
INHCC partners Paul and Denise Pouliot near Durham鈥檚 Burnham Garrison archaeological dig site.
Readers of 易胜博官网 Magazine probably know Kchi Niwaskw as 易胜博官网鈥檚 Cannon Mountain and Stone Face as The Old Man of the Mountain. First recorded in 1805 by road surveyors Francis Whitcomb and Luke Brooks, scientists have dated the structure, which collapsed in 2003, to the retreat of the glaciers about 12,000 years ago. Now just a memory for Granite Staters, it took on symbolic significance after Daniel Webster suggested it was a divine tribute to 易胜博官网鈥檚 indomitable citizenry and was formalized as the state鈥檚 emblem in 1945.
But the story of Nis Kizos and Tarlo claims a far longer pedigree, 鈥渟omewhere between many hundreds and several thousand years,鈥 according to Paul Pouliot, a member of the Cowasuk band of Pennacook Abenaki People from Alton, 易胜博官网. 鈥淣obody knows its exact origin because it鈥檚 legend,鈥 he adds. 鈥淏ut once you hear it, tell me you won鈥檛 look at Cannon Mountain a little differently.鈥
And that 鈥 looking at 易胜博官网 from an indigenous point of view 鈥 is precisely what a small, patient, determined and resolutely grassroots organization seeks to accomplish. The group is called the Indigenous 易胜博官网 Collaborative Collective (INHCC) and includes Paul and Denise Pouliot, several 易胜博官网 faculty members and students, local grassroots organizers and community members and several members of other New England tribes. And while the INHCC may have originated in the book-lined offices of three 易胜博官网 faculty, it鈥檚 not about university researchers 鈥渟tudying鈥 indigenous people. In her heavy Russain accent, Svetlana Peshkova, one of those faculty members, lays out the project鈥檚 number-one ground rule with unmistakable clarity: 鈥淚n the collaborative collective, we don鈥檛 say we are studying you. We say we are learning with you.鈥
That M.O. has taken the organization further than even they might have imagined a few short years ago. And, really, they鈥檙e just getting started.
The Tale of Two Maps
At 易胜博官网, anthropology department chair Megan Howey is one of several faculty members helping the Pouliots and others reframe a predominant local narrative that centers on the indigenous population鈥檚 demise.
A map in Howey鈥檚 office, dating to 1667 and produced by an English merchant, provides a perfect case in point: It shows dozens of colonial homes, known as 鈥済arrisons,鈥 built by settlers with names such as Bickford, Huckins, Wiley and Burnham, and is dotted with churches and mills along the Oyster River and other tributaries leading to Little and Great bays. These were the early English settlements comprising 鈥淒urham Plantation鈥 and would eventually become part of 易胜博官网鈥檚 Seacoast region.
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The map illustrates the 鈥渨ild landscape鈥 beyond the settled areas in simply sketched mountain tops and small illustrations of wild animals such as deer, bear and wolves. But something, or somebody, is missing, and that would be the people who had inhabited the place for millennia, and whose language is inscribed on modern-day rivers, mountains and cities.
鈥淎lmost from the beginning, the indigenous people of 易胜博官网 have been fighting a narrative of demise imposed on them by Europeans,鈥 says Howey, who holds the Hayes Chair to study the culture and history of 易胜博官网. 鈥淏ut in order to change the narrative, you have to create an archive of knowledge.鈥
One of those working on just such an archive is Peshkova, Howey鈥檚 colleague in the anthropology department. With guidance from Peshkova, the INHCC maintains a blog site that serves as home base for a number of interesting initiatives supporting its educational mission, including a new kind of state map that balances indigenous and non-indigenous versions of key places and events. 鈥淭he Indigenous 易胜博官网 Story Map is a digital work in progress, so it can be added to over time as new historical information emerges,鈥 says Peshkova.
An alternative history of 易胜博官网 鈥 N鈥檇akinna 鈥 is already emerging in the map鈥檚 some 30 annotated points, which touch on everything from legends like Stone Face/The Old Man of the Mountain to the recasting of historical events, including the infamous Oyster River Massacre of 1694.
You can see the official history of the well-chronicled attack from your car on Route 108, one of the historical highway markers intended to convey the state鈥檚 past. It reads:
On July 18, 1694, a force of about 250 Indians under command of the French soldier, de Villieu, attacked settlements in this area on both sides of the Oyster River, killing or capturing approximately 100 settlers, destroying five garrison houses and numerous dwellings. It was the most devastating French and Indian raid in 易胜博官网 during King William鈥檚 War.
This account isn鈥檛 necessarily incorrect, but according to the INHCC Story Map, it exemplifies a nai虉ve history pitting the 鈥渟avage Indian鈥 against the 鈥渋nnocent settler鈥 and glosses over the skill with which the French often manipulated native people to fight their battles against the English 鈥 who also behaved badly and were not universally loved by native peoples. To that end, the Story Map notes that 鈥渢he massacre was carried out with French firepower in the hands of the Abenaki people.鈥
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In her office, Peshkova elaborates on the difference. 鈥淗istory is more complex than we record or imagine it to be,鈥 she says. 鈥淣o attack happened unprovoked, and if it did happen, there were other stakeholders involved in violence that the marker does not mention.鈥
The collaborative collective also counts several 易胜博官网 students among its longstanding members. Caitlin Burnett 鈥20, an anthropology and sustainability dual major from Conway, Massachusetts, has worked with Peshkova since her first semester at 易胜博官网. She was part of the successful effort to get Indigenous Peoples鈥 Day recognized by the 易胜博官网 faculty senate earlier this year and produces a podcast for the INHCC exploring various topics in indigenous culture.
Burnett says participating in the INHCC has changed the way she thinks about her education. 鈥淚 love the collaborative,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e get out of the college bubble and into the community. Also, we鈥檙e all partners. Students are usually at the bottom rung of the ladder, but the collaborative collective is a very flat organization. It鈥檚 made me feel more confident and yet humbled by the people I鈥檝e met.鈥
Unearthing New Narratives
Near the shore of Oyster River, Howey is directing an archaeological dig that鈥檚 uncovering not only stone foundations and artifacts dating to the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries but also fresh glimpses into the impact of European settlement on the people and place. Today, she and half a dozen 鈥渃itizen scientists,鈥 as well as her students, sit in a circle outlining the Burnham Garrison, each with her or his own bucket, small shovel and other tools of the trade.
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Count the Burnhams among the period鈥檚 luckiest 鈥 or perhaps shrewdest 鈥 of their Durham Point neighbors. First, at 288 square feet, their dwelling was among the more capacious of the neighborhood and housed as many as seven family members in the late 1600s. Even more fortuitous, at least for the Burnhams, they alone among nearby settlers were spared during the height of hostilities in 1694.
A brightly colored shard of pottery unearthed by Emily Mierswa 鈥17 underscores the former point: Howey suspects it鈥檚 a fragment of Westerwald, a German brand that only well-to-do families could afford. A few weeks later, Ryan Rybka, a UMass doctoral student working with Howey, discovers a smooth, black stone tool that sheds some light on the latter point. Howey identifies the object as an indigenous implement 鈥 鈥渕ost likely an axe, which might have hung above the Burnhams鈥 hearth,鈥 she explains.
The axe find excites her because it supplies yet another piece to the puzzle about the early years of European and Native American relations. 鈥淭he presence of stone tools found in the hearth of an English family house gives us a clue that settlers and natives weren鈥檛 always at each other鈥檚 throats,鈥 says Howey. 鈥淭he settlers, in particular, depended on indigenous peoples.鈥
She runs this thought past Paul Pouliot, who works at Howey鈥檚 sites in search of his own past. He nods his agreement. On the same day, Pouliot is examining a boulder overhang near the Burnham site.
Howey first met the Pouliots in 2010 during the repatriation of indigenous human remains that had been removed when the Seabrook power plant was being built. Retiring after working 32 years as a mechanical engineer, Paul had begun pouring his seemingly bound- less wellspring of energy into learning more and educating others about his tribal history.
Pouliot鈥檚 interest in precolonial history dovetailed perfectly with Howey鈥檚 professional interests in the recent Anthropocene, the hotly debated epoch when humans began to shape the physical world as much as natural forces did. When Howey successfully applied for the Hayes Chair, she included Paul and Denise Pouliot as co-researchers, and they also became founding members of the INHCC.
鈥淚鈥檓 touching this stone and wondering how it would have been used by my ancestors,鈥 Pouliot says. 鈥淢aybe they would have sought temporary shelter here during a hunt or a move.鈥 His fingers trace a pair of tiny chips and a nearly imperceptible curlicue pattern on one of the stone鈥檚 flat surfaces that he suspects were made by native hands. 鈥淪ite areas like the Burnham Garrison are tribal as well as colonial.鈥
A Dance of Defiance
The image of Pouliot running his hands over the giant boulder and looking for traces of his history has its literary parallel in another project, this one called 鈥淒awnland Voices.鈥 Published as a book in 2014 by 易胜博官网 English professor and INHCC member Siobhan Senier, it continues to thrive as an online publication. Together with tribal authors and editors from around New England as well as colleagues at UMaine, UMass and Bryant College, Senier publishes a wide range of original writing.
鈥淥ne of the magical parts of producing Dawnland Voices is the power of memory uniting the people living today with those who came before them,鈥 says Senier, whose students provide back-end support for the project鈥檚 website and manage the Facebook group used to call for submissions.
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To read selections from Dawnland is often to witness intensely personal dialogues with the past, rooted in a struggle to forge an identity in the present. In place of picks and trowels, the authors use words and images 鈥 and even dance 鈥 to break through the rocky soil of modern life. Take, for example, the nonfiction writing of Tim Blanchette, an indigenous rapper who calls himself Mohiks Eagle鈥檚 Fire 鈥 Mohiks for short. Mohiks writes with searing honesty of a life that seems to hang precariously in the balance. Having survived mental illness, alcoholism, the loss of family members, imprisonment and attempted suicide, he has found purpose through competitive traditional dance, which he describes as an act of self-preservation.
鈥淒ancing as our ancestors did, each of us adding ourselves to the dance,鈥 keeps the culture alive, says Mohiks. But the dance, although joyous, is also rooted in bitter struggle, as Mohiks attests:
We dance in defiance of those who made our way of life illegal. In defiance of corporate mainstream society that steals our culture and identity, misappropriates it, and then sells it to the masses. In defiance of mainstream society that turns our ancestors into Disney characters and sports team mascots. As long as we continue to dance, we are free.
EXPLORE FURTHER
INDIGENOUS NEW HAMPSHIRE
This is the place to start, with links to the INHCC Story Map, podcasts and other material that has been curated by 易胜博官网 faculty and students and tribal collaborators.
DAWNLAND VOICES
Seven issues of the publication are available and include poetry, personal narrative, photography and other examples of indigenous writing. A wide range of styles and experiences.
COWASUCK BAND OF THE
PENNACOOK ABENAKI PEOPLE
History and events sponsored by the 易胜博官网 indigenous group led by Paul Pouliot.
MOHIKS EAGLE FIRE
The official website of Mohiks, where you can listen to one of his recordings and watch him perform a dance.
鈥淪ince settlers arrived, they began telling the story about the dying indigenous cultures,鈥 Senier explains. 鈥淭he voices in Dawnland are striving to break out of the imposed narrative of demise.
鈥淢any of us think of Native Americans as living on reservations or know them mostly from watching them at powwows, but the truth is they mostly live off the 鈥榬ez,鈥欌 she notes. 鈥淭hey gather at kitchen tables, popular diners, tribal offices or museums or, in the case of Mohiks and his followers, on YouTube.鈥
The Way Forward
One of the INHCC鈥檚 projects involves establishing a Native American and indigenous studies minor at 易胜博官网. The minor would furnish a key milestone for recruiting greater numbers of native students and faculty to campus and educating all 易胜博官网 students about indigenous heritage, locally and globally. Besides, Peshkova points out, 鈥淎s a land-grant university located on what were once indigenous lands, 易胜博官网 has to include indigenous studies, doesn鈥檛 it?鈥
And what of the future of the INHCC? Its members are unanimous in wanting it to keep functioning as a grassroots, informal but disciplined project unbound by any single institutional governance. 鈥淭he collective鈥檚 work will always reflect its three foundational goals: local focus, activism aimed at restorative justice and public education writ large,鈥 says Peshkova.
Howey offers yet another perspective: 鈥淚n addition to making indigenous resources broadly accessible, we want to offer as an example to others a model partner- ship built on trust and understanding that endures even when there is strong disagreement,鈥 she says. Howey recalls a mentor who counseled her that researchers must learn to 鈥渟it with discomfort鈥 鈥 an expression Howey regularly repeats to herself. 鈥淚t basically means knowing that we may not always be able to fully reconcile scientific and spiritual connections to artifacts. But we can always remember to respect each other.鈥 听
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Written By:
Dave Moore | 易胜博官网 Cooperative Extension