-moz-user-select:none; -webkit-user-select:none; -khtml-user-select:none; -ms-user-select:none; user-select:none;

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Joseph Bruchac, "Marge" Margaret (Bruchac) Kennick; and Joe's sons James and Jesse Bowman Bruchac regarding their ancestor Lewis Bowman and Lewis' ALLEGED "Abenaki" Ancestry/Parentage....


Fair use is a exception to the exclusive right granted by copyright law to the author of a creative work.

17 U.S.C. § 107
Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 17 U.S.C. § 106 and 17 U.S.C. § 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticismcommentnews reportingteaching scholarshipor researchis not an infringement of copyright

[A] reviewer [like Douglas Lloyd Buchholz] may fairly cite largely from the original workif his design be really and truly to use the passages for the purposes of fair and reasonable criticism.

How is it that Joseph Bruchac (and  his sister Marge's ancestors) are legitimately-speaking Abenakis?

Here is THEIR Genealogy:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Q1YTLuaLqPVEh5YjJ0VXZRY3M/view?usp=sharing


In recent retrospect, Wabanaki Beadwork Facebook Group Rhonda Besaw True identified her next project of beadwork as, "Third in the series "The Strength of the Nation Lies with the Women" to honor Dr. Margaret Bruchac (Abenaki) is DONE!...funded by Native Arts New England, a program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the Ford Foundation, the Native Arts and Cultures Foundation, and Anonymous Donors...."


Margaret "Marge" M. Bruchac
Born: 08 Dec 1953
Father: Joseph Edward Bruchac
Mother: Marion Flora Bowman
Sibling: Joseph Bruchac
Niece of: James and Jesse Bowman Bruchac

How is that Margaret (nee: Bruchac) Kennick actually an Abenaki woman? From what I can discern genealogically, they have merely IMPLIED that there allegedly exists a Vital Record, which allegedly states that their ancestor was born at "St. Francis"....

Yet, this DOES NOT mean Odanak nor even St. Francois du Lac, in Yamaska County, Quebec, Canada. Of course, the Bruchac's after-all-these-years of book-selling "Abenaki" stories etc. and doing Educational Presentations, seemingly descend from the MOHAWK People. So now they wear the Kanien’kehake People's form of headdress called the Guhsto:wa.



Jesse Bowman Bruchac 
(on the left)
His father Joseph Bruchac
(on the right)

Ca. September 27, 2011
ACW Native American Writers Series

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LP5EKRIHPto

Hmmm, let's take a look at several different points of interest regarding the Bruchac Family.

First, they CLAIMED in their book (by implied reference) that they were descended from the O'Bomsawin's of Odanak, Quebec, Canada (across the river from Saint Francois du Lac, Yamaska County, Qc, Canada) by way of Obomsawin = Bowman, that their ancestors Lewis/Louis Bowman b. 20 Jul 1844 in "Canada" came from "St. Francis" (Odanak). 

Page 343: Also in 1910, in Highgate, a Bouman (Obomsawin) and Brisbois family appear in the records of Missisquoi. 1519. These two families hail from central Vermont and the Lake George community. Their presence suggests that migration back and forth to that area as well as Odanak was still occurring in 1910. In fact, oral tradition from the Bowman Joseph Bruchac family  and the Maurice Denis Adirondack Abenaki family has confirmed the existence of the Vermont Abenaki community in the 20th century. 1520.
Footnote 1519. See Household # 232 in 1910 Highgate, Vermont Census in Appendix 11.
Footnote 1520. 2282, 8/5/83: 2283, 8/5/83: 1-4.

Page 344: In the Bouman Bowman family, present family members recall when their grandfather Jesse E. (Elmer) Bowman would “disappear” for awhile to go visit relatives  “in Vermont” in this century.

Also see and read these various books written by Joseph Bruchac:
“Bowman’s Store, A Journey to Myself” by Joseph Bruchac ©1997. Pages 10 & 11, 153 & 154.
“Roots of Survival, Native American Storytelling and the Sacred” by Joseph Bruchac © 1996. Pages 179 to194 … Pay close attention to

Page 185 …“Bomazeen: The name comes from Obum-sawin. It means “Keepers of the Ceremonial Fire.” It is a name which has been spelled many ways by Abenaki people, some of whom still carry variations of that name. Joseph Obowmaswine was a veteran of the War of 1812, fighting on the Canadian side. Today, at Odanak (the Abenaki reserve on the St. Francis River in Quebec Province), the Obomsawin family still lives. And the name Cowin, which was that of a family of Indians in Vermont in the late 1880s, probably came from Obomsawin. Names are changed frequently from father to son among the Abenaki. Sometimes …

 Page 186 …an Abenaki name has been Gallicized, then re-Abenaki-ized, andthen Anglicized. Sabbatist. Saint Jean-Baptiste. Sabbatist. St. Pierre. Sa Bial. Sabael. Obum-sawin. Bomazeen. Bowman. The name of mother’s father  --  Jesse Bowman.”
“The Heart of a Chief” by Joseph Bruchac ©1998. Author’s Note (In Part) “I decided, however, not to set this novel on a real reservation. Some of the issues in the book, such as casino gambling, leadership, and alcohol abuse, are too sensitive for me to do that. Instead, I have imagined a reservation where none currently exist, although they should: in New Hampshire. The Penacook are one of the nations of my own Western Abenaki people; but there is, at present,no state or federally recognized Penacook community.”

In a telephone interview with Joseph Bruchac (Abenaki), by Eliza T. Dressang, to accompany the October 6, 1999 discussion of Native American literature for children and teenagers, on CCBC-Net, Mr. Joseph Bruchac (in part) has this to say:”I belong to the Abenaki Nation which is a non-recognized nation in the United States. My great-grandfather [Louis Bowman] came from the little village of Odanak in Canada. I do not have a card from a federally recognized Native American nation.”
Joseph Bruchac’s younger sister, Margaret Bruchac, repeatedly in publications claims to be a Missisqoui Abenaki woman.

“The Winter People” by Joseph Bruchac ©2002. Pages 160 to 168. Pay close attention to Page 163: “For many years I thought of writing about the events of Roger’s Raid. It was, in part, a personal thing. My own great-grandfather Louis Bowman was born in St. Francis.”

“Hidden Roots” by Joseph Bruchac©2004. Pages 130 to 136.Pay close attention to Pages 31 to 44; and 134 of the Author’s Notes. “Sophie” wife to “Uncle Louis” in the book is in reference to Sophie Senecal; and “Uncle Louis” is in reference to Louis Bowman (Sophie nee: Senecal’s son).

“March toward the Thunder” by Joseph Bruchac ©2008. Pages 291 to 293. Pay close attention to Page 293: “My great-grandfather was Canadian, but a Canadian of Native descent whose ancestral roots were in what became the United States. Records list his birth place as St. Francis, the name then used for the Abenaki Indian reserve of Odanak, a mission village made up largely of refugee Indians from New England who fled north to escape the English during the eighteenth century.”  “Like numerous other young Canadian Indian men, my great-grandfather came south to find work because little was available around the reserve.
And, 1864, it was in the United States that a recruiter for the Irish Brigade found him.”

From Jesse Bowman Bruchac (son of Joseph Bruchac) Date: Wed, 06 May 2009 01:12:29:
“The suggested Bowman/Obomsawin connection has been made by many, but directly to us by an Odanak elder Maurice Denis who proposed to my aunt and father in the 70s that it was a name change. Maurice was my father’s mentor at the time and I spent many days as a young child in his kitchen hearing the Abenaki language as he taught my dad the traditional stories of long ago. Maurice lived not far from us and ran an Indian village in Old Forge NY where we spent many summers. Anyway, he believed we were Obomsawin, but this has not and likely cannot be proved. In addition, as suggested in this thread it may not be the case at all. However, even without a name change, Bowman itself is a very old Eastern Algonquin family name. On the record in the 17th century in Massachusetts among the Nantic people. To present it remains a common family name of the Nipmuc, Stockbridge Munsee Mohicans and is also connected with the Wampanoag families, many of whom trace their Native ancestry through Bowman lines.

Page 344: “After 1910, there are few specific indications of Odanak/Missisquoi relations before 1974/5. The Petition and the Day (1981) identity work on Odanak both underscore the disruptive effects of WW 1, the Depression and WW 2 on the family trading and travel networks. 1521. National security combined with economic protectionism to prevent the Odanak Benedict/ Panadis family from returning to work at Highgate Springs from 1915 to 1930.”
Footnote 1522. 78 in Moody, Field Notes, 1983.

Page 353: Of course, numerous oral traditions which link the present community to their 19th and 18th century ancestry have also appeared in the research. The Swasson Morits story is not only a traditional naming tradition, but also a clear sign of linguistic and inter-family continuity at Missisquoi. 1563. 

If one wishes to review the FULL context of what I have (meaning Pages 343 to 353, please refer to this data: 

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Q1YTLuaLqPRlF0ODZ6cmxOU1k/view?usp=sharing

Here is Lewis Bowman's Civil War Pension Records cited in the book entitled "March Toward the Thunder" copyrighted  in 2008:


Mr. Joseph Bruchac, his sons James and Jesse Bowman Bruchac, along with Margaret M. Bruchac-Kennick have IMPLIED in this book "March Toward the Thunder" on page 293, that Lewis Bowman was ...." born at "St. Francis", the name used for the Abenaki Indian Community of Odanak, a mission village made up largely of refugee Indians from New England who fled north to escape the English during the eighteenth century."

Ok so WHERE in this Pension Record, does it ever mention Lewis Bowman ever being born at "St. Francis"? 

What documentation do they the Bruchac's actually SOURCE, by Book Title, Page, Location, etc.?

Please, if anyone (including the Bruchac's can inform my person or the PUBLIC of the actual PROOF documentarily of this St. Francis = Odanak connection, DO SHOW and PROVIDE such DOCUMENTATION, as it pertains to Lewis Bowman, who died on September 10th, 1918 in Greenfield, Saratoga County, New York. 

CLARIFICATION: In the summer of 2009 it was my person, that informed Jesse Bowman Bruchac, of the Owisto'k "Ots-Toch" (Mohawk woman) and her husband Cornelius Antoneson "BroerCarnelis" Van Slyck(e) genealogical ancestral connection with the Bruchac descendants. BEFORE that, they didn't know about this genealogical connection to the Mohawk woman.

I'll post more about the Bruchac's at a later time. Suffice it to say, that again, it would seem that they, as with many people, have re-invented themselves into being "Abenaki" simply because..... yet there is no documentation to substantiate their claims, but here is their genealogy just the same, for review:

Owistok Ots-Toch Descendants as of 08-07-2009 to Jesse Bowman Bruchac:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Q1YTLuaLqPdUFLOWFHX0Q3YzA/view?usp=sharing


I would also like to point out the following: 

Per an email from Cynthia Bisca to my person that was dated August 08, 2009

"It is true that Cornelis Van Slyke "married" (had a liaison) with a Mohawk woman from the Canajoharie Castle or Village.  But she was not the daughter of Jacques Hertel, who probably never came to that part of the Mohawk Valley. Her name is unknown as is her date of birth. She had other children by a Mohawk, who stayed in the village.  She was supposed to have had a sister who married a Bradt, (untrue) which is why I [Cynthia Biasca] did the research which showed some of the myths about the names of the two daughters and their appearances, obviously manufactured in the 1800's by someone who wanted to romanticize the story.  The full debunking is in her article.
So in the case of the Van Slycks, there was a Mohawk mother of unknown name and age who gave birth to 3 or 4 Van Slyck children (Martin is questionable) whose names were/are Jacques, Hilletje and Leah.  They did not have an Elizabeth to my knowledge, nor were any of their children born in Holland!  Ots-Toch is not even an Indian name, I have been told. 

Indian blood  =  yes.  Hertel and the name Ots-Toch and a date of birth for her = no.

Hope this helps.
Cynthia

The following are the article pages she sent to me, kindly: 

Jacques Hertel and the Indian "Princess"
Page 91 

Jacques Hertel and the Indian "Princess"
Page 92-93 

 Jacques Hertel and the Indian "Princess"
Page 94-95

Jacques Hertel and the Indian "Princess"
Page 96-97


I wish these were better scanned copies, but they are what I obtained directly from  Cynthia Brott Biasca, author of the above research.

In essence and conclusion, Ots-Toch is reputedly a Mohawk Indian, but there is considerable discussion about whether she was a daughter of Jaques Hertel. There is some discussion below on this.

Regarding the "Castle," it was a palisaded Mohawk village. On the web at the various Canajoharie sites (located through Google.com) is this 1927 discussion of proposed markers in Canajoharie: "In the Herkimer/Montgomery County area (an) interest was reflected in a series of lengthy articles run by the Fort Plain Standard in the summer of 1927. Among the numerous markers being proposed we find: INDIAN CASTLE - The Upper or Canajoharie Mohawk Castle stood on site of Greene farm greenhouses. Church was Mohawk Indian Mission built by Sir William Johnson, 1769. Fort Hendrick, British army post, erected near here during the French and Indian war (1754-1760). FORT CANAJOHARIE, 1756-1760 - British fort, built during the French and Indian war to guard river ford. Stood on high ground near here. (Fort Plain Standard, June 23, 1927). The church referred to was the Indian Castle Mission Church that still stands, overlooking Route 5S and the Thruway at Indian Castle and sporting the date of "1769." It is this locale that traditionally has been represented as the site of the Upper Mohawk Castle (palisaded village) of the eighteenth century - hence the name of the hamlet.

There is a considerable body of lore regarding Cornelis' (one of many spellings) Mohawk Indian wife, by whom he bore four children. In an article from The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record, vol. 128, Number 2, pages 91-97, JACQUES HERTEL AND THE INDIAN PRINCESSES, the author Cynthia Brott Biasca dismisses the notion that Cornelis wife was a princess, the daughter of Jaques Hertel. She believes the story comes from some 1860 notes by a Schenectady researcher. She notes "Anyone who has done significant research on the Van Slyke (Van Slyck) and Bradt families has come across the story, promoted as fact by people like historian Nelson Greene, that a French trader named Jacques Hertel came to the Mohawk valley and there fathered two daughters by a Mohawk "princess." They were said to be named Ots-Toch and Kenutje, the former being "wild and savage like her mother while Kenutje was small and handsome and very white, like her father." Ots-Toch, in this tale, married Cornelis Van Slyck and Kenutje "married a Bradt."

She continues later "There is ample proof that Cornelis Van Slyck had several children by an Indian woman at the Canajoharie Castle, as their village was referred to. But was she the daughter of a French trader? At first I uncritically accepted this theory, which has been promulgated by many members of the Van Slyke family, among others, offering very questionable "proofs" from various sources. But the time frame of the birth of the two daughters did not correspond with the age Kenutje would have been had she been the mother of Arent Andriessen. And in my research it became apparent that Kenutje was a part of the entire tradition of Hertel, his two daughters, their names and descriptions. Kenutje did not stand alone as an Indian maiden who was the mother of Arent Andriessen Bradt, but in conjunction with her sister, who was born about 1620 and who had son Jacques/Ackes Van Slyck in 1640.
The persistence of this tradition was highlighted by the publication, in late 1996, of a book on the Van Slyke family by Lorine Shulze, a descendant of Jacques Van Slyck. Included is a chapter on Jacques Hertel as the father of Ots-Toch but not Kenutje, who, she says, is controversial and, to her knowledge, only mentioned in one source. Her thesis is that Hertel could have been the father of Ots-Toch, since there was peace between the Iroquois and the French of New France from about 1622 to 1627, a period in which Ots-Toch could have been born. However, Mrs. Schulze only cites 19th and 20th century secondary sources to support her thesis. She presents no primary evidence that Hertel actually was ever in the Mohawk Valley or that he fathered children by a Mohawk woman. As shown below, the primary evidence that does exist shows that the mother of Cornelis Van Slyck's children was a full-blooded Indian."
And, after several more pages of anaysis of records, she ends "What remains from the whole myth of Hertel and his daughters that can be substantiated? The only unchallenged facts are that Cornelis Van Slyck "married" an Indian woman from the Mohawk Castle at Canajoharie. Nowhere in Danckaerts' Journal, where he discusses the Van Slycks, and Hilletje in particular, does he give her mother a name, and his information indicates she was a full-blooded Indian. We know Van Slyck fathered at least four children, and that his wife probably had other fully Indian children. And we know that Jacques Cornelisse, son of Cornelis Van Slyck, had three children who married Bradts, passing on somewhat diluted Indian blood to many Bradt descendants.
Since 17th century primary sources do not support the Hertel tradition, it seems ill-advised to accept as accurate the versions of that tradition that appear two or three centuries later, backed by no factual data. It is time to drop the MYTH of Hertel, Ots-Toch, and Kenutje; drop the idea that Arent Bradt was the son of an Indian "princess"; and stop romanticizing a genealogy that can stand on its own feet without the need to invent details, names, and dates that have no substance in fact."


ABENAKI-BOWMAN
Re: ABENAKI-BOWMAN
migakawinno (Jesse Bowman Bruchac)
Posted: 6 May 2009 1:12AM GMT
Classification: Query
Kwai Doug [Douglas Buchholz], Carolee [Reynolds-Matthews] and other friends I know in this thread. I hope you are well. Since I've been mentioned a few times by name and this revolves around my family, as well of course, around many of ours, I thought I'd share a little of what I know. 

As we have always said more is unknown than known. A great deal of faith and courage went into my father's decision to embrace his Native heritage. He took a leap and I thank him for this and for raising me with an awareness and great respect for everything beautiful about life, Native culture and the earth. This is a respect, Native or not, we should all have. There is much beauty. My life now centers around many circles, one of which has remained for almost 20 years now the fight to keep the Western Abenaki language alive. If you would like to learn more about it, please visit http://westernabenaki.com

First this thread needs some clarification. To suggest that the 1700's were a time when Native people had no concerns with racism shows a lack of knowledge about Native history. This was the time of the forced removals and the most likely time for one to hide their identity if possible as Native in order to literally save their lives. Indians in the northeast at this time literally had bounties put on their heads. 

Secondly what we now call the Abenaki are in fact a coming together of many diverse groups. Many were from New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, New York, Massachusetts and from peoples as diverse as the Mohawk, Wendat (Huron), Nipmuc, Wampanoag, Penobscot, Sokwaki, Mohican etc.. etc.. etc.. The term Abenaki simply means "easterner". Grey Lock himself was Woronoco. 

As for the Bowman family, the Indian blood is there. The full extent will likely never be known. Most of the family hid their Native ancestry in order to find work and live normal lives in their homelands without threat of removal or racism. Others likely forgot, or did not care enough to remember they had Native ancestry at all. 

The suggested Bowman/Obomsawin connection has been made by many, but directly to us by an Odanak elder Maurice Denis who proposed to my aunt and father in the 70's it was a name change. Maurice was my fathers mentor at the time and I spent many days as a young child in his kitchen hearing the Abenaki language as he taught my dad the tradition stories of long ago. Maurice lived not far from us and ran an Indian village in Old Forge NY where we spent many summers. Anyway, he believed we were Obomsawin, but this has not and likely can not be proved. In addition, as suggested in this thread it may not be the case at all. However, even without a name change, Bowman itself is a very old Eastern Algonquin family name. On the record in the 17th century in Massachusetts among the Natic people. To present it remains a common family name of the Nipmuc, Stockbridge Munsee Mohicans and is also connected with the Wampanoag families many of whom trace their Native ancestry through Bowman lines. 

The Senical (Seneca, Senecal) line (Lewis Bowman's mother Sophie Senical) is equally interesting. The Senecal family has a documented history with Odanak, Yamaska and surrounding communites. Intermarrying with the Gill's in the 1840s and prior to this making some failed business deals together, even selling off some of the reserve with help of the then Odanak chief Gill. The famous artist, Charles Gill has a Senecal grandfather. Not clear if this family is Sophie's family, but Senecal's landed in Three Rivers Quebec in 1640-ish from France, 40 years before the Abenaki community of Odanak was established and are are still there today. 

Other unanswered ancestors in our geneology are numerous. Out of Vermont, the Bedel's on my mom's side, and through the Dunham line (my grandmas mom), the Mann's and Spear's all drop off fast and may have Abenaki links. Like most ancestries, ours has more questions than answers, but a clear pattern emerges. Close contact with northeast Native communities and most lines being in the northeast from first European contact and before. 

What is known Native-wise is Jesse Bowman's Mohawk ancestry through his mother Alice Van Antwerp is well documented and multi-layered. One line below is to Ots Toch Hartell (Snow Bird). Also another branch of the Van Antwerp line hits Grietje, who has been mentioned. 

This might help some of you:
10 Jesse Bowman
9. Alice Van Antwerp 
8. Daniel Wynet Van Antwerp 
7. Winant Van Antwerp 
6. Douwe VanAntwerp
5. Hendrikje Fonda VanBuren
4. Aaltje VanNess VanBuren
3. Cornelius VanBuren
2. Elizabeth VanSlyck 
1. Ots Toch Hartell 

Kwai Mskwamagw ta kdagik nid8bak ta nid8baskwak. N'kawachowi kd'agakimziba aln8baiwi askwa.

Wlalamegw8gan,
Migakawinno (Jesse Bowman Bruchac)

Descendants of Owisto'k / Ots-Toch Mohawk Woman to the Bruchac Family:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Q1YTLuaLqPdjRpUmwzYWRIVjg/view?usp=sharing

Re: ABENAKI-BOWMAN
Cynthia Biasca
Posted: 3 Aug 2009 5:44 PM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames: Bradt, Van Valkenburg, Clement, Werner
Hi - You are essentially right. However, Maria Bradt, bpt 1713, did not marry Isaac Van Valkenburg; she had an illegitimate child by him bpt. 17 Dec. 1732 at Schoharie Lutheran Ch. However, he used his father's last name. Isaac the father went on to marry Jannetje Clement in 1737.
Isaac the son married Anna Marie Werner. They had ten children, three of whom married Bradts. By then they used the name Vollick.
The family did NOT go back to Ots Toch - she was a mythwhich I debunked a few years ago. See my book "Descendants of Albert and Arent Andriessen Bradt" and the article in the NY Genealogical and Biographical Record of April 1997 called "Jacques Hertel and the Indian Princesses."
Cynthia Brott Biasca

For a more detailed review of the message board thread of communications back and forth between Carollee Reynolds-Matthews and the Bruchac descendants:

http://boards.rootsweb.com/topics.ethnic.natam.nations.abenaki.abenakinat/240.8.1.1/mb.ashx

As for the alleged Mohawk woman named "Grietje" whom married to Pieter de Steenbaker Borsboom (of which Carollee (nee: Reynolds) Matthews and her daughter Takara Cynthia Matthews descend from [Grietje/Borsboom>Mabie>VanDyke>Partlow>Covey>Hilliker>Reynolds>Matthews], claims to be "cousins" with the Bruchac's. How far back (how many generations into their perspective genealogical backgrounds does it go) in order for the relationship to show up between Carol Reynolds - Matthews and Jesse Bowman Bruchac?

Perhaps the Mohawk Ancestry, that Carollee (nee: Reynolds) Matthews and her daughter T.K. claim to have, doesn't actually exist in the first place, except in MYTH/wishful thinking? Do they live in a Mohawk Community, speak Mohawk, etc? No (?), they claim to be Vermont "Abenakis."

For Carolle (Reynolds) Matthews (and Takara C. Matthews Ancestral Connection to Grietje in further genealogical detail, please review the following PDF:

https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6Q1YTLuaLqPN2VJQnFrOHViZlk/view?usp=sharing



Head Quarters Department of Washington
Office East Commisary of Musters
Washington D. C.
Jan. 25, 1865

Sir,
I have the honor to request that the name of Pvt. Lewis Bowman, Co. E., 69th N.Y. Volunteers, be erased from the M.O. Rolls dated June 3rd, 1865: forwarded to your office. His name was placed on the M.O. Rolls by mistake of the Surgeon in charge, he should be discharged in Surgeons Certificate of Disability.
Very Respectfully,



Louis Bowman

Age: 20 years

Born: Canada
Occupation: Laborer
Eyes: Black
Hair: Black
Complexion: Dark
Height: 5 ft., 8 1/2 inches

Just because he was described as having black eyes, black hair and a dark complexion DOES NOT MEAN HE WAS INDIAN, or ABENAKI at all.


No. 1522 
Lewis Bowman
White
Residence: Greenfield, N.Y.
Birthplace: Canada
Father: Joseph Bowman
Mother: Sophia Rasberry [Not Senecal]
Birthplace of parents: Canada
2nd Wife: Mary E. (nee: VanAntwerp) Goodrich
[widowed sister of Lewis's 1st wife Alice Marie Van Antwerp]
Residence: Greenfield, N.Y.
Born: Wilton, Saratoga County, New York
Father: Winant VanAntwwept
Mother: Susan Barney
Birthplace of parents: Warren County, NY

Does finding an Native Ancestor in the family genealogy ca. July 2009 all the way back 200-300 years ago (for example, allegedly this Mohawk by the name of "Owisto'k" "Ots-Toch") make the Bruchac's ...... now all-of-sudden Mohawk's/ Kanienkehaka, what with wearing Kastoweh's during their "presentation's" i.e. "Story-Telling" [see pictures in this post above, of Joe Bruchac and his son Jesse] and writing numerous books regarding Native People's, making a $$ PROFIT $$ off Native Communities, copyrighting their stories, their culture, their heritage, whether Wabanaki, Abenaki (btw, there is a difference between the two) and or Mohawk? 

Whose "stories"? Whose "songs"? do the Bruchac's take from and copyright, for themselves?

Is such 'traditional' Abenaki? Mohawk? Etc.? When did the Abenaki or Mohawk Culture, Stories, Songs, Traditions, Dances, etc get a PRICE TAG and a Copyright Symbol on them?

I ponder this question: are the Bruchac writing books like "the Arrow Over the Door" - "Hidden Roots" - "The Winter People" - "Roots of Survival" "Bowman's Store" and "March Toward the Thunder" not so much for anything else, but to promote their own "story" ... that they are allegedly "Abenakis"? 

Are they promoting the subject matter in the books, or themselves, in their attempts at identifying as "Abenakis" without ANY real evidence to back up what they say? 

How many "St. Francis" locations are there in the Province of Quebec, Canada that Lewis Bowman ALLEGEDLY came from, to Saratoga County, New York? 


Let's see how many St. Francis there really is:

1. Saint-François, Laval, Quebec, a district of Laval, Quebec that was an independent city before 1965.

2. Saint-François-de-l'Île-d'Orléans, Quebec, known simply as Saint-François until December 2003.
3. Saint-François-de-Beauce, Quebec, now part of Beauceville, Quebec, Canada. 
4. Saint-François-du-Lac, Quebec, Canada.
5. Saint-François-de-Sales, Quebec in Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean region.

(confusingly, some of the other Saint-François were also known historically as Saint-François-de-Sales parishes)

6. Saint-François-de-la-Rivière-du-Sud, Quebec, Canada.
7. Saint-François-d'Assise, Quebec, Canada
8. Saint-François-Xavier-de-Brompton, Quebec, Canada
9. Saint-François-Xavier-de-Viger, Quebec, Canada.

So, why did Joseph Bruchac jump to the conclusion that it automatically just had to be Odanak and or #4. Saint-François-du-Lac, Quebec, on page 293 of his book entitled "March Toward the Thunder"? There is at least 9 (and probably MANY MORE "St. Francis" locations in both Ontario and Quebec, Canada) that I found just using Google.com Search engine, so why immediately pick Odanak's Abenaki Community? There was another known Abenaki Community or Enclave situated around or near #3 back in the day, called "Sartigan" And some of the Native residents of Sartigan did in fact relocate to Odanak.

I will be posting more on the blog about the Bruchac's assuredly.... in due time....

Something to think about and ponder..... 

again.....

Genealogy 
without factual historical documentation 
is 
plain and simple 
merely 
a mythology

Mythology is not genealogy

Genealogies created by mythology
isn't factual historical proof

Friday, January 25, 2013

They want to keep pointing at one another and claiming fraudulently that they are all legitimately genealogically descendants of the Abenaki? Really? - Doris Cheney Minkler - Nancy Hubshman "Red Star" - Rhonda Lou Besaw and Charles F. True Jr. and a few more Genealogical Mappings:


Fair use is a exception to the exclusive right granted by copyright law to the author of a creative work.

17 U.S.C. § 107
Notwithstanding the provisions of sections 17 U.S.C. § 106 and 17 U.S.C. § 106A, the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright

[A] reviewer [like Douglas Lloyd Buchholz] may fairly cite largely from the original work, if his design be really and truly to use the passages for the purposes of fair and reasonable criticism.

Verstehen Sie?
Kwatam?

DO YOU UNDERSTAND the "FAIR USE" clause of the Copyright Infringement Act?

So with that stated quite clearly, from the very beginning, I will modify this particular post[slightly] - meaning without some of the images previoiusly posted

Censorship at it's best, through the DMCA.COM, twice now.

What are these FAKE WANNABIAK "Abenakis" of VT/NH etc. really afraid of? 


[Little ol' me and or this blog?]

Answer: the TRUTHFUL 'critical examination and questioning of their baseless (and dare I say very likely fraudulent) statements and claims that their ancestors or themselves are Abenakis!!!

How is it that these women (or the Bruchac's for that matter) are Abenakis, historically - genealogically speaking? Hummmmm? Do their genealogical records substantiate their claims

Let's actually review the genealogical reports etc, shall we? (and yes I have the documents to back up my FTM Reports)

[1.] How is Rhonda Besaw an Abenaki woman? 

Here's HER Genealogy:

Rhonda's Genealogical Mapping

[2.] How is Charles Francis True Jr. an Abenaki Chief (of what COMMUNITY)?

Here is HIS Genealogy:

Charles Francis True Jr.'s Ancestry

In October 2012 Wabanaki Beadwork Facebook Group Rhonda Lou (nee: Besaw) Grimes - True began to declare that 4 women were Abenakis........

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=541706995847100&set=a.346929075324894.88945.343830105634791&type=1&theater

She said "This is the next lady I will be doing a beaded portrait of.....4th in the series "The Strength of the Nation Lies With the Women"... Grandmother Doris Minckler, Abenaki/Mohawk." Indeed, the late Doris Minckler was a descendant of the Mohawk Caughanwaga/Kahnawa:ke Rice Family... yet is she descendant of the Abenaki?


Doris Gertrude (nee: Cheney) DeCarr - Minkler
Born: 30 Oct 1926 at Monkton Ridge, Addison County, Vermont
Died: 10 May 1997
Father: Giles Gilbert Cheney
Mother: Marguerite Ann Gibeau/ Gebo

How is that Doris "Grandmother Morning Dove" Gertrude Cheney - Minkler an Abenaki Elder Woman? 

Burton Decarr and his mother's Ancestry

And Rhonda's close relative, the late Nancy Millette-Doucet, is an "Koasek" Abenaki Chief etc?

How is it that Nancy Millette an Abenaki (or an Abenaki Chief)?

Rhonda Besaw could question, but how dare I do the same?

Here is Rhonda Louw Besaw's cousin Nancy Millette's Genealogy:

Rhonda, goes onto to claim that Donna Moody is an Abenaki Elder...

How is that Donna Louise Carvalho - Charlebois - Moody is an Abenaki Elder?

Donna Moody's Ancestry Mapping

Donna Louise Carvalho

Born: 23 Jan 1946 in Attleboro, Bristol County, Massachusetts
Father: John Joseph Carvalho
Mother: Lillian Dorothy Robert(s)

Donna Louise (nee: Carvalho) Charlebois - Moody claimed also that she too was a descendant of the OBomsawin's of Odanak, Quebec, Canada [O'Bomsawin = Robert i.e. Obomsawin dit Robert]

Donna Louise Carvalho's paternal lineage goes back to Manuel Joaquin Carvalho born in Sao Migel, Azores, or Açores, Aveiro, Portugal, died in Fall River, Bristol County, Massachusetts.

Her maternal lineage goes back quite a number of generations to a supposedly (AND DEBATABLE)1600's Mik'Maq woman afore-mentioned in this post, as well as to a HURON woman by the name of Marie Catherine 8enta Plat dit Pillat, from the 1600's. So, in 300-200 years time-frame, the living descendant today, re-invents themselves INTO being Abenaki, based on a singular ancestry, with NO COMMUNITY, NO LANGUAGE, and from 1-2 generations down from that Native Ancestors, the descendants ARE identifying as White or Caucasian, and no indication(s) from an external point of documented observation (Vital Records, Census Records etc) as being "native" or Huron or Mik'Maq. I guess it just takes 200 years later is a Pendleton Blanket that Joe Bruchac presented to her, a pair of braids, and a whole bunch of "VT Abenaki" Public Presentations or more, claiming one is a Vermont Abenaki eh? I guess Donna Moody could join any group of re-invented Vermont "Abenakis" such as Nathan Pero's group, or even the Nulhegan group up in Orleans County, Vermont using that HURON ancestral connection (how many generations removed from her?)

[01.] "Atseña" Pierre Le Plat dit Pillat, born in La Rochelle / Ossosané (Huronia). He married 3819.
"Annenghton" Marguerite Moulinet in La Rochelle / Ossosané (Huronia) Georgian Bay.

[02.] Marie Catherine Plat dit Pillat, (FRENCH) born 30 Mar 1646 in La Rochelle, Nouvelle-France or Charente-Maritime, Poitou-Charentes, France; died 23 Jul 1717 in Montreal, Montreal County, Quebec, Canada;
She married Nicholas Pierre Charron dit Ducharme 19 Oct 1665 in Notre-Dame de Montréal, Montreal, Ile de Montreal County, Quebec, Canada.

[03.] Francois Charron dit Ducharme, born 02 Jun 1678 in Sorel, Richelieu County, Quebec, Canada; died
29 Mar 1678 in Sorel, Richelieu County, Quebec, Canada. He married Marguerite Piette Trempe
30 Jan 1701 in Ste. Pierre de Sorel, Sorel, Richelieu County, Quebec, Canada.

[04.] Marie Charlotte Charon dit Ducharme + Jean Baptiste Secheret dit Frechet

[05.] Jean Baptiste Frechet + Marie Rose Joly dit Dolbec

[06.] Marie Louise Frechet + Joseph Branconnier

[07.] Marie Rose Branconnier + Thomas "Damas" LaDurantaye

[08.] Sara LaDurantaye + Paschal Robert

[09.] Wilfred David (or Foster) Robert(s) + Laura Bedard

[10.] Lillian Dorothy Robert(s) + John Joseph Carvalho

[11.] Donna Louise (nee: Carvalho) + 1m. Robert Ernest Charlebois on June 04, 1966 (CHANGING HER NAME to her MOTHERS MAIDEN NAME of Roberts upon divorce to Charlebois per Proposed decree of divorce dated March 24, 1995 which was finalized on May 12, 1995) + 2m John Scott Moody on Sept. 30, 2000.

Per the Birth Certificate of Attleboro, Bristol County, MA, Donna Louise was born Carvalho as a maiden name on January 23, 1946 Registered No. 49 Page 64. NOT ROBERT or ROBERTS at all.

When Donna L. Carvalho was issued a marriage license when she'd intended to marry Robert E. Charlebois on May 24 1966, and then married the following June 04, 1966 at St. Mary's in Norton, MA, she used her maiden name of Carvalho, showing that HER MOTHER'S Maiden Name was "Roberts"...

Why then does Donna Louise Charlebois petition the NH State Superior Court on March 24, 1995 Docket Number 95-m-057 in her Proposed Decree of Divorce, and claim that she, as the PLAINTIFF, requsting that she shall assume her mother's maiden name, Roberts?

Was the surname change to her mother's maiden name because the O'Bomsawin's used the surname of Robert, so she could (after may 1995) IMPLY such  a genealogical connection to Odanak/or to the Abenakis, under false pretense? It does make me sit back and wonder....

Rhonda on her created Facebook.com continued, "This is fourth in my series of portraits entitled "The Strength of the Nation Lies With the Women". The next portrait will be of another Abenaki Elder, Donna Roberts Moody."

And just for the sake of it, Here is Rick Hunt and his wife Carolyn (nee: Osgood - Black)'s Genealogies

 How is that the "Laughing Couple"  Rick and Carolyn Hunt are Abenakis?

Carolyn (Osgood/Black) Hunt's Genealogy:

Carolyn Black Osgood Hunt's Genealogy Mapping

Richard "Rick" Ray Hunt's Genealogy:

Rick and son Josh Hunt's Ancestry Mapping

MY RESPONSE:

WHERE is the historically documented ABENAKI Ancestry in the ancestries of Rhonda Besaw, Rick Hunt, Nancy Millette Doucet, Carolyn Osgood/Black - Hunt, Doris Cheney - Minckler?


Are they Abenakis because they have a 12th Great Grandmother that was Abenaki, Huron, or Algonkian? Mik'maq or Mohawk? One drop rule?

You TRY to find the substantiation genealogically, historical or even BEFORE 1976 when their ancestors were identified externally as ... or identifying internally within their families (observable documented evidence) as ...  that they were and or are legitimate Abenakis, before 1974 or even today! That evidence isn't to be found, because it never existed in the first place? Or they would SHOW and PROVIDE that historical evidence from within and surrounding their families. But they can't because that "evidence" NEVER existed?

Again, how is it, that the late Doris Gertrude (nee: Cheney) Decarr - Minkler is an Abenaki woman? I've worked on her genealogical background, and I only see a MOHAWK connection through the RICE/Dicaire family ancestry. Her ancestor was Pierre Dicaire b. 1721 and whom married to Cecile "Anenharisonnise" Rice b. abt. 1723 at Lac Des Deux Montagnes, Deux Montagnes County, Quebec, Canada and she was from Kahnawa:ke (very distantly removed from Doris G. Minkler). 

No Abenaki whatsoever (Remember the B.I.A. Report Conclusions ca. 2005 - 2007 wherein NOT one family or person from the Franklin County, VT area proved ANY viable connection(s) to the Abenakis? 

This INCLUDES Doris Gertrude (nee: Cheney) Decarr - Minkler!.

Secondly, how is that Charles Francis True Jr. and or his wife Rhonda Lou (nee: Besaw) Grimes _ True ARE Abenakis? 

Indeed, it was I, that found (for Rhonda) her genealogical connection Roch Manitoubowich b. abt. 1600 and whom married to Outsibabanoqueah b. abt. 1606 (Rhonda didn't know about this genealogical connection UNTIL I'd found it, no matter what she implies or says today). 

Yet how are these two HURONS from the distant early 1600's .... actually VT or NH Abenakis? IN FACT they were HURON Refugee's under the umbrella of Jesuit Protection during the Mohawk hostile incursions against the Huron Nation in the 1600's! 

Is Rhonda True "Abenaki" simply because she married Charlie True who claims to be a "Chief" of an Incorporation called the "Abenaki Nation of NH"? 

How many legitimately documented genealogically connected descendant Abenakis does he actually represent? Or do they just assume they are "Abenakis" merely because they looked into his eyes and SAID they were atthe Miti-Jo Campground Pow-wow? Or does his 'members' assume that they are "Abenaki" or "Pennacook" or "Cowasuck" based on their alleged and re-invented "Grandma-Said-So-Stories" much like Rhonda be-lie-ves she's "Abenaki" or Eastern Abenaki"/"Penobscot" simply because she herself SAYS her late father said so?

Thirdly, how is it that Donna (nee: Roberts) Charlebois-Moody is an Abenaki woman, let alone an Elder (of what viable historical cohesive Abenaki Community)? 

Yet again, I have researched her genealogical historical records, and 11 or so generations back in fact she does descend from a 1600's HURON woman. That being Marie Catherine 8enta Plat dit Pillat who was born 30 Mar 1646 at Huronia or La Rochelle, Nouvelle-France or Charente-Maritime, Poitou-Charentes, France. She'd married to a Frenchman Nicholas Pierre Charron dit Ducharme She died at Huronia or La Rochelle, Nouvelle-France 

Donna Moody also descends DISTANTLY by many generations from a Mi'kmaq woman. Her name was Catherine Marie Mi'Kmaq born abt. 1600. She m. Pierre LeJeune dit Briard and d. abt. 1636 at Port Royal, NS, Canada. 

How is that, she has been IMPLIED to be an VT/NH Abenaki by both VT and NH Agencies etc? Do they KNOW her genealogical background?

IN FACT NONE OF THESE 3 WOMEN descend from any Abenakis that I can see genealogically, socially or historically! 

If I am incorrect or in error, then please, SHOW and PROVIDE the documented evidence, genealogically or historically-speaking. [Instead they want to DMCA complain and whine about this blog post, so they can keep "hiding in plain sight"]

The "persona's" they each have created for themselves, is simply a re-invention, much like putting on a pair of roundish tinted glasses and a Capote coat, or wearing long hair (braided of course) with a pair of beaded earrings, or a beaded bag slug across the shoulder. 

But what's UNDERNEATH ALL THIS Indian-ist Pontification to the Masses of NAIVE PEOPLE going on in N'dakinna? (I didn't write NaTive either... but there are some NATIVE PEOPLE'S that are being extremely naive as well about what is going on here in the Northeast, what with this Re-Invention of the Vermont and New Hamsphire "Abenaki" "Pennacook" "Cowasuck"  i.e. (or "Koasek"), "El-Nu", "Missisquoi" (St. Francis/Sokoki) and "Nulhegan" groups.

This is the RE-WRITING and DISTORTING of Abenaki history by creating FAKE "Abenakis". 

So what if Minkler gave out Indian-ist names to a bunch of New Age-ist Wannabiak, or had read tea-leaves (all the while being a Catholic) to the ignorant "Indian-ists" such as the late Nancy Lee (nee: Millette) Cruger - Lyons - Doucet. BTW, the late Nancy Millette-Doucet and Rhonda Besaw-Grimes-True ARE in fact, related genealogically-speaking. When Nancy popped up in 1992-1993 in Littleton, NH .... out of the "Abenaki" woodwork, so did her cousins Rhonda Besaw and "Rick" Hunt. 

Coincidence? I think not.

So what if Rhonda Lou (nee: Besaw) True claims to be an "Abenaki", why? "because she can do some nice beadwork?" 

So what that Donna (nee: Roberts) Moody can 'pontificate' amongst a group of people as if what she claims is true, which might actually be incorrect. She ain't no O'bomsawin either! No matter how she tries to 'cook' the books of her genealogical background !!


A Mik'maq IS a Mik'maq....

A Huron IS a Huron.... 

A Mohawk IS a Mohawk...... 

NOT Abenaki

Go ahead and keep "re-writing" this so called "Abenaki" history .... I see what's going on ....

The ancestors MUST be amused by all of this? 




The ONLY person Rhonda Besaw-True has "beaded up" onto a bag (thanks to the grants she has solicited to do these artistic pieces), THAT WAS ABENAKI, IS IN FACT  Mary "Mali" Margaret nee: Mason 

Mary Margaret Keating was born 1931 in Keene, Cheshire County, New Hampshire (to Elizabeth Mary M'Sadoques) was the granddaughter of Israel M'Sadoques and Marie Watso, clearly and definitely born AT Odanak, Quebec, Canada a KNOWN historical and contemporaneous Abenaki COMMUNITY. 

Mary "Mali" (nee: Mason) Margaret Keating

Born: 11 Jun 1931 in Keene, Cheshire County, New Hampshire
Died: 13 Mar 2001 in Hardwick, Caledonia County, Vermont
1m: Robert Edward Holland
Her Child: Lynn Holland who married William Joseph Murphy
2m: Bruce Hadlock Keating

Here is Mary Mali Margaret (nee: Mason) Holland - Keating's Ancestry (again it is a work-in-progress).

Mali Mason - Keating's Genealogical Mapping

Mali Keating's genealogy SUBSTANTIATES the Abenaki community of Odanak and their people, ancestors and descendants alike.

... NOT these so-called Vermont/New Hampshire self-proclaimed "Abenakis" like the so-called "member" of the St. Francis/Sokoki (of the Missisquoi/ Swanton, VT Honmer St. Francis Sr. group) "Nancy Red Star" for one example....of just such a person.

Actually she is Nancy Hubshman born December 30, 1950 at the Greenfield Hospital, in Stamford, Fairfield County, Connecticut to Louis Henry Hubshman and Joyce Burroughs Matthews

Nancy Hubshman married twice, first to Christopher "Stick" Sylbert on June 06, 1976 in Stamford, CT and she remarried secondly to Kevin Francis Red Star of the Lodge Grass, Crow Indian Community, Montana Indian Community.

She (Nancy nee: Hubshman) a.k.a. Nancy Redstar or "Nancy Red Star" attempts to imply that the Cherokee (of whom she CLAIMS erroneously to descend from) and the Abenakis are cousins, on Youtube.com. 

She is not Cherokee either, from where I am sitting. 

She wants to desperately claim she is related to "Bonnie and Clyde" too, but from where I am sittin' she ain't a descendant either of them two.

So, y'all wanna see her ancestry too? Ok, here is:

Nancy Red Star's Ancestry Mapping

I got documents too, to back up what I am saying! herein. "Missisquoi Abenaki", my arse. She may have a Missisquoi 'membership' Card (just like a lot of "white' folks did get and do still have because the late Michael "Tribal Judge" Delaney and his sidekick Homer St. Francis Sr. were giving em out left, right and sideways to anyone claiming they was Indian, Blackfoot, Cherokee, or Abenaki) but that don't make her an Abenaki.

Her genealogical ancestors don't even come anywhere near Vermont, let alone interact with Vermont/New Hampshire Abenakis, historically or contemporaneously on a genealogical level whatsoever. 


Now she (Nancy nee: Hubshman) "Red Sky" claims that she is an enrolled member of the Red Lake Ojibway Nation ???? Yep, she went from being a "citizen" (card holder) of Swanton Vt.'s Homer group while claiming to be "Cherokee" to NOW being a member of Red Lake!

So why was Mali Keating "entertaining this woman, Nancy (nee: Hubshman) "Red Sky", in the first place back in the day? Gullibility, Ego, Ignorance? 

Why did so many get 'membership cards' from these varied "Abenaki" Incorporation's since 1974 when in fact, these people were not Abenakis at all? Something to think about....

Mali Keating descends from a Thomas Keeney born ca. 1578 in  King's Lynn, Norfolk County, England (I surmise I think, so do I descend from the same, I know my Grandma's maiden name was Keeney ... does that make us related? Does that make me Abenaki since she is too; or does that make her "white" ?). You don't see Native People in America or Canada looking through the genealogical backgrounds of their ancestors looking for any scrap of WHITE ancestry, now does one? They don't become Shake and Bake Instant "White" People (to heck with the Potato's, we wanna-be real Abenaki Indians!) simply because they have a Non-Native Ancestral lineage in their genealogical backgrounds ca. 1600's, now do they? But by golly, there are MANY who go around looking for any scrap of INDIAN ancestry in their genealogical backgrounds, so that they can TRY to legitimize themselves as being THEE REAL Abenakis; even if those singular Native Ancestors were and are Huron, Mi'Kmaq, Western Algonquian, or even really actually Mohawk!

And I am sure Mary "Mali" (nee: Mason) Keating would be so very pissed off and or disgusted with what is going on these days, what with the creation of FAKE "Abenakis" throughout N'dakinna, now legally  "recognized" by the State of Vermont Politicians/Gov./Legislature. But someone's got to take on the role playing of the Abenaki Indians, because they can't all have died off and disappeared..... so (drum roll ... flute playing) here come the wannabiak of Vermont and New Hampshire. When their genealogical records don't work, they bring out the Brown Ash basket-making and the beadwork, or making wooden flutes "in the traditional way."

And just because this is the dynamic these days since 2009 (etc), doesn't make these groups "Abenaki" "Tribes" nor the majority of their "memberships" legitimately Abenakis at all. Even if they conjure up doing beadwork, black ash basketry or keep jumping up and down swearing that THEY are THEE "Abenakis" because their Grandma (or Father) said so..... it's the Who-The-Hell-Are-We "Tribe" of Wannabiak!

I could say that I am a bit "amused" by whats been going on in Abenaki La-La-Land; but actually, in all honesty, I am not amused by these women's shenanigans, anymore than  I have been amused by the whole political "recognition" of these people allegedly claiming to be (being) "abenakis" let alone, "Native Americans" recently in Vermont). 

Nor am I amused by the so-called many self-proclaimed male Abenaki/Cowasuck/Penacook "Chiefs"/Representatives cropped out of the woodwork, such as Paul Wilson Pouliot or Charles Francis True Jr., who, for whatever delusional idea's that they have had and continue to have, that they are the 'head' of some bone-a-fide legitimate Abenaki "Tribe" or "community" these days. 

They have no genealogical, historical or social connection(s) to the Abenakis, that I can discern. they cropped up post-1974-1976. 

If they did, they would SHOW and PROVIDE legitimate evidence of those Abenaki genealogical connections. To this day, they, none of them, have ever done so. Probably because they've never had the evidence, ever, in the first place.

Does having an Algonquin ancestor, or a Mik'maq ancestor, or a Huron ancestor, or a even an Abenaki ancestor from the 1600-1700's make a descendant an Algonquin/Mik'Maq/Huron or Abenaki? 

What if, for the previous 100 or 200 years since that Native Ancestral connection existed, the descendants of that Native Ancestor NEVER lived in a Native COMMUNITY that was discernible, cohesive, detectable externally (let alone internally i.e. Swanton, Vermont), spoke no detectable Abenaki/Mik'maq/Huron/ Algonquin language within the family down to present?

ARE these many people across New England (from New York, up into Quebec, all way down into CT, MA, NH, VT and even Rhode Island) afore-mentioned really honest to goodness genuinely genealogically-proven Abenakis? Or are they merely attempting to keep profiting emotionally and/or financially, by keeping their MYTHS perpetuating to the naive masses, claiming to be thee Abenakis descendants

If they SAY We are Abenakis  loud enough...long enough, it won't matter if it is in FACT a LIE or a DISTORTION that they have or are continuing to perpetuate, because people will "be-lie-ve" what they hear .... not what is FACTUALLY PROVEN. Well, I guess if you look into Charlie F. True's eyes long enough and SAY your an Abenaki, it is good enough for him.... because he isn't Abenaki either.... (oh but LOOK, see his late father's high forehead, good strong white teeth, and them high cheekbones and those dark looking hands he'd say). That was PROOF enough.... or is it? To me, it sounds a bit "eugenic like".....

The late Nancy Millette-Doucet self concocted her "stories" about her ancestors Almira (nee: Rines) Ingerson - Pollock and Almira's daughter Flora Eunice (nee: Ingerson) Hunt IS a "classic example" of what I am talking about here. I strongly suspect her story was based on Joseph Bruchac's book entitled 'Fox Song' by Philomel Books, published in 1993 - 32 pages
from award-winning poet and storyteller Joseph Bruchac comes a "moving tale of the intuitive understanding between the young and old. Through many seasons, Grama Bowman teaches Jamie the ways of her Abenaki people. Then Grama Bowman is gone, but her world remains--a place where Jamie will never be alone. Full-color illustrations."

Which btw, was RIGHT exactly at the time, Nancy Cruger (nee: Millette) started began starting to created her Indian - Abenaki persona, what with the Littleton, NH Pow-wow, as that town's "promoter" having introduced herself to Jesse Larocque, Homer St. Francis Sr., Michael Delaney, and of course Odanak's very own Walter Watso......

And if ANYONE would like to see the genealogical foundations (etc) for my assertions genealogically-speaking, well you can communicate a request and your email address etc and I will gladly send what further data, documents, pictures etc that I have.


Genealogy 
without factual historical documentation 
is 
plain and simple 
merely 
a mythology

Mythology is not genealogy

Genealogies created by mythology
isn't factual historical proof

In the meantime, I am still working on their genealogies, the historical (and hysterical) incorporation records etc of these varied "Abenaki" groups throughout Vermont and New Hampshire.

Just my thoughts for the day..... 

Search This Blog