Skip to main content
Indigenous New England Digital Collections
Search using this query type:

Search only these record types:




Advanced Search (Items only)

Browse Items (189 total)

DV-305-1.pdf
In the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement, many indigenous intellectuals lent their voices to the cause of racial justice and equity. Donna Loring--a Penobscot tribal leader, author, and Vietnam veteran--exemplifies the commitment to…

Wabanaki June 1980.pdf
The June 1980 issue of the Wabanaki Alliance covers many important topics, such as Native child welfare, a woman's ordeal with suicide, local poetry, and a local worker's ordeal as an ally of people in need. Some of these are major issues for the…

DV-351.pdf
An account of a dugout canoe trip from the mainland to Aquinnah, launched by Plimoth Plantation's Wampanoag Indian Program.

http://s3.amazonaws.com/omeka-net/806/archive/files/2c55f384709e2dd37fdff5e210d8f836.JPG
Thomas Commuck (Narragansett) published his hymnal, Indian Melodies, in 1845. While Commuck clearly states that the purpose of this collection is to “make a little money,” to provide for the needy as well as his family, and to “spread the knowledge…

DV-353.pdf
In this letter, Little Wolf (writing from Roxbury, MA) wishes Red Wing a happy Thanksgiving and consoles her on the death of White Oak. He praises her museum and also references the Dovecrest Restaurant, on the same premises.

DV-354.pdf
Cassius A. Champlin was President of the Tribal Council during the 1930s, when Red Wing was publishing The Narragansett Dawn. In this letter or speech to tribal youth he extols the values of education and caring for each other.
Output Formats

atom, dc-rdf, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2