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Saturday, December 18, 2010

State of VT's Response to Petition for Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation of Vermont: Pages 219 to 229:

Attachment B
Review of Historical Narrative, pages 1-70, of
"Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe
submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs
by the Abenaki Nation of Vermont dated October 1982"
by John Alexander Dickinson
Professor, University of Montreal
Quebec,Canada
The historical document drawn up on behalf of the Abenaki tribal council of Vermont, presents a reasonable reconstruction of most historical events and relies on widely held assumptions concerning social and political organization amongst hunting-gathering communities in the Northeast. Unfortunately, the Western Abenaki remain a largely unknown quantity and much of their history must be pieced together using indirect evidence which is open to interpretation. For example, Volume 1 of the Historical Atlas of Canada, does not indicate any Native populations in the Appalachian region from the Green Mountains to the Gaspe.
I will first go over the entire document submitted to me and comment on statements that I find incorrect or interpretations that could be challenged. Then I will answer in more detail the specific questions raised by the Vermont Attorney Generals office.
It is erroneous to state that Champlain learned of the Abenaki on his 1609 expedition to Lake Champlain (pages 2 and 24). Champlain states that the area along the Richelieu and Lake Champlain was formerly inhabited and that there were rich corn fields east of the Lake (without specifying that these fields were along the Missisquoi or elsewhere). From the native peoples that were accompanying him, Champlain understood that these lands were formerly occupied by the Iroquois but that they had been abandoned because of warfare (Biggar edition, Vol. II, pp. 90-93). The Iroquois referred to here might be Saint-Lawrence Iroquoians, who left sites along the Richelieu River and who mysteriously disappeared before 1580. It is also possible that Champlain, who was not familiar with the region or its inhabitants, misunderstood his informers (the competence of interpreters at this early stage can be called into question), and that the residents of this region were Sokokis, Pennacooks or Mahicans; nations that later merged to form the Western Abenaki.
Early town histories written in the nineteenth century are not usually the most reliable sources, but do contain oral traditions otherwise forgotten and details not found in archives. At best, however, they provide indications of a Native presence in the region in a not too distant past, but have more difficulty establishing exact dates. They are also very imprecise as to the exact identity of the peoples they deal with.
The question of whether land was held in common or by individual families (raised on page 9) is a difficult one. The opinions of Speck, once seen as a model for family
hunting territories, have been challenged by Leacock and more recently both were put into question by Feit (in G.W.Stocking ed., Colonial Situations. Essays in the Contextualization of Ethnographic Knowledge, Madison, 1991). It seems evident that the Abenaki frequented the Missisquoi area throughout most of the eighteenth century and developed a spiritual relation with the spirits of the lakes and rivers of the region. During the nineteenth century, they probably continued to hunt in areas not occupied by Euro-American settlers on both sides of the Canadian-United States border, as before. Property is probably not the correct concept to use here, but familiarity with the game and geography gave certain hunters a prime role in exploiting the area. Unfortunately, it seems impossible to identify exactly who these hunters who lead bands were.
The problem of estimating pre-contact native populations is extremely difficult (pages 12-14). The authors cited were all writing in a period when it was current to exaggerate the effects of epidemics and, as David Henige mentions in several articles, high count with no real documentary basis. Days estimate of 5000 is plausible. The flora and fauna of the region could probably sustain a higher population, but was the maximum carrying capacity attained or had warfare dispersed populations? It is impossible to answer these questions in any definitive manner especially given the paucity of documentary and archeological sources. The only clear evidence available concerns the eighteenth century, and it would seem that the 60 to 80 warriors mentioned in French documents regarding the village at Missisquoi relate to an Abenaki community of some 300-400 people. According to figures worked out by W.A. Starna for the neighboring Adirondacs, such a population would require an area of about 1000 to 1500 square kilometers (up to 600 square miles) for subsistence hunting (see my article in S. Courville et N. Seguin, dirs., Espace et culture/Space and Culture, Quebec, 1995, pp. 117-125). Such a population could have continued to exploit areas of northern Vermont and New Hampshire after the advent of Euro-American settlers and after the American Revolution without entering into conflict with the latter and without disrupting their traditional way of life. The references to small groups of hunters could refer to such bands continuing to occupy the territory, but they could also refer to bands from St-Francois coming south to exploit traditional territories. The evidence is not clear enough to definitively state which of these two possibilities (or both of them) is actually what happened.
The paper is correct to emphasize band rather than tribal organization as the basic socio-economic and political unit. The description of a fluid group is appropriate and follows the standard interpretation of what hunting community organization was like (my only complaint would be with the introduction of a Delaware matrilineal pattern which is something of a red herring since it refers to groups farther south cultivating more corn and relying less on hunting). Unfortunately, it is impossible to say with any certainty how many bands exploited the Missisquoi watershed and what their relations with the bands at St-Francois were.
Mission communities in the St. Lawrence valley had become somewhat acculturated by the eighteenth century with populations adopting some elements of European apparel and some other elements of material culture. The most important link to Europeans, however, seems to be the Roman Catholic Religion although there is considerable debate amongst scholars as to the degree to which Catholicism had been internalized. The different communities did have a clear identity within the French domain, however, and French documents refer specifically to the Abenaki whereas British documents after the Conquest of New France often subsume all mission Indians under the term Seven Nations of Canada. This alliance was certainly present as of the American Revolution and oral tradition would have it beginning in the seventeenth century (see Jean-Pierre Sawaya, Les Sept Feux du Canada, Sillery, 1998). This political organization existed and was at a level superior to the hunting band throughout the period 1760-1840. The Missisquoi Abenaki would have been considered part of this larger unit prior to 1783. The recognition by Britain of an independent United States, however, would have put them outside the geographical limits of Quebec and, in British opinion, out of the alliance although the exact boundary line was not clearly known in the area for several years. The Missisquoi Abenaki would probably still have considered themselves part of the Saint-Francis mission political unit.
The establishment of Kanhnawake in 1668 had nothing to do with a desire to link the Iroquois and the Abenaki. From an Iroquois perspective, it was established to exploit traditional fisheries in the region and to enable some converts to have access to missionaries. From a French perspective, it drew christianized Iroquois and captives and thereby enfeebling the Five Nations confederacy as well as establishing a protective shield to the south of French settlements. The alliance between Kahnawake Mohawk and Abenaki was a later development and these groups only really acted in unison at the end of the French and Indian War. D. Peter MacLeod (The Canadian Iroquois and the Seven Years War, Toronto, 1996) considers that the Abenaki were already involved in warfare since 1750 to defend their traditional hunting grounds in Vermont and were more willing partners than the Iroquois. After the war and during the American Revolution the Canadian League became firmer with the Kahnawakes playing a leading role and often speaking for the other members in formal meetings with government authorities. It is often difficult to distinguish which is the voice of the Mohawks and which is the voice of the confederacy.
There seems to be a contradiction in stating that the hunting grounds of this extraordinarily rich area would have been depleted in 1700 (page 26) and then claim that many Abenaki were living there. It is true that the area to the east of Lake Champlain was little known and it is reasonable to assume that the Abenaki established at St-Francois would exploit the area south of them as a hunting territory. However, at this time both French and British had mapped the area and territory. However, at this time both French and British had mapped the area and claimed it as their territory. The French claim rested mainly on allied Indians occupying and exploiting the region and this justified the concession of seigneurial grants down the Richelieu and around the north of Lake Champlain in the early
eighteenth century. It was certainly at this time that a group of Abenakis from St-Francis established a village at Missisquoi. Whether they were returning to lands they had previously occupied or not cannot be proved, but their occupation of the area in the last half century of French domination in Canada is certain. Refugees from Shaghticoke might have joined the original groups or may have been some of the original inhabitants. Again, this cannot be demonstrated one way or another.
The question of political authority is difficult. Europeans had difficulty recognizing Native systems of social control and what they have to say, if taken too literally, can be misleading. French officers, especially during the wars at the end of the French period, were often critical of Natives and considered them undisciplined. This stemmed from misunderstanding of Native goals and the need to proceed through consensus rather than by command. Europeans took note of war leaders who were helpful to them but not of other leaders who probably had as great if not greater influence in the community. At times, the French tried to impose chiefs they thought would do their bidding, but this was generally refused by the Natives, although the French continued to treat "their chief' as the principal spokesman for the nation. Grey Lock was recognized as a major war chief, but this would not necessarily have made Missisquoi a "center" (p. 30) since the French amalgamated his actions with those of the Abenakis in general.
The Dutch were not a threat during the French and Indian War (p. 31)
The population counts on page 32 are speculative. There was a lot of population movement, but it is unlikely that the Abenaki of St. Francois and Missisquoi would have grown to more that 1300-1500 in the period. The Missisquoi population for the 1750s seems very optimistic since the village was on the front line and the growth of Odanak is probably attributable to families moving back there from Missisquoi. The number of hunting bands in the interior would have had been based at a permanent settlement (probably St-Francois). Likewise, Bougainville's report concerns warriors that were with the army and they came from St-Francois as well as from Missisquoi. I believe that it would be wrong to assume that the 100 to 150 men were all from Missisquoi.
I am wary of Bougainville's statement that Abenaki youth had less respect for their elders that other Indians nations (p. 34). Native government was not coercive and chiefs had little authority (as Europeans understood the term) over their followers. It is strange that a document written to reflect Native views would uncritically accept such claims by European observers who had little knowledge of Indians especially at a time when French officers views were becoming more racist (Saliha Belmessous thesis at Ecole des Hautes Etudes, 2000). The Abenaki continued to be represented by the Seven Nations of Canada in the years after the 1760 so there is evidence of a political grouping above the family hunting band.
  We know too little of the movements of Native populations to state that "Indians from all over New England were on the move" (p. 36) in the period right after the
surrender of New France. Most were pragmatists and would have realized that they would have to deal with British authorities in the future.
Perry's suppositions are merely that and there is no proof that there were more Abenaki at Missisquoi than elsewhere (p. 37). Lower Canada did not yet exist when Murray was governor, but this passage indicates the uncertainty over the boundary. There is no proof that the Charlotte mentioned a little lower was the daughter of Grey Lock. Charlotte is such a common Christian name that nothing certain can be deduced from this.
The lease in Appendix A and mentioned on page 38 certainly is clear evidence that the Abenaki considered the land around Missisquoi as their land. The collective signing can be interpreted as evidence of a higher political organization than that of the hunting band. At this time it was still rare for Natives to consider property as being held individually but rather as a collective gift from the Creator. The signatories would seem to be the elders responsible for community organization.
The relations between Kahnawake and the other members of the Seven Nations of Canada are not always clear. Kahnawake often spoke for the "confederacy", but it would seem normal for the Mohawk to look out for their interests first. Any claims they made, could be claims for the entity. Lake Champlain was a frontier between Mohawk and Abenaki hunting territories since the 17th century and both nations could stake legitimate claims. The Abenaki would, however, have a stronger claim to the eastern shore. This comes up again on page 52 and the petition on page 313 was clearly signed by 20 chiefs of the Seven Nations which included the Abenaki.
I do not see that the reference to the problems of the Abenaki at St. Regis (p. 41) is an indication that Missisquoi was considered their territory. The Abenaki at St. Regis had no chiefs recognized by the British, but this does not mean that they had no chiefs (p. 42). The Abenaki did not get along well with the Iroquois at St. Regis and most found their way back to St. Francois.
The Abenaki population in Vermont at the beginning of the Revolution is impossible to determine (pp. 43-44). The "evidence" presented is largely hypothetical and I would hesitate attributing more than 500 Abenaki to the area at this time. It is impossible to determine whether they considered themselves part of the St. Francois Abenaki or an independent group.
The question of Native baptisms is a difficult one. Natives were nominally Catholic, but it is unsure how complete their conversions were especially in periods of turmoil when priests were not available. Often, Natives brought several children, some adolescents, to be baptized at the same time (the Tadoussac register contains many examples of this type). The ritual would not seem, therefore to be of prime importance to them. Were the Abenaki equally nonchalant about such matters? The period during the war and after the Conquest was a difficult one for the Quebec Church: it was not legally recognized and lacked priests. Natives were not a priority

for the hierarchy and I do not believe that there was a Catholic community in the future United States that was accessible. Abenakis can be found in several parish registers. The register for Pointe Olivier (St. Mathias de Chambly) mentions two Missisquoi Abenaki baptisms in June 1755 and April 1759. The Chambly register has two Missisquoi baptisms : Rene Portneuf in April 1760 and Marie-Madeleine in 1763. But it also contains two baptisms of St. Francois Abenaki in December 1756 and June 1764. (The published registers stop in 1765 so I cannot know if there were any at a later date.) The two other parishes in the vicinity with registers before 1765 were St. Philippe and St. Constant but they have no Native baptisms. Only one other parish was opened before 1799, Blairfindie, that might contain Abenaki acts. All the other parishes closer to the U.S. Canada border were opened in the period 18231843. What can be deduced from this scant data? Abenakis were not having many children baptized outside the mission communities. Chambly was a stopping point for Abenakis moving north from Missisquoi to St. Francois and for residents of St. Francois going south to hunt.

I do not share the interpretation of the citation on page 54. I believe that the citation says that Madame Campeau wore a green ribbon on her hat when she expected a visit from the white person who occupied the land she claimed to settle her case. The words "possessor of her assumed heritage" indicates that she awaited the person occupied an inheritance that she assumed was hers.
I believe that the question of where the Indians were from is important (page 55). The final citation clearly refers to Mohawks who also had claim to the Lake Champlain area. Traveling and hunting expeditions were part of both Abenaki and Mohawk lifestyles and this does not seem to demonstrate much except that Natives were still hunting in the area.
The Bouchette citation on page 69 says little about the Abenaki at Odanak. Bouchette, as other European-Americans, had a great disdain for Native practice and was looking for signs of agricultural improvement on the British model. I believe that the Abenaki were continuing to exploit hunting territories along the upper St. Francis and into Vermont and New Hampshire, but these were Odanak Abenakis. Their relations with Abenakis living on a continual basis south of the 45th parallel are not clear.
The genealogical data, based largely on oral histories, is difficult to demonstrate, but I believe that most of it going back 200 years or so is probably quite accurate. Beyond two centuries, there is a lot of conjecture. Family names were not well fixed and since most Natives continued to speak their own languages into the 19th century, not very reliable. First or Christian names were not varied at the time and offer little precise information on family trees.
A major question that is not really resolved in the document is the relationship between the Missisquoi Abenaki and the residents of St. Francois. To my mind, the Missisquoi were a branch of the larger community at St. Francois throughout the
French regime and there was certainly considerable movement back and forth between these communities. Did the Missisquoi band ever have a distinct identity and political organization? During the French period, the Abenaki themselves would not even have considered this a valid question. It was only after the American Revolution divided hunting territories to the south and to the north under two distinct Euro-American authorities that this problem might have been raised. Given the uncertainty as to where the boundary was during the early years and the paucity of white settlement, especially in the mountainous areas used for hunting, the bands exploiting the region probably did not think it necessary to deal with this question. Only in the nineteenth century, as white settlement progressively took away their hunting lands would a new form of accommodation be required. Genealogies indicating their settlement in white communities and work as day laborers would answer this, but I cannot give a definite opinion with the material at hand.
Attachment C
Addendum to Review of Abenaki Historical Narrative
by John Alexander Dickinson
Professor, University of Montreal
Quebec, Canada
The question of the relationship between St Francis and Missisquoi continues to bother me. I do have a plausible hypothesis but cannot back it up with clear documentation and I am not sure it is really helpful. There are perhaps some clear references in the official correspondence of Beauharnois or Hocquart but I do not have the time to read several hundred manuscript pages.
When the Abenaki established a village at Missisquoi, it was in the context of French government efforts to limit the effect of the disastrous Treaty of Utrecht (1713) in which France relinquished vast territories (notably "Acadia") and recognized British sovereignty over the Iroquois. The French were also trying to develop a naval shipbuilding program and the best oak stands were in the Lake Champlain Richelieu River region as the construction of a sawmill at Missisquoi attests. Hocquart was also actively granting seigneuries in this area from 1733 on. Although he stated in a letter to the minister that the Lake Champlain region was more advantageous than the upper St Lawrence because of its climate (Munro, Seigniorial Tenure, pp. 180, 183), 1 believe that strategic considerations were more important. Also native peoples were often seen as the line of first defence to protect agricultural establishments. This was the rational behind the concession of the Lac des Deux-Montagnes to the Sulpicians in 1717 so that they could relocate the Iroquois then living on Montreal Island.
From these considerations, I infer that French authorities encouraged the St Francis Abenaki to consolidate the hunting camp at Missisquoi and make it a true village hoping thereby to better protect French settlers. With expansion up the Richelieu, a complete displacement of St Francis south might have been considered by the authorities. Some Abenaki were favorable and did move to Missisquoi, but the majority remained in St Francis they were after all independent allies and not subservient subjects. Ties between the Abenaki at St Francis and Missisquoi remained strong and they almost certainly considered themselves part of a united Abenaki nation with much movement back and forth for hunting, social interaction and trade. Since Missisquoi was uncomfortably close to British military forces after 1750, St Francis was the logical refuge and indeed I remarked in my article on population that numbers in the mission communities increased in times of conflict and then went down again with peace as refugees returned to their lands. After the fall of New France, the military threat disappeared for a decade but the Revolution and white penetration into the area for settlement threatened to disrupt the old relation. Hunting territories in the uplands could be maintained and sustain a
population. It is unlikely, however, that a complete break with the parent community would have occurred since family ties, the need to find mates, and religious convictions would draw the Vermont Abenaki north. Only in the nineteenth century as the Abenaki were forced to abandon a traditional hunting lifestyle and find employment in Vermont communities would they become truly distinct from the St Francis Abenaki.
To summarize: Abenaki movement to Missisquoi clearly fit in with French imperial policy but only in as much as Missisquoi was still a subdivision of the St Francis Abenaki. Until the American Revolution, nothing disrupted the unity between two villages sharing common family ties and political goals. "Authority" was centred in St Francis as the parent community. The creation of a border between the two communities obliged the Abenaki living to the south to become more independent but without breaking the social links to the parent community for many years.
AFFIDAVIT OF J. KAY DAVIS

NOW COMES J. Kay Davis and duly swears upon oath as follows:
1. I, J. Kay Davis, am a genealogist and consultant specializing in issues relating to tribal acknowledgment.
2. I am currently the historian of the Bois Forte Band of Minnesota Chippewa. I am a member of that tribe.
3. From 1993 to 1996 I held the position of Assistant Genealogical Researcher at the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Branch of Acknowledgment and Research, in Washington, D.C.
4. I obtained my B.A. in Native American Studies from George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia, in 1995. I served as a workshop presenter in genealogy at the Idaho Historical Society in 1993 and 1994. I was the project designer for an exhibit about Native American New England Immigration to Idaho at the Idaho Historical Society in 1992.
5. I have served as a consultant to the Vermont Attorney General's Office on genealogical issues relating to the criteria for federal tribal acknowledgment. Throughout the period of consultation, I provided guidance to the Attorney General's Office on sources of genealogical, census, and community data.
6. I reviewed the following documents provided to me by the Vermont Attorney General's Office: (a) Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs by the Abenaki Nation of Vermont dated October 1982, (b) Addendum to the Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs by the Abenaki Nation, January 10, 1986, along with Appendices (c) Second Addendum to the Petition for Federal Recognition as a Native-American Tribe, Genealogy of the Abenaki Nation of Missisquoi, submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, December 11, 1995, including the

Family Descendancy Charts. The copies of the documents I reviewed had been redacted by the Bureau of Indian Affairs to remove names of living people. However, I was able to review unredacted copies of the redacted pages of the 1982 petition, as the original petition is on file in a publicly accessible library in Vermont.
7. Upon request of the Attorney General's Office, I also prepared a report containing my comments on certain aspects of the Abenaki petition based on my examination of genealogical records. That report is attached hereto as Attachment A.
8. The report is based on my knowledge of Proposed Findings and Final Determinations issued by the Bureau or Indian Affairs in federal acknowledgment cases, my experience in conducting genealogical research related to Indians, my review of the petition documents, and my review of genealogical and historical material collected by me or under my direction. The types of genealogical and historical material I examined included, but were not limited to, vital records, church records from the U.S. and Canada, cemetery records, federal census records, military records, historical lists of Abenakis in Canada, records ofthe Carlisle Indian school, and Gordon Day's "Identity ofthe St. Francis Indians."

The foregoing statements are based on my personal knowledge and are true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
Signed_____this day of __________, 2002
____________________
J. Kay Davis
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COUNTY OF_____________ , SS.
Subscribed and swore to before me,
this_____ day of October, 2002.
___________________
Notary Public

Friday, December 17, 2010

State of VT's Response to Petition for Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation of Vermont: Pages 211 to 218:

Sturtevant, William, and Stanley, Samuel
1968
Indian Communities in the Eastern States, Indian Historian 1:15-19

Sumner, Samuel
1860
History of the Missisco Valley. Irasburgh, Vt.: Orleans County Historical Society

Swanton Courier
10/29/1881
Article, October 29, 1881, reprinted in Swanton Courier Nov. 12, 1942

12/4/1913a
The Indians, Dec. 4, 1913

12/4/1913b
Swanton Today, Dec. 4, 1913

12/4/1913c
Relics from Frink Grounds, Dec. 4, 1913

1941-1942
Growing up in Vermont, by Walter B. Scott, July 3, 1941-March 19, 1942. Found at MSS 25 #90, Vermont Historical Society, Barre, Vt.

Swanton, John
1952
The Indian Tribes of North America. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 145, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

Swanton, Vermont, Town Clerk
1904-1920 Birth Records

Tamarin, Alfred
1974
We Have Not Vanished: Eastern Indians in the United States. Chicago: Follett Publishing Co.

Tantaquidgeon, Gladys
1934
The New England Indians. Typescript. File No. 671, U.S. Department of Interior, Office of Indian Affairs, Washington, D.C.

Tufts, Henry
1807
The Autobiography of a Criminal. Dover, N.H.: Samuel Bragg. Edited by Edmund Pearson. Reprint ed., New York: Duffield & Co.: 1930

Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher
2001
The Age of Homespun: Objects and Stories in the Creation of an American Myth. New York: Alfred A. Knopf
U.S. Bureau of the Census
Original Forms
1860a
Eighth Census of the United States, St. Albans, Vt., Franklin County

1860b
Eighth Census of the United States, Swanton, Vt., Franklin County

1870a Ninth Census ofthe United States, Highgate, Vt., Franklin County

1870b Ninth Census ofthe United States, Swanton Vt., Franklin County

1880 Tenth Census of the United States, Highgate, Vt., Franklin County

1900a Twelfth Census ofthe United States, Coldwell, N.Y., Warren County

1900b Twelfth Census ofthe United States, Luzerne, N.Y., Warren County

1900c
Instructions for Schedule 1, reprinted in 200 Years of US. Census Taking: Population and Housing Questions, 1790-1990, U.S. Bureau ofthe Census, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office (1989)

1900d
Twelfth Census ofthe United States, Highgate, Vt., Franklin County 1900e Twelfth Census ofthe United States, Swanton, Vt., Franklin County

1910
Thirteenth Census of the United States, St. Albans City, Vt., Franklin County

Published Compilations (U.S. Bureau of the Census)
1864
Population of the United States in 1860; Compiled from the Original Returns of the Eighth Census. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1872
The Statistics of the Population in the United States Embracing the Tables of Race, Nationality, Sex, selected Ages and Occupations from the Original Returns of the Ninth Census. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1894
Report on Indians Taxed and Indians Not Taxed in the United States (Except Alaska) at the Eleventh Census: 1890. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1901
Twelfth Census of the United States, 1900, Population, Part 1 Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1922
Fourteenth Census of the United States, vol. III, Population 1920, Composition and Characteristics of the Population by States. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office
Published Compilations (U.S. Bureau of the Census) continued
1932
Fifteenth Census of the United States: 930, Population, vol. III, Part 2. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1943
Sixteenth Census ofthe United States, Population, Characteristics of the Population, vol. III, Part 7. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1952
A Report of the Seventeenth Decennial Census of the United States, Census of the Population: 1950, vol. II, Characteristics of the Population, Part 45, Vermont. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1961
The Eighteenth Decennial Census of the United States, Census of Population: 1960, vol. 1, Characteristics of the Population, Part 47, Vermont. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1973
1970 Census of Population, vol. 1, Characteristics of the Population, Part 47, Vermont. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1982
1980 Census of Population and Housing, Summary of Characteristics for Governmental Units and Standard Metropolitan Statistical Areas, Vermont. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

1992
1990 Census of Population, General Population Characteristics, Vermont. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

Indexes (U.S. Bureau of the Census)
1870
Ninth Census of the United States, Vermont 1870, Census Index, Vermont 1870. Family Quest CD-ROM, Heritage Quest

1880
Tenth Census ofthe United States, 1880. Census Index, Vermont. Salt Lake City: Latter Day Saints CD-ROM

U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs
10/23/2001
Memorandum Regarding Addendum C of Abenaki Petition, by Aldo Salerno, Oct. 23, 2001

U.S. Military, Local Registration Boards
1917-18
World War I Draft Registration cards. National Archives, Washington, D.C.

Vermont Historical Society
11/1959
[Biographical Note] Vermont Historical Society, News and Notes, 23 (November, 1959)

Vermont Historical Society continued
1968
[Biographical Note], Vermont History 36:106

1983
Museum Collection and Loans identification sheet for item 1983.12. la-b

1998
Abenaki in Vermont, A History Kit for Students and Their Teachers, Montpelier, Vt.: Vermont Historical Society

Vermont Sportsman
12/1976
Editorial, December 1976

Vicero, Ralph
1968
Immigration of French Canadians to New England, 1840-1900: A Geographical Analysis. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin

1971
French-Canadian Settlement in Vermont Prior to the Civil War, The Professional Geographer, 23:290

Wallace , Anthony F. C.
1952
Photographs of Indian Village—Lake George. Wallace Family Collection, series IX. American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa.

Wells, Frederic Palmer
1923
History of Barnet, Vt. Burlington, Vt.: Free Press Printing Co.

Wiseman, Frederick Matthew
2001
Voice ofthe Dawn: An Autohistory ofthe Abenaki Nation

2/18/2002
The New Vermont Eugenics Survey: William E. Griffin, Eve Jacobs-Carnahan and The Abenakis, A Press Packet/ February 18, 2002

Works Progress Administration
1937
Vermont: A Guide to the Green Mountain State. Boston: Houghton Mifflin
Legal Authorities
Federal Court Cases
1901
Montoya v. United States, 180 U.S. 261 (1901)

1979
Mashpee Tribe v. New Seabury Corp., 592 F.2d 575 (1st Cir. 1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 866 (1979) and 464 U.S. 866 (1983)

1982
United States v. Washington, 641 F.2d 1368 (9th Cir. 1981), cert. denied, 454 U.S. 1143 (1982)

1997
United Houma Nation v. Babbitt, 1997 WL 403425 (D.D.C. 1997)

2000
Miami Nation of Indians of Indiana v. Babbitt, 112 F. Supp. 2d 742 (N.D. Ind. 2000), aff'd, Miami Nation of Indians v. U.S. Dept. of Interior 255 F.3d. 342 (7th Cir. 2001)

Vermont Court Case
1992
State v. Elliott, 159 Vt. 102, 616 A.2d 210 (1992) U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs Decisions

U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs Decisions
1982
Narragansett Indian Tribe of Rhode Island, Proposed Finding (July 1982)

1985a
Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy, Inc., et al., Proposed Finding (March 1985)

1985b
Southeastern Cherokee Confederacy, Inc., et al., Final Determination, 50 Fed. Reg. 39047 (Sept. 26, 1985)

1987
Wampanoag Tribal Council of Gay Head, Inc., Final Determination (Feb. 1987)

1987
MaChris Lower Alabama Creek Indian Tribe, Inc., Proposed Finding (August 27, 1987)

1992
Miami Nation of Indians of the State of Indiana, Inc., Summary Under the Criteria for Final Determination Against Federal Acknowledgment

1994
Mohegan Tribe of Indians of the State of Connecticut, Final Determination
U.S. Indian Affairs Decisions continued
1994
Jena Band of Choctaw, Proposed Finding, Summary Under the Criteria (Sept. 1994)

1994
United Houma Nation, Inc., Summary Under the Criteria and Evidence for Proposed Finding Against Federal Acknowledgment

1995
Huron Potawatomi, Inc., Proposed Finding, Summary Under the Criteria

1996
Duwamish Tribal Organization, Summary Under the Criteria for Proposed Finding Against Acknowledgment (June 1996)

2000
Little Shell Tribe of Chippewa Indians of Montana, Proposed Finding

2000
Steilacoom Tribe of Indians, Notice of Proposed Finding Against Federal Acknowledgment, 65 Fed. Reg. 5 880 (Feb. 7, 2000)

2001
Duwamish Tribal Organization, Final Determination (Sept. 2001) 2001 Nipmuc Nation (#69A), Proposed Finding (Sept. 2001)

2001
Ohlone/Costanoan Muwekma Tribe, Proposed Finding (August 2001)

2001
Webster/Dudley Band of Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuc Indians (#69B), Proposed Finding (Sept. 2001)

2002
Chinook Indian Tribe, Notice of Reconsidered Final Determination, 67 Fed. Reg. 46204 (July 12, 2002)

United States Federal Regulations and Federal Register Notices on Same
Procedures for Establishing That an American Indian Group Exists as an Indian Tribe, 25 C.F.R. Part 83

1991
Procedures for Establishing That an American Indian Group Exists as an Indian Tribe; Proposed Rule, 56 Fed. Reg. 47320-47330 (Sept. 18, 1991)

1994
Procedures for Establishing That an American Indian Group Exists as an Indian Tribe; Final Rule, 59 Fed. Reg. 9280-9300 (Feb. 25, 1994)
AFFIDAVIT OF JOHN ALEXANDER DICKINSON

NOW COMES John Alexander Dickinson and duly swears upon oath as follows:

1. I, John A. Dickinson, am a full Professor of History at the Universite de Montreal located in Quebec, Canada.

2. I obtained my Ph.D. in History from the University of Toronto in Ontario, Canada, in 1977, where I concentrated on the history of New France.

3. I have researched and written books and articles on the history of New France (Quebec) in the 17th, 18th and early 19th centuries. My research has focused on the interactions between Amerindians and Europeans and the socioeconomic history of the 17th and 18th centuries. As I am fluent in both French and English, I have written and published works in both languages.

4. I have taught courses at the university level on the history of preindustrial Canada to 1850, the early history of New France (Quebec), Native history, and early historiography.

5. A true and accurate copy of my curriculum vitae listing my professional experience and publications is attached as Attachment A.

6. I have reviewed pages 1 through 70 of the historical narrative of the "Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs by the Abenaki Nation of Vermont dated October 1982," along with Appendices A [Robertson's Lease], B [the Case of Capt. Louis Outalmagouin], and C [Iroquois Land Claims to Vermont] to that petition.

7. Upon request of the Vermont Attorney General's Office, I reviewed those documents for general accuracy. In addition I addressed the following questions: Did Abenaki Indians leave Vermont around the time of the American Revolution, or did they go into hiding within the state? From 1791 to 1840, was
Mississquoi a political or community center for the Abenaki or was the center located in Quebec at Odanak (St. Francis)? Does the existence of religious records in Chambly, Quebec, indicate that there was a large settlement of Abenaki at Mississquoi or could it indicate that there were Abenaki in Quebec near Chambly?

8. I prepared a report containing my opinion on the issues in paragraph 7. That report is attached hereto as Attachment B.

9. I also prepared an addendum to the report, specifically addressing the relationship between the Abenaki at St. Francis and Mississquoi. That addendum is attached hereto as Attachment C.

10. Both the report and the addendum in Attachments B and C are based on my extensive knowledge of the history of New France and New England in the 17th through early 19th centuries, my professional research in those areas, and my review of the documents listed in paragraph 6 above.

____________________
John Alexander Dickinson

Serment prete devant/Oath taken before
______________________
name and position or quality

a/at,___________le/on _________2001.
             place                    date

[Attachment A]
[curriculum vita]
[Not included]

State of VT's Response to Petition for Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation of Vermont: Pages 201 to 210:

Gordon Day continued
1973
Missisquoi: A New Look at an Old Village, Man in the Northeast, 6:51-57 (Fall 1973)

1974
Henry Tufts as a Source on the Eighteenth Century Abenakis, Ethnohistory 21:189-197 (Summer 1974)

8/2/1977
Letter to John Moody, August 2, 1977, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, 01, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

1978a
Ethnology in the Works of Rowland E. Robinson, in Papers of the Ninth Algonquian Conference 36-39. Edited by William Cowan. Ottawa, Ont.: Carleton University

1978b
Western Abenaki, Handbook offorth American Indians 15:148-159

1979
Arosagunticook and Androscoggin, in Papers of the Tenth Algonquian Conference, 10-15. Edited by William Cowan. Ottawa, Ont.: Carleton University

4/27/1979
Letter to John Moody, April 27, 1979, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, 01, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

1981a
Abenaki Place-Names in the Champlain Valley, reprinted in Foster, Michael K. and Cowan, William, eds., In Search of New England's Past. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press (1998)

1981b
The Identity of the St. Francis Indians, National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, no. 71. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada

8/1988
Letter to John Moody, August 1988, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, 01, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

4/25/1990
Letter to Homer St. Francis, April 25, 1990, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, 01, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

de Reyes, Leopold, Father
3/8/2001
Email from Father Leopold de Reyes, General SS. CC. Archivist, at the Sacred Hearts Congregation in Rome, to Interlibrary Loan Librarian Meg Page at the Vermont Department of Libraries, March 8, 2001
Delaney, Charles "Megeso" Lawrence II
Diplomatic Ambassador, Abenakis of Mazipskwik 1/22/1996 Letter to Bureau of Indian Affairs, Jan. 22, 1996

DeMarce, Virginia Easley
1994
Notebook: French-Canadian Settlement in the Champlain Islands, Grand Isle County, Vermont Before the Year 1880 (1985, updated April 1994) at www.rootsweb.com/—vtgrandi/demarce/titlepage.htm

Dickason, Olive P.
1990
The French and the Abenaki: A Study in Frontier Politics, Vermont History 58:82-98

Dickinson, John & Grabowski, Jan
1993
Les Populations Amerindiennes de la Vallee Laurentienne 1608-1765, Annales de Demographic Historique, 52-65

Dickinson, John Alexander
2001
Affidavit of John Alexander Dickinson

Drake, Samuel G.
1845
The Book of the Indians; or, Biography and History of the Indians ofNorth America, from its First Discovery to the Year 1841. Boston: Benjamin B. Mussey

Drouin Genealogical Institute
1989
Repertoire Alphabetique des Manages des Canadiens Francois, 1760-1935, Ottawa, Ont.: By the Institute, and corresponding microfilm collection of marriage records filmed in 1940's

Eastman, Francis Smith
1828
A History of Vermont, From its First Settlement to the Present Time. Brattleboro, Vt.: Holbrook and Fessenden

Eichholz, Alice
1993
Collecting Vermont Ancestors. Rev. ed. Montpelier: New Trails!

Eugenics Survey of Vermont
Archival Papers
[1926-1930]a
"Pedigree: St. Francis," Papers ofthe Eugenics Survey of Vermont, Box PRA 10, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

[1926-1930]b
"Phillips General History," Papers ofthe Eugenics Survey of Vermont, Box PRA 12, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.
Eugenics Survey of Vermont
Archival Papers continued
[1929]
"Towns Suggested for Study" file, Papers of the Eugenics Survey of Vermont, Box PRA 8, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

[1932-1936]
"Questionnaire Interviews," Papers of the Eugenics Survey of Vermont, Boxes PRA 15 and 17, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

Publications
1927
Lessons from a Eugenical Survey of Vermont: A Preliminary Report. Burlington, Vt.: University of Vermont

1929
Third Annual Report of the Eugenics Survey of Vermont. Burlington, Vt.: University of Vermont

Frisch, Jack A.
1971
The Abenakis Among the St. Regis Mohawks, Indian Historian 4:27-29

Foster, Michael K. and Cowan, William, eds.
1998
In Search ofNew England's Native Past: Selected Essays by Gordon M. Day. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press

Gallagher, Nancy L.
1998
"Eugenics Survey of Vermont: Collection Summary Description," Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt., www.bgs.state.vt.us/gsc/pubrec/referen/eugenics.htm

1999
Breeding Better Vermonters: The Eugenics Project in the Green Mountain State. Hanover, N.H.:University Press of New England

Gilbert, William Harlen Jr.
1948
Surviving Indian Groups of the Eastern United States in Annual Report of the Smithsonian Institution, 407-438

Goldfrap, J., Secretary to Governor of Lower Canada
3/29/1765
Letter to Lt. Scott, March 29, 1765, RG4, C2, vol. 1, reel C- 10462, Canadian National Archives, Ottawa, Ont.

Green Mountain Democrat
4/3/1835
An Indian Encampment in Connecticut, April 3, 1835

Greenbaum, Susan and Wherry, James
1988
Site Visit Report of the Abenaki Self-Help Association, Inc.
(Provided to the BIA by petitioner)
Greening, W.E.
1966
"Historic Odanak and the Abenaki Nation," Canadian Geographical Journal 73 (3):92-97

Hall, S.R.
1868
The Geography and History of Vermont. 2nd ed., Montpelier, Vt.: C.W. Willard

Hallowell, A. Irving
n.d. Biographical Sketch of Alfred Irving Hallowell. Hallowell Papers. Typescript. American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa.

1928
Recent Changes in the Kinship Terminology of the St. Francis Abenaki, Proceedings, Twenty-Second International Congress of Americanists, 97-145 (Rome, 1928)

Hamon, E.
1891
Les Canadiens-Francais de la Nouvelle-Angleterre 1851-1890. Quebec: N.S. Hardy

Haviland, William
6/10/1970
Letter to Gordon Day, June 10, 1970, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 518, E7, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

4/22/1976
Letter to Gordon Day, April 22, 1976, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 518, E7, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

Haviland, William A., and Power, Marjory W.
1994
The Original Vermonters. Rev. ed.. Hanover, N.H.: University Press of New England

Hayes, Lyman Simpson
1907
History of the Town of Rockingham, Vermont. Bellows Falls, Vt.: Published by the Town

Hoague, Wayne
1/12/1977
Memo to Governor Richard Snelling, Jan. 12, 1977, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 566, E2, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

Hodge, Frederick Webb
1907
Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, Part I. Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 30. Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office
Horsford, Marion
1925
Canadians in Vermont, The Vermonter 30:11-15

Huden, John C.
1955
Indians in Vermont Present and Past, Vermont History 23:25-28

1956a
A Vermont Sketchbook: The Abenakis, the Iroquoians, and Vermont, Vermont History 24:21-25

1956b
The Problem—Indians and White Men in Vermont— When and Where (1550 - )? Vermont History 24:110

1956c
The White Chief of the St. Francis Abnakis—Some Aspects of Border Warfare, 1690-1790: Part I, Vermont History 24:199-211

1956d
The White Chief of the St. Francis Abnakis—Some Aspects of Border Warfare, 1690-1790: Part 11, Vermont History 24:337-355

1957
Adventures in Abnakiland, Vermont History 25:185-193

1958
Indian Groups in Vermont, Vermont History 26:112-115

Hume, Gary
1991
Joseph Laurent's Intervals Camp: Post-Colonial Abenaki Adaptation and Revitalization in New Hampshire, in Algonkians of New England: Past and Present, 101-113. Edited by Peter Benes. Boston. Mass.: Boston University Press

Hunter, Jean I.
1939
The French Invasion of the Eastern Townships: A Regional Study. M.A. thesis, McGill University

Jefferson, Thomas
1782
Writings. Edited by Merrill D. Peterson. Notes on the State of Virginia in Reprinted. 1984. New York: Literary Classics ofthe United States

Johnson, William, Sir
1921-1965
Papers of Sir William Johnson. Edited by Division on Archives and History. Albany, N.Y.:University of the State of New York

Kendall, Edward Augustus
1809
Travels Through the Northern Parts of the United States in the Years 1807 and 1808. New York:I. Riley
Laurent, Joseph
1955
The Abenakis: Aborigines of Vermont—Part I, Vermont History 23:286-293

Ledoux, Rodney R.
1988
History of Swanton Vermont. Swanton, Vt.: Swanton Historical Society

Ledoux, Tom
1993
St. Mary's Catholic Cemetery, Swanton, VT. Swanton, Vt.: Swanton Historical Society

Lester, Joan
1987
"We Didn't Make Fancy Baskets Until We Were Discovered": Fancy Basket Making in Maine in A Key into the Language of Woodsplint Baskets. Edited by Ann McMullen & Russell Bandsman. Washington, Conn.: American Indian Archeological Institute

MacLeod, D. Peter
1995
The Canadian Iroquois and the Seven Years' War. Toronto, Ont.: Dundurn Press

Martin, Terence
1955
Rowland Evans Robinson, Realist of the Outdoors, offprint from Vermont History 23:7 (January 1955)

McMullen, Ann
1991
Native Basketry, Basketry Styles, and Changing Group Identity in Southern New England, in Algonkians of New England: Past and Present. Edited by Benes, Peter, ed., Boston, Mass.: Boston University Press

Modern Woodmen of America
1999a
History. Rock Island, Ill., www.modem-woodmen.org/PubRel/ AboutUs/AFewWordsOnHistory.htm

1999b
What's In a Name. Rock Island, Ill., www.modem-woodmen.org/ PubRel/AboutUs/WhatsInAName.htm

Montpelier Bridge
12/2000
Storytelling, Rest for the Abenaki, Dec. 2000
Moody, John
4/24/1976
Letter to Gordon Day, April 24, 1976, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, f.31, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

1979
Missisquoi: Abenaki Survival in Their Ancient Homeland. Typescript.

7/17/1988
Letter to Gordon Day, July 17, 1988, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 522, f.31, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

Moorehead, Warren K.
1914
The American Indian in the United States; Period 1850-1914: The Present Condition of the American Indian; His Political History and Other Topics; A Plea for Justice. Andover, Mass.: The Andover Press

Morse, Jedediah
1822
Report to the Secretary of War of the United States on Indian Affairs, Comprising a Narrative of a Tour Performed in the Summer of 1820. Washington, D.C.: Davis & Force

Mouly, R.P.
1960
Au Secours des Indies en Detresse en Amerique de l'Est et de l'Ouest. Montgeron, S.-et-O. Lectures missionares

Needham, Walter
1965
I Knew About the Indians, Vermont Life (Autumn 1965)

Nichols, Frances S.
1954
Index to Schoolcraft's U.S. Indian Tribes, Smithsonian Institution Bureau of Ethnology, Bulletin 152, Washington, D.C.: Government Printing Office

Pelletier, Gaby
1982
Abenaki Basketry. National Museum of Man Mercury Series, Canadian Ethnology Service Paper no. 85. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada

Perkins, George H.
1873
On an Ancient Burial-Ground in Swanton, Vt., offprint from Proceedings of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (August 1873)

Perkins, Henry F.
1930
Hereditary Factors in Rural Communities, offprint from Eugenics III(8), August 1930
Perry, John Buckley
[1863]
[Swanton Natural History]. Papers of John Bulkley Perry, Box 3, folder 4, Special Collections, University of Vermont, Burlington, Vt.

1868
Article, Proceedings of the Boston Society of Natural History, 12:219-222

1882
The History ofthe Town of Swanton, Vermont Historical Gazetteer. iv:933- 974. Montpelier, Vt.: Abby Maria Hemenway

Petitioner
1982
Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs by the Abenaki Nation of Vermont (October 1982)

1986
Addendum to the Petition for Federal Recognition as an American Indian Tribe submitted to the Bureau of Indian Affairs by the Abenaki Nation of Vermont, January 10, 1986, in Response to the Letter of Obvious Deficiencies and Significant Omissions (6/14/83)

1996
Second Addendum to the Petition for Federal Recognition as a Native-American Indian Tribe (December 11, 1995)

2000
Abenaki Nation—Recognition Strategy (submitted as part of Additional Material in Support of Abenaki Petition) (May 2000)

Pierce, Ken
1977
A History of the Abenaki People. Burlington, Vt.: University of Vermont Instructional Development Center

Richmond, Roaldus, Supervisor, Vermont Writers Project, Work Projects Administration
2/10/1941
Letter to Prof. Arthur W. Peach, Feb. 10, 1941, Vermont Historical Society, manuscript collection, MS 83

Robinson, Rowland E.
1867
A Sketch of the Early History of Ferrisburgh, in Vermont Historical
Gazetteer, i:31-35. Burlington, Vt.: Miss A.M. Hemenway

[1879-81]
Nature Notes, 1879-80. Folder 9, Robinson Papers, Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, Vt.

11/1894
Letter to Joseph Laurent, November 1894. Box 3, folder 27, Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, Vt., stored at Sheldon Museum, Middlebury, Vt.

1921a
Sobapsqua in Silver Fields and Other Sketches of a Farmer-Sportsman. Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Co.
Robinson, Roland E. continued
1921b
On a Glass Roof in Silver Fields and Other Sketches of a Farmer-Sportsman. Boston, Mass.: Houghton Mifflin Co.

1937
Indians in Danvis in Uncle Lisha's Shop and a Danvis Pioneer, Rutland, Vt.: Charles E. Tuttle Co.

Robinson, William
1/14/1880
Letter to Rowland E. Robinson, January, 14, 1880. Box 6, folder 16, Rokeby Museum, Ferrisburgh, Vt., stored at Sheldon Museum, Middlebury, Vt.

Royce, Mrs. Ellsworth
1969
The Last of the Abenakis in Vermont. Typescript. Misc. File Add.—
Abnakis in Vermont, Vermont Historical Society, Barre, Vt.

Rutland Daily Herald
12/13/1976
Sportsmen's Federation Asks Close Look at Abnaki Measure, Dec. 13, 1976
Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 566, E2. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec, Canada

11/2/1987
Abenaki Chief Calls for Ouster; Half of Tribe Walks Out, Nov. 2, 1987, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 566, E2. Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec, Canada

Salmon, Thomas P., Governor, State of Vermont
11/24/1976
Executive Order 36, November 24, 1976

Salo, Matt T. and Sheila
1977
The Kalderas in Eastern Canada, National Museum of Man, Mercury Series, Canadian Centre for Folk Culture Studies Paper no. 21. Ottawa: National Museums of Canada

1982
Romnichel Economic and Social Organization in New England, 1850-1930, Urban Anthropology 11:273-313

Schoolcraft, H.R.
1851-54
Historical and Statistical Information on the Indian Tribes of the
United States. Philadelphia, Pa.: Lippincott, Grambo

Shea, John G.
1855
History of the Catholic Missions Among the Indian Tribes of the United States, 1529-1854. New York: Edward Dungan & Brother
Snelling, Richard A., Governor, State of Vermont
1/28/1977
Executive Order 3, January 28, 1977

Speck, Frank G.
1915
Eastern Algonkian Wabanaki Confederacy, American Anthropologist 17:492-508

1919
The Functions of Wampum Among the Eastern Algonkian, in Memoirs of the American Anthropological Ass'n, vol. VI, reprint ed., New York: Kraus Reprint Corp.: 1964

1926
Culture Problems in Northeastern North America, Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 65(4):272-311

1947
Eastern Algonkian Block-Stamp Decoration. Trenton, N.J.: Archeological Society of New Jersey

1952
Photographs of Indian Village—Lake George. Frank G. Speck Collection, American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa.

St. Albans Daily Messenger
11/10/1952
Iroquois Case is Postponed to '53, Nov. 10, 1952

4/8/1953
200 Iroquois Invade Vermont by Automobile, April 8, 1953

State of Vermont
1880
Records of Governor and Council of State of Vermont, vol. VIII

State of Vermont, Public Records Division
1760-1870
Vermont Vital Records, Microfilm 1760-1870, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

1871-1908
Vermont Vital Records, Microfilm 1871-1908, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

1909-1941
Vermont Vital Records, Microfilm 1909-1941, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

1955-1968
Marriage Records, Vermont Vital Records, Microfilm, Vermont Public Records Division, Middlesex, Vt.

State of Vermont, Secretary of State
1908
Vermont Legislature Directory. Boston: Rand, Avery

Thursday, December 16, 2010

State of VT's Response to Petition for Federal Acknowledgment of the St. Francis/Sokoki Band of the Abenaki Nation of Vermont: Pages 191 to 200:

The ambiguities in the genealogies of these individuals illustrate the uncertainties and weaknesses in the evidence. Not only is it not clear that the progenitors were Abenaki, it is not clear that the present-day members of the petitioner are descended from them.

Petitioner Self-Identified as White
In addition to the doubts cast by the genealogies as to whether the petitioner is descended from a historic tribe, there are documents indicating a lack of self-identification with any tribe. These are the World War I draft registration cards for members of the Lampman and St. Francis families in which they indicated their race as white or Caucasian.
There were two draft efforts during that war, and the registration form changed slightly the second time. The first form asked "Race (specify which)." The second form had boxes to check for each race, including one marked "Indian." The following people indicated they were Caucasian or white on those forms:

Nazaire St. Francis....father of Homer St. Francis
George St. Francis....uncle of Homer St. Francis
Mitchell St. Francis....uncle of Homer St. Francis
Joseph Julian St. Francis....first cousin of father of Homer St. Francis
Herbert Lampman....father of Leonard Lampman
Walter Lampman....uncle of Leonard Lampman
Herman Deney Lampman....uncle of Leonard Lampman
Edward Hoag....grandson of Flavien Hoague, cousin of both Leonard Lampman and Homer St. Francis

(U.S. Military, Local Registration Boards). These registrant forms are especially interesting because they pre-date the eugenics movement of Vermont. Any argument that petitioner's
ancestors sought to hide their Indian identities because they feared being targeted by the eugenics survey is misplaced here. The survey did not start until nearly a decade later.
Another snapshot of self-identification can be seen in applications for marriage licenses in Vermont between 1955 and 1968. During this time period, applicants for a marriage license filled out forms on which they included certain personal information, including their race. The applicants signed these forms under oath. The town clerks certified to the Department of Health that they had the applicants' forms on record, and then sent certified copies of the information to the state Department of Health. These copies are available on microfilm at the Division of Public Records. 86. After 1968, the portion of the certificates indicating the race of the applicants was excised from the microfilm copies on file at Public Records. An inspection of marriage records sampled from the 1955 to 1968 time period reveals the following people self-identified as white:

Gary Belrose married Andrea Ledoux (daughter of Hazel Vincelette who is probably #44 on LaFrance Family Descendancy Chart) 87.

Leo Belrose (Belrose Family Descendancy Chart #9) married Eldora Cheney and Gwendolyn Boucher

Armand Lampman (J.F. Morits Family Descendancy Chart #82, and Gardner Family Descendancy Chart #36) married Marjorie Greenia (Phillips Family Descendancy Chart #95)
____________________
FOOTNOTES:
86. The marriage records on file at Public Records for marriages prior to 1955 are in a different format and do not include the certification by the town clerk.
87. Because the names of living people were excised from the genealogical charts provided to the State of Vermont by BAR, the State was unable to confirm exactly which individuals these two were on the Family Descendancy Charts. Undoubtedly, BAR will be able to confirm this by examining the complete genealogical charts in its files.
Francis Lampman (son of Herman Lampman, J.F. Morits Family Descendancy Chart #26)88 married Edna Martin

Josephine (Gardner) Lampman (Gardner Family Descendancy Chart #29) married Raymond Harrington

Marjorie Lampman (daughter of Herman Lampman, J.F. Morits Family Descendancy Chart #26) married Armand West

Roberta Lampman (daughter of Herman Lampman, J.F. Morits Family Descendancy Chart #26) married Norman West

Virginia Lampman (J.F. Morits Family Descendancy Chart #78, Gardner Family Descendancy Chart #32) married Maurice Young

George Medor (St. Laurent Family Descendancy Chart #405) married Viola Virian

Homer St. Francis (St. Francis Family Descendancy Chart #49) married Patsy Partlow

Pauline St. Francis (daughter of Eli St. Francis) married Robert Menard

Robert St. Francis (son of Hubert St. Francis, St. Francis Family Descendancy Chart #43) married Nancy Dudley

Ronald St. Francis (son of Hubert St. Francis, St. Francis Family Descendancy Chart #43) married Loretta Laplant

(State of Vermont, Public Records Division 1955-1968).

These records indicate that a decade before the formation of the Abenaki Tribal Council, the petitioner's members did not view themselves as Indian. This raises the possibility that the sense of Indian identity was not deeply rooted in these people, but rather was a new concept. It raises questions as to the continuity of Indian heritage, ancestry, and community.
_________________
FOOTNOTE:
88. Francis's father's name is shown on the marriage certificate, and was found on the Family Descendancy Charts, even though Francis's name was excised from the charts provided to the State. For that reason, the state was only able to indicate the father's identification number on the charts. A similar approach was taken for other names in this list.
Summary of Failure of Evidence to Satisfy Criterion (e)
The petitioner has not submitted evidence to show that its current membership is descended from the historic Abenaki tribe that once occupied the Missisquoi region. Petitioner admits that it "has always been receptive to Indian families from anywhere in the northeastern U.S. and the border region with Canada" (Petition: 158-59). This Pan-Indian attitude, along with many generations of marriages to French Canadians and other whites has resulted in family genealogies without any clear Abenaki ancestry.

Conclusion
On the four criteria for federal acknowledgment examined, the evidence raises serious questions about the existence of a tribe of Abenakis in Vermont who are a continuation of the historic Abenakis who lived at Missisquoi prior to the American Revolution. The invisibility of any tribe from 1790 to 1974 was so complete that historians, anthropologists and census takers were unable to locate it. No outside observers verify its existence during that time period thus precluding a finding on Criterion (a) for federal acknowledgment.
The absence of any indication of a separate and distinct Indian community suggests that the petitioner's ancestors did not live in an Indian community as required by Criterion (b). The silence of any political authority until 1974, followed by the lack of widespread acceptance once a formal organization was created, supports a negative finding on Criterion (c). Lastly the lack of proof of Abenaki heritage pervades the petitioner's submission with respect to Criterion (e). Any one of these deficiencies would be enough to merit a finding
against federal acknowledgment. The presence of serious questions regarding the evidence on all four of them requires a finding against federal acknowledgment.

Dated, this day of December, 2002.
STATE OF VERMONT WILLIAM H. SORRELL ATTORNEY GENERAL
By:_______________________________
Eve Jacobs-Carnahan
Special Assistant Attorney General
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Notes of conversation with Elvine Royce, Charles Adams Papers, Commission to Investigate Indian Claims Vermont, State Archives

Ainsworth, Lillian M.
1944
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Aldrich, Lewis Cass
1891
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Anderson, Elm
1937
We Americans: A Study of Cleavage in an American City. New York: Russell & Russell

Baker, Jane S.
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Benedict, Jeff
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6/2/2001
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Brasser, Ted
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Burlingame, Edwin H.
1853
Diary, Reference File: Schools BarreAcademy, Collection of Aldrich Public Library, Barre, Vt.

Burlington Free Press
4/20/1951 Two Iroquois Indian Chiefs Press Claim to State, April 20, 1951

4/19/1952
Charles Adams Appointed to Investigate Iroquois Indians' Claim to Land in Vt., April 19, 1952

1/17/1977
Abenaki Council Ex-Member Seeks To Block Federal Grant to Tribe, Jan. 17, 1977

5/1977
Hoague Ouster Blamed on Tribal Split, May 1977

10/21/1977
Snelling Perplexed by Abenaki Tribal Split, Oct. 21, 1977

5/10/1987
Abenaki Chieftain is Buried, May 10, 1987

9/13/1987
Abenaki Chiefs Election Elicits Mixed Emotions, Sept. 13, 1987

10/10/1988
Election day quiet as Abenakis cast ballots, Oct. 10, 1988

9/12/1989
Abenakis make leader chief for life, Sept. 12, 1989

10/29/1995
Abenaki break with chief, Oct. 29, 1995

11/7/1995
Constitution revisions widen Abenaki rift, Nov. 7, 1995

7/9/2001
Abenaki Chief St. Francis dies, July 9, 2001

7/12/2001
Abenaki bury their chief, July 12, 2001
Cadbury, Warder H.
2/28/1959
Letter to Department of Anthropology, University of Pennsylvania, Feb. 28, 1959, in Anthony F.C. Wallace Papers at American Philosophical Society, Philadelphia, Pa.

Calloway, Colin G.
2/20/1985
Letter to Gordon Day, February 20, 1985, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 515, f. 19, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

1986
Green Mountain Diaspora: Indian Population Movements in Vermont, c.1600-1800, Vermont History 54:197-228

1987
Grey Lock's War, Vermont History 55:212-226

1990a
Surviving the Dark Ages: Vermont Abenakis During the Contact Period, Vermont History 58:70-81

1990b
The Western Abenakis of Vermont 1600-1800: War, Migration, and the Survival of an Indian People. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press

Canada, Indian Affairs
1805
Durham Grant Letters Patent. Saint Francois Agency Correspondence Regarding an Abenaki Woman's Claim to a Lot in Durham Township as Part of Inheritance, Forty Years Later. RG 10, vol. 2443, file 47,112, reel C-1186, National Archives of Canada, Ottawa, Ont.

1832
Nominal Return of the Abenaquois Indians at the Village of St. Francois. Gordon Day Collection of Manuscripts on the Languages of the Indians of Canada, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., microfilm reel 12, item 8

1842
Agreement of the Tribe for building spots and gardens [Text of decision of Abenaki council of warriors and chiefs concerning setting aside of land for St. Francis Reserve]. Gordon Day Collection of Manuscripts on the Languages of the Indians of Canada, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., microfilm reel 12, item 8

1873
Recuisement du Village des Sauvages Abenakis de St. Francois. Gordon Day Collection of Manuscripts on the Languages of the Indians of Canada, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., microfilm reel 12, item 4
(Canada, Indian Affairs...continued)
1874
Petition of the Abenakis of St. Francois Against General Emancipation of Indians in the Dominion, signed by Grand Chief of Abenakis. RG10, File 3204, National Archives of Canada, Ottawa, Ont.

1875
Recuisement du Village des Abenakis de St. Francois 1875. Gordon Day Collection of Manuscripts on the Languages of the Indians of Canada, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H., microfilm reel 12, item 4

1893
Indian Distribution Paylists, Abenakis of St. Francis, signed by Abenaki chiefs. RG10, vol. 9806, reel C-7268, National Archives of Canada, Ottawa, Ont.

Canadian Encyclopedia
1985a
"St.-Jean-Baptiste Society," by Richard Jones, 3:1619

1985b
"St. Jean-sur-Richelieu," by Kathleen Lord, 3:1619

Charland, Thomas-M.
1961
Un village d'Abenaquis sur la riviere Missisquoi, (An Abenaki Village on the Missisquoi River) in Revue d'Histoire L'Amerique Francaise, 15:319-332. Translation by Grace B. Huden, typescript, MS974.31/Sw24ch, Vermont Historical Society, Barre, Vt.

1964
Histoire des Abenakis d'Odanak, 1675-1937. Montreal: Editions du Uvrier

Child, Hamilton
1883
Gazetteer and Business Directory of Franklin and Grand Isle Counties, Vt., for 1882-83. Syracuse, N.Y.: Hamilton Child

Clifford, Deborah
2001
The Passion of Abby Hemenway. Montpelier, Vt.: Vermont Historical Society

Colby, Elbridge
ca. 1964
Indian Names Around Vermont, Misc. File Add., Vermont Historical Society, Barre, Vt.

2001
[Biographical Note], Arlington National Cemetery Website, www.arlingtoncemetery.com/ecolby.htm
Collins, Edward D.
1934
Foreword, to Robinson, Rowland E., Uncle Lisha's Outing, The Buttles Gals and Along Three Rivers. Rutland, Vt.: The Tuttle Co.

Coolidge, Guy Omeron
1985
The French Occupation of the Champlain Valley from 1609 to 1759, Revised and annotated by Alexander Dunnett Gibson. Montpelier, Vt.: Vermont Historical Society

Crockett, Walter Hill
1921
Vermont, The Green Mountain State, 1:49-64. New York: The Century History Co.

Daniels, Thomas
1963
Vermont Indians. Orwell, Vt.: Mrs. Thomas E. Daniels

Dann, Kevin
12/1/1989
Letter to Gordon Day, December 1, 1989, Dr. Gordon M. Day Papers, Box 515, 03, Canadian Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

1991
From Degeneration to Regeneration: The Eugenics Survey of Vermont, 1925-1936, Vermont History 59:5-29

2001
Lewis Creek, Lost and Found. Hanover: Middlebury College Press

Davis, J. Kay
2002
Affidavit of J. Kay Davis

Day, Gordon
1948-1973
Abenaki Journal of Gordon M. Day, Typescript, Special Collections, Dartmouth College, Hanover, N.H.

12/28/1952
Letter to Charles Adams, Dec. 28, 1952, Charles Adams Papers, Commission to Investigate Indian Claims Vermont, State Archives

1965
The Indian Occupation of Vermont, Vermont History 33:365

1965
"Gray Lock," Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. III, 1741 to 1770:265

1971
The Eastern Boundary of Iroquoia: Abenaki Evidence, reprinted in Foster, Michael K. and Cowan, William, eds., In Search of New England's Past. Amherst, Mass.: University of Massachusetts Press (1998)

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