the active scholar's list.

3. Teacher's Resource Manual Presentation of Completed Manual
Chairman Willard introduced "Abenakis and Their Neighbors" Teachers and Interpreters Resource Guide by Professor Fred Wiseman and Melody Brook. At November's meeting in Newport, Luke challenged the commission to produce a Vermont Native American resource guide for educators after visiting schools and meeting with teachers who expressed a desire for such a guide. Professor Wiseman spoke on the manual. This detailed guide is now acailable on the VCNAA website. [ http://vcnaa.vermont.gov/commission ] Professor Wiseman also introduced a fourth grade lesson plan and is currently working on middle and high school curriculum that meet the Vermont standards. They are also working on a virtual Wabanaki museum. Nancy Millette-Doucet reminded the commission of the Koasek curriculum booklet as a useful tool to teachers in the region. Luke agreed it would be good to have a general curriculum but regional curricula could be beneficial and made a note to come back to this discussion at an upcoming commission meeting. Don Stevens noted that the Department of Education had promised to distribute any materials to teachers.

4. Overview of Rules for Hearings
Luke distributed a copy of the rules for the hearings and allowed everyone time to read through them before the hearings began. He also read them out loud. He mentioned the hearings are
Page [2.]
bound by the statute and will be kept within the outlined framework. All formalities will be upheld.
Roger Sheehan asked for clarification on the format. Luke clarified that the applicant's spokesperson may give an opening statement follow by public testimony and rebuttal time if requested.
Professor Wiseman explained the possible confusion around governance in the twentieth century. A band is composed of closely related families and ascribed status determines membership. The leadership and governance fall with alpha male/female and grandparents as elder advisors.

The following is in reference to Dr. Weisman's statement addressing Elnu as a band and using Wikpedia as his source. In particular, Dr. O'Neil at the University of Palomar College, San Marcos, California has described a band as being acephalous. If this is so then how can any of these "Abenakis" corporations be bands seeing that they are all governed by a dominate small group of individual "chiefs" or "sagamos".



Secondly, it only took me less than two minutes to find credible academic resources on the internet that defined the term of "band: without having to settle for Wikpedia. "band - a small group of related people, who are primarily organized through family bonds. Foraging typifies the subsistence technology. A respected and older person may be looked to for leadership, but the person has no formalized authority."


Department of Anthropology
Oregon State University


"Definitions of Anthropological Terms"


http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/anth370/gloss.html


Band; the level of political integration in which a society consists only of an association of families living together. Bands are loosely allied by marriage, descent, friendship, and common interest. The primary integrating mechanism is kinship ties. There is no economic class differentiation. All adults of the same gender are more or less equal as far as community decision making is concerned. However, some individuals in a band may stand out for their skills and knowledge. These often are the people who have the best memories, are the best hunters, most successful curers, most gifted speakers, etc. Such people become informal leaders. Most often they are given authority by community consensus arrived at through casual discussion without the need for a formal vote. Leaders generally have temporary political power at best, and they do not have any significant authority relative to other adults within their band. Subsequently, bands are essentially acephalous societies. The total number of people within these societies rarely exceeds a few dozen. Bands are found among foraging societies.


Acephalous societies; a society in which political power is diffused to the degree that there are no institutionalized political leadership roles such as chiefs and kings. Bands and tribes are acephalous. Most foragers and simple horticulturalists have highly egalitarian, acephalous societies.
The word "acephalous" is Greek for "without a head."
Source: Dr. Dennis O'Neil
Behavioral Sciences Department
Palomar College
San Marcos, California
http://anthro.palomar.edu/tutorials/cglossary.htm
Dept. of Anthropology
University of Alabama


Band, a small, loosely organized group of hunter-gatherer families, occupying a specifiable territory and tending toward self-sufficiency.
Source: Harris M (1997) Culture, People, Nature: An Introduction to General Anthropology, seventh edition. New York: Allyn and Bacon.

Governance is legitimate when band members recognize the alpha male/female and grandparents as people in charge. Frank Speck used the band level to reconstruct Penobscot society. Large-scale socio-cutlural integration is not necessary to be legitimate.
Roger "Longtoe" Anthony Sheehan explained the determination in a Canadian court case similar to the Vermont situation amongst the Montagnais and Cree. They were a hunter/gatherer society and were never integrated into large groups but the courts agreed they were a tribe. If Vermont bands were not spread out throughout the state with members in others and they had a reservation, family names would be on the registers, just like in Canada. In Vermont, most Indians received the determination "white" on their birth certificates because they were not assigned to reservations.

1:30 - Public Hearing: Koasek of the Koas Application
Chief Nancy Millette - Doucet thanked everyone, gave a brief introduction, and recognized the process as horrifying but good has come out of it. Luke opened the door to public testimony.
Professor Fred Wiseman read Dave Skinas' report on the Koasek application and confirmed that it met requirements. He also included sources not found in the application. He also discussed the importance of the breakthroughs in academic material within this petition, especially regarding fish-fertilized mounds (sucker fish) backed up by Father Rasles' dictionary.
Nancy Millette Doucet spoke on her current trip to the Bradford Middle School and many of the children that identified a native heritage also used fish in their gardens. Giovanna Peebles spoke about possible collaborations with indigenous people of Vermont and historic preservation in regard to sustainability. They can play a role in climate change. Good gardners might use that type of sustainability. Luke Willard mentioned the native voice will be heard in this regard.
Nancy asked what was the response from the commission. Luke explained that the application is still being reviewed by a work group of commissioners and a decision will be made after the scholar's panel has issued their findings.
Nancy wanted to articulate that the connection with Elnu as explained in the report from Dave Skinas was not necessarily recent in the strict sense but began in the early 1990's with Rose Hartwell and family/friends that worked on village demonstrations.
LINK: http://reinventedvermontabenaki.blogspot.com/2009/07/sagakwa-pow-wow-twin-mountain-nh-july.html

Page [3.]
Melody Walker-Brook asked if Nancy Millette-Doucet could expand on what the band has done in terms of language revitalization. Nancy explained their efforts regarding Father Aubery/Laurent dictionary and the connection with Dartmouth College to put out a 50 CD set for use by Abenaki bands. Anyone from the larger community can purchase them through Dartmouth. She received a grant for these and created a website for tribal members to access lessons. The website was expensive to maintain. Giovanna Peebles asked why the website cost so much to maintain. Nancy Doucet explained it was the amount of space used and the complexity of the site. Giovanna was surprised that Dartmouth didn't help financially with the language efforts. Professor Wiseman explained the history of the tapes. Nancy described the language summit at Missisquoi attended by people from Odanak, Elnu, and Koasek. She has recorded stories from the elders in her community for posterity.
One can see ONLY Elie Joubert, adopted son of Cecile Wawanolet and his female driver in this video. Was Elie Joubert and his "driver" coming to Swanton, Franklin County, Vermont FROM New York State, instead of FROM Odanak, Quebec, Canada? If the latter is the possible reality of the situation, then was truthfully Abenakis from and of Odanak, Quebec, Canada actually truthfully INVOLVED, in this endeavor? It would appear that Abenakis at Odanak, Quebec, Canada were NOT involved whatsoever, according to this Youtube.com video. One can see that the parties involved were Elie Joubert, April Merrill, Sherry Gould and her husband Wiliam (Bill) Gould, Roger "Longtoe" Sheehan, Nancy Millette-Doucet and Frederick Matthew Wiseman Ph.D among others.

Donald Warren Stevens Jr. stated that recognition will bring some measure of legitimacy that will allow bands to talk to companies and other resources to begin a process of revitalizing the language.
Nancy Millette-Doucet thanked the commission for our time.
Luke Andrew Willard concluded the hearing at 2:30 pm.
2:45 - Public Hearing: Elnu Application
Luke opened the hearing. Melody (nee: Walker) Brook excused herself from her duties and Shirly Hook assumed the recording of minutes. Chief Roger Sheehan began with an opening statement and welcomed questions.
Roger Sheehan spoke about the Woodland Confederacy. He spoke about the difference between reeactment and living the history of his people. He stated that by living the history, it helps to revitalize customs and traditions.
Professor Wiseman read a statement from Eloise Beil on the Elnu application. She will send a complete response as soon as possible. Her comments were positive. Professor Wiseman read the review of scholar, David Lacy, who finds that Elnu have met the criteria set out by S.222, although the application was sometimes difficult to navigate. Professor Wiseman commented on his own review of Elnu's application and testified that Elnu has met all the criteria of S.222 ... that Professor Frederick Matthew Wiseman Ph.D himself, helped create, manipulate and alter with the help of Hinda Miller/ Vincent Illuzzi to help his conconcoted and confabulating " Vermont Indigenous Alliance" (which was founded in 2008 comprised of these 4 "Abenaki" Corporate's) that the "Professor" himself is coordinator of! How biased and non-transparent of him.

David Vanslette asked Roger what Elnu's goals for the future are. Roger answered that it is all about the revitalization of traditions and culture. The sharing of music, arts/crafts, and language take a front seat to corporate existence.
Roger thanked all present for the opportunity to speak and answer questions about his people.
Luke concluded the hearing at 3:45 pm.
4:00 - Public Hearing: Nulhegan Application
Vice Chair, Melody Brook assumed the duties of facilitator as Luke Willard excused himself from his duties for the duration of the hearing. Melody resumed the recording of minutes.

WHY is it, that one gets the impression that there is a "dance" going on, stepping in - stepping out, but that these people are orchestrating events and their "responses" via mutual back-and-forth commnication's via telephone, email, and other "hidden" chatter, making sure that their statements and actions inside and out of these VCNAA meetings, are in step with each other's groups? Remember, these people are members of and associated (affiliated) with each other as of 2008 in their "Vermont Indigenous Alliance" founded in 2008. These people have spent a vast amount of time and effort to IMPLY that their groups are legitimate, with their cherry-picked allegedly independent 3-Member-Review Panel scholar's.
I have a very difficult time thinking the Recognition Process has not become corrupt, biased, and an obvious contradication unto itself at this point, in my thinking. It would appear that these "Abenaki" corporate's are merely granting themselves their own State Legislative Recognition, through this VCNAA which is comprised of self-serving members of these "Abenaki" Corporate entities from beginning to end!
Page [4.]
Chief Don Stevens thanked everyone. He mentioned that they were there fighting for recogntion so that their kids might simply be allowed to enjoy their heritage without having to fight for the same thing in the future. He added that Natives are the only people in the world who are required to prove their 'pedigree' and provide 'papers' for someone else to validate them.

Luke spoke of how painful it has been over the years watching elders, who have hoped and fought for recognition for so many years, pass away without the honor of being recognized for who they are.

Don mentioned that through this process all sorts of important information has come out - new ideas and new validation of their distinctive identity. "This isn't about money. We take care of our own. We always have and we always will."
Professor Fred Wiseman read the scholar's responses from Dave Lacy, Dave Skinas, and Kevin Dann. Each scholar agreed that Nulhegan's application and genealogical material met all criteria of S.222. Don reiterated that the tribe has now been validated by all three scholars and has complied fully with S.222. Anything short of recognition would be an affront to the scholars and the commission.
Shirly Hook inquired when a recommendation would need to be presented for the upcoming legislative session. Don thanked the commission for it's time and urged the commission to move forward with Nulhegan's application since they have complied with the process.

Melody concluded the hearing at 5:00 pm.
An early January meeting was discussed and it was decided to meet on January 4th, at 5:00 pm in Montpelier.
The commission adjourned at 5:15 pm.
Respectfully submitted by,
Melody Walker Brook, Vice Chairman
Abenaki Nation
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the U.S. Department of Agriculture for generously providing financial assistance for the development of this website under a Rural Business Enterprise grant. We also thank the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity, Inc. and the Women's Small Business Program, our grant partners.

We want to acknowledge in particular the work of Scott Gorman who, in addition to assisting with site design, took on the emmense task of programming this website. Scott is currently an anthropology major at Yale University and a member of Vermont's Abenaki community ("St. Francis/Sokoki" group via the Hakey lineage).

We want to thank Don Stevens who continues to maintain the website. Don is current on the Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs and a member of this tribe.

A special thanks goes out to MAX-IT who donates space for our website which allows our connectivity to the world wide web.
To access MAX-IT's website, click on http://www.maxit.biz/

Special thanks to Joe Bruchac, Fred Wiseman, John and Donna Moody, Chief April St. Francis-Merrill, Paul Greeno, Jeff Benay and Jesse Larocque for helping assemble ideas and content materials for the site.

Special special thanks to Amy Yavitz who volunteered to help with typing and editing of site contents.
This website was funded through a Rural Business Enterprise Grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Doesn't David Skinas, employed by the Dept. of Agriculture, sit on the Abenaki Self Help Association, Inc. Board of Directors? What was his "influence" (if any) in gaining these grants for April Merrill's group?

Clearly and obviously, Mr. "Chief" Donald Warren Stevens Jr. WAS (and probably still is) a member of the "St. Francis/Sokoki" group led by April St. Francis-Merrill. He supports April Merrill, advocated for her. I think he also allegedly manipulated and sabotaged the previous appointed VCNAA commission on Native American Affairs when he sat with Jeanne Brink, Timothy de la Bruere, Brad Barrett and Judy Dow ... as did Chairperson's Mark William Mitchell, and Charles Lawrence "Megeso" Delaney Jr. who were all affiliated with the Homer St. Francis "St. Francis-Sokoki" group now led by Homer's daughter April Merrill.
Abenaki Nation
Donald Stevens - Webmaster
Donald is currently the Director of Information Techonology for a Firearms Company and a member of Vermont's Abenak community.
He can be reached for questions or comments at:
Donald_Stevens@myfairpoint.net

This website was funded through a Rural Business Enterprise Grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
[Since, on February 11, 2011 Vince Illuzzi and Timothy Ashe would NOT allow outside-of-Vermont person(s) to "testify" or speak officially at the Committee Hearing in Room 27 of the Legislature, including those who attended the Committee Hearing, such as Denise Watso, Jacques Watso, and several other representatives from and of the historical and contemporary Abenaki Community of Odanak situated in the Province of Quebec, Canada ... I will (again) submit this February 04, 2010 newspaper Editorial that was published yet again as my "testimony" in writing to the Senate Committee. Retrospectively-speaking, Vincent Illuzzi inviting (and then uninviting) Richard "Skip" Bernier and other Abenaki People to speak at the Hearing, is just plain disgusting and insulting to them and others, in my thinking. Especially when they were invited and at the night before, Richard "Skip" Bernier was told by Illuzzi's representative "that ONLY Skip Bernier, would be allowed to testify at the following morning's Hearing in Room 27.
The Watso's and other Abenaki families, etc COME FROM VERMONT and retain their Abenaki genealogical, historical, and social connections! Their Abenaki ancestors were buried in this land, and their descendants still are here in Vermont (for example, the late Molly Keating and her living daughter Lynn Murphy to name just a few).
I was not allowed to speak to the Committee Hearing either, as a human being, regarding the violation(s) of S.222 being perpetuated and ignored by the state, by this concocted Vermont Commission on Native American affairs, etc. In the S.222 "Abenaki" Recognition Bill it reads, "No member of the 3-Member-Review Panel may be AFFILIATED WITH the Applicant(s)." Contrary to this portion of S.222 created by Hinda Miller and her other political associate Mr. Vince Illuzzi and which was signed by the former Governor of Vermont, Jim Douglas, these scholar's were not "independent" as Don Stevens proclaims. Far from it, these scholars have had a vested interested in protecting their long "working relationships and scholarly works retrospectively-speaking" with these "Abenaki" Corporate's which comprise this confabulating "VT Abenaki Indigenous Alliance" which is made up of Koasek, El-NU, St. Francis/Sokoki, and Nulhegan "Abenaki" Corporate entities and their memberships whom associate with each other. So much for fairness, transparency, and so on in this whole "Recognition Process"]

Qualified to be called Abenaki
To the Editor:
To: Senate Economic Development Committee clerk, Tim Ashe (tashe@leg.state.vt.us),
I do not suspect you will listen to any of these words I may share with you and your committee, but I will attempt to convey this information so that hopefully all persons will understand what I am saying.
I have been associated with these "groups" of persons claiming to be Abenaki. I have been interacting with these "groups" for almost 20 years. I have conducted extensive field research, genealogical research, and interviews with numerous persons throughout Vermont and New England within and around these "groups." I have yet to find, secure and verify any evidence whatsoever that these "groups" are legitimately descendants from the Abenaki people, nor that their ancestry comes from (in whole or in part) the Abenakis. So, just who are these "groups" knocking on your legislative door? Genealogically- speaking they are people who ancestrally have Huron, Mic-Mac, Acadian and or Algonquin Native Ancestors from the early to mid-1700's time frame or earlier. They do not descend from any historical Abenaki communities that existed within (or surrounding) the state of Vermont, regardless of what they proclaim, and protest. Genealogically, this conclusion is quite blatantly clear and convincing.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs, as a Federal Agency, took what little documentary evidence that was given to them by the Swanton, Vt. "group" led by April St. Francis-Merrill who claims she is a descendant of Grey Lock, and the B.I.A. concluded based on that scant documentary evidence, that this group up in Swanton were not Abenakis, nor from a Historical Abenaki Community/Tribe, let alone had anyone within that alleged and re-invented "group" verified and or even tried to legitimately validate documentarily that their ancestors were Abenaki. Genealogically- speaking, it is definitively proved that April St. Francis-Merrill' s ancestors do not descend from Grey Lock, who was not Abenaki, but rather a refugee from the southern area. Chief Gray Lock was born about 1660 in a Waronoke Village, which is now the town of Westfield, Mass. The Waronokes were a part of the Pocomtuck Confederacy of Central Massachusetts.
The Legislature is about to make the biggest mistake if it "officially recognizes any specific groups" or persons within the state of Vermont as being Abenaki, without the appropriate unmanipulated and unbiased Commission on Native American Affairs, first having sought out the specific clear and convincing evidence that the "group" or persons in question, are of Abenaki descent. Each chairman of this VCNAA has been "from" or retrospectively connected to the St. Francis/Sokoki group led by April
St. Francis-Merrill. All three chairmen have had a demonstrated bias of using the commission to gain instant direct and without condition(s) Vermont "State Recognition" for April Merrill's "group." I also mention the "other" incorporated "groups" led by Nancy Milletee-Doucet, Luke Willard, Ralph Swett, Paul Pouliot, Roger Longtoe Sheheen, and Brian Chenevert, etc.
Mark Mitchell, Donald Stevens and now Charles Lawrence Delaney Jr. are obviously biased in that they have advocated and continue to advocate, for allowing the so-called "Historical Tribes" (which are merely Vermont-sanctioned "incorporation's" created since 1976) to gain official state recognition by name. Where were these so-called alleged and re-invented "Abenakis" BEFORE the 1970s?
Perhaps Sen. Vincent Illuzzi in his Clan of the Hawk western headdress could care less. As the chairman of the Senate Economic Development Committee, he is dealing with these alleged and re-invented "Abenakis" who have no genealogical connection to the Abenaki Ancestors. These "groups" will lay claim and protest that they represent those very ancestors, as they grovel, crawl, and slither up the Legislative steps of both Vermont and New Hampshire with their lies, deceptions, and deceitfulness. The fact is that if one studies and evaluates these "groups" foundations, their "members" genealogical foundations, the lies and deceit becomes very apparent and obvious.
Legitimately documented Abenakis do care very much about their "identity." I suspect quite strongly that the Odanak Abenakis, the Wolinak Abenakis (and all surrounding Native Communities such as Old Town, Pleasant Point, Kahnewake, Akwesasne and many other legitimate historical native communities) will find such possible Vermont state recognition of these incorporated and unsubstantiated "Abenaki" groups to be quite insulting and rude, as these groups rewrite Abenaki history.
Is it to be that in Vermont (and in New Hampshire) all one has to do is "incorporate" with the Secretary of State, claim one is a "Tribe", "Band" or group of persons who raise their hands and claim to be Abenakis, and yet do not have to show and provide a shred of clear and convincing genealogical evidence that they are indeed legitimately of Abenaki descent?
My blog, the "Reinvention of the Abenaki" which is online, shows and provides the clear and convincing evidence that these groups are manipulating, lying to and deceiving the state of Vermont (and) New Hampshire trying to grab hold of the purse strings of the state and federal agencies ever more tightly, so that they can be paid to be Abenakis. It's called "identity theft" and "deceit." They want to be paid to spew their concocted re-invented "Abenaki" culture, their concocted "Abenaki" history in their lies, deceitfulness, and deceptions at the expense of the legitimate Abenaki ancestors and descendants. They want to be paid to speak their alleged Abenaki ancestral language. And yet 99.9% percent of these people have no clear and convincing genealogical evidence that their ancestors were Abenakis from and/or of Vermont/ New Hampshire, let alone Native people. I find that odd. Shouldn't the Legislature and the Senate Economic Development Committee be made aware of this reality? Or is it just about the "tourism" and money? The answer is that the state of Vermont, the Legislature, and Senator Illuzzi's committee could care less about learning and becoming aware of the honest truth regarding the Abenaki people. Perhaps the Legislature and the committee are blind, deaf and dumb to readily and without question, open the door to state recognition for these "groups" without so much as requesting and demanding that there be a genealogical foundation to this process of recognition? It comes to mind, that thieves and liars know no shame in what they do or say.
It has burdened my spirit, my heart and my mind for some years now, this "business" of these people, these groups. The Abenaki ancestors are being insulted by what is happening with every one of those people who, with their hands out, begging for those state and federal grants, begging to be specifically and officially "recognized" by the Vermont Legislature. These "groups" and their so-called "chiefs" all think they will come away rich if they gain instant, shake and bake Abenaki recognition from Vermont or New Hampshire.
Do you think for one second that the Native people's of this country will not pay attention to what is happening in Vermont with this mess that has been going and not address this "business," if these groups in Vermont gain recognition without proof? Do you think for one minute that they will not also knock on your legislative door? Perhaps the legitimately documented Abenaki ancestors descendants will rip that "door" from its hinges, to finally address this mockery going on in Vermont and New Hampshire.
I do hope and pray you are listening to what I am sharing with this committee, because if you do not, it may very well cost you all very dearly. I suspect my words herein will very likely fall to the ground, amongst the deaf, ignorant, arrogant and blind.
This process is not about "Lateral Violence" as Mr. Donald Stevens, a Phillips descendant and former VCNAA chairman has stated, in what I am speaking of here, but rather it is about the seeking out the documentary foundation of truth. It will prevail regardless of what happens with these groups of this "business" going on in Montpelier. Again it begins with showing and providing genealogical evidence that connects clearly and convincingly to the ancestral Abenaki people, and it ends there as well. It ought to be a foundation to anyone and any group gaining recognition from Vermont or New Hampshire. It ought to be a process all of these alleged and re-invented groups claiming to be Abenaki goes through, equally-transparently-and honestly. No one ought to gain state recognition instantaneously by the stroke of a pen simply to assuage the generational guilt and because of some contemporary sympathies. Abenaki people were never "hiding in plain sight," nor were Abenakis targeted by the Eugenics' Program of Vermont. Research and truth proves this out.
Now, I have watched as Mark Mitchell came and went, I have watched as Stevens came and went, and now I am seeing that Charles Lawrence Delaney Jr. heads this Vermont Commission on Native American Affairs.
All of these men were and are tied to the group in Swanton. They are biased and circumventing the intent of the VCNAA's purpose, because by having these persons who are from these groups heading the commission it would be like "the fox guarding the hen house." Empowering the commission on Native American Affairs to grant or officially give state recognition to persons or groups as being Abenaki or not Abenaki, etc. would be a huge mistake. Favoritism, bias, manipulation, and deceit would be the game plot of the day. I do want to make it very clear, that Judy Dow, Timothy de la Bruere, Brad Barratt and Jeanne Brink have not been the source of conflict within the commission, but rather it has been each and every chairman who has been unrepresentative of the commission as a whole, and who has attempted to manipulate the commission to be controlled by April Merrill and other groups who demand instant official state recognition.
Douglas Lloyd Buchholz
Lancaster, N.H.

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