Eastern Delaware Nations

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Research & Interpretation Project

Research & Interpretation Project

Keystone of our Vision: A New Cultural Center at Wyalusing

Design by Campbell Architects LLC

        Researching, interpreting and telling the story of American Indian presence, past and present, in Northeast Pennsylvania is the focus of this regional history project.
The Research & Planning Phase will continue through the Fall of 2010.
Implementation portions of this project began in 2009.

Academic Partners | Project Description | Results | Goals | Need | Project Model | Summation
Project Funding
| Cultural Center | Previous Funding

         Throughout Pennsylvania's history, American Indians have been written out of existence since the 1790s, but continued American Indian lineage still survives today within the commonwealth. American Indians in Pennsylvania hid in plain sight through assimilation into the non-native dominant society. Due to fear of removal, federal policies prohibiting land ownership or public office for Indians, boarding schools for Indian children, or laws outlawing native religions; they chose to 'become' the ethnicities they resembled or were connected to through marriage or other relationships.
          Their legacy is written in physical features of their descendants throughout the region. Their traditions and worldview are still reflected in oral histories and culture of their descendants' families. As documentation of their presence expands, their cultural contributions will be better understood and acknowledged. The continued lack of recognition and misidentification along with an accepted image of sliding into the dominant culture, at least on paper, has allowed the creation of the dominant rhetoric that the legacy of American Indians in the state of Pennsylvania ended in the 1790s.
         The project is underway, documenting the genealogies of a select group of EDN members who claim continued American Indian descent within the state of Pennsylvania. The project's overall goal is to explore the possibility of continued presence of American Indians in the state of Pennsylvania beyond the 1790s and possibly connections to other current Pennsylvania residents.
         Genealogical research is integral for understanding family lineage and where we came from as a people. The scholarship of this project will create programs focused on education through scholarly and public venues. By uncovering these hidden lineages, EDN will be poised to educate the public and involve local communities in relearning/expanding the known history of American Indians in Pennsylvania. Focusing on Bradford, Sullivan, Wyoming, and Susquehanna Counties, the project will utilize primary documents from these counties, the Pennsylvania State Archives, Moravian Church archives in Bethlehem, PA, and EDN's archives to write a hidden population back into history. Using the documents of Pennsylvania's past, a new interpretation of current American Indian descendants' claims will be attested.

          In his book "Native Americans' Pennsylvania," Daniel K. Richter says, "In recent decades the Lehigh Valley has become a main center for Lenapes who tried to remain within their ancient territory rather than migrate westward."
         Those who stayed chose one of two basic strategies. Some gathered in specific localities forming refugee communities. At least one such settlement existed near Towanda, PA. In his article "Marginal Groups," Brewton Berry mentions the "Pool Tribe or Pooles." Tradition traces this group back to 18th century Superintendent of Indian Affairs, Sir William Johnson and an Indian woman. Their daughter Elizabeth married Anthony Vanderpool, scion of a wealthy New York Dutch family. When his family disowned him, they fled to Pennsylvania. Some people connected to the settlement they founded can still speak the patois developed there. Racial stereotypes and stigma continue to affect the lives of their descendents.
         Other people chose to 'become' the ethnicities they resembled or were connected to through marriage or other relationships, due to fear of removal, federal policies prohibiting land ownership or public office for Indians, boarding schools for Indian children, or laws outlawing Native religions. These people, in essence, hid in plain sight through assimilation into the non-Native majority.
         Their legacy is written in physical features of their descendants throughout the region. Their traditions and worldview are still reflected in oral histories and culture of their descendants' families. As documentation of their presence expands, their cultural contributions will be better understood and acknowledged.
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Academic Partners

Dr. Dave Minderhout, Professor of Anthropology, Bloomsburg University. Author of "The Museum of Indian Culture and Native Identity in Pennsylvania," with Andrea T. Frantz. Publication 2008
Dr. Katherine Faull, Director, Program in Comparative Humanities, Professor of German, Bucknell University. Author of "Moravian Women's Memoirs: Their Related Lives 1750-1820."
Dr. Amy C. Schutt, Lecturer, Department of History, State University of New York College at Cortland. Author of "Peoples of the River Valleys: The Odyssey of the Delaware Indians"
Lee Zelewicz, EDN Cultural researcher; masters in sociocultural anthropology, School of Human Evolution and Social Change, Arizona State University.
Susan M. Taffe, Graduate Teaching Assistant, Cornell University, Ph. D. program in musicology, focus in ethnomusicology, minor in American Indian Studies.

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Funding

Initial consultation for the Research and Planning Phase of this regional history project was funded by:

Pennsylvania Humanities Council and the Allen F. Pierce Foundation. Continued research is currently funded by the Allen F. Pierce Foundation.
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Project Description

EDN Mission Statement: Eastern Delaware Nation seeks to gather the scattered people of the Delaware tribes, restore traditional cultures through researching history, heritage and cultural contributions, and promote cultural awareness through education.

         This project falls within that mission statement and was identified as a project of interest in Eastern Delaware Nations (EDN) Strategic Plan completed in 2003. EDN membership includes about 600 families concentrated mainly in Sullivan, Wyoming, and Bradford Counties in Pennsylvania. The group has been a 501C3 organization since 1993 and was incorporated in 1996.
         In 1999, EDN purchased approximately 13 acres of ancestral land straddling Route 6, two miles north of Wyalusing PA. Included within this holding is Wyalusing Rocks overlook, an American Indian historical site. EDN is honored to be caretaker of this place sacred to many tribes throughout the Northeast.
         EDN has nearly completed the planning phase of a project to build a Cultural Center on its land. The Cultural Center will provide a place where the general public can access the history of American Indians in Pennsylvania and understand the present-day culture of their descendants.

         EDN has initiated interpretive programs, provided presenters and speakers, and produced publicity materials to accomplish this goal, but so far, these events have only reached a small portion of the regional audience. As this research project develops, new opportunities will arise to share information with local, regional, and national audiences.
         Community meetings during the consultation phase used a variety of static, active, and interactive elements to explore aspects of the story. Audience members had the opportunity to contribute and connect with new information on cognitive and emotional levels. Participants had an opportunity for personal reflection and analysis. Continued interaction/dialogue will be encouraged.
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Results - This project will produce a matrix of materials:

* Research materials archived at EDN's proposed reference library and genealogical research facility for use by other researchers following identified threads and/or those revealed within archived materials.
* Listing of support/resource materials archived at other facilities regionally and statewide.
* A cohesive interpretation of the American Indian presence in Northeastern Pennsylvania presented to the public at EDN's Cultural Center.
* Support plan for research and possible dig at the site of Friedenshutten, a Moravian Mission serving Delaware Indians established in 1765 near Wyalusing.
* Multimedia materials supporting and expanding public use of the interpretation.
* A guide to conducting local research on regional American Indian descendants.
* A curriculum for use in grades 4, 6 and 9.
* Educational guides and materials for public use.
* A plan to identify, interpret and conserve lifeways followed by American Indian descendents in the region.
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Goals:
* Identification of existing research on the topic.
* Survey of regional and local historical societies - (ongoing)
* Conduct research in:
State archives in Harrisburg PA; Moravian Church Archives in Bethlehem PA; National Archives in Washington D.C.
* Initial series of Community Forums open to the public (Completed)
* Archive and organize EDN's collection of research and genealogical materials

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Need
         There is world-wide interest today in American Indian history and culture. Members of the Moravian Church in Germany know more about the history of Friedenshutten than Americans living near the site. American Indians and their descendants have been an invisible minority in Pennsylvania since colonial days, their presence obscured by a mix of social and political policies, views, and practices.
         This project will explore, reveal and interpret history nearly forgotten in Pennyslvania. Presentation of that history at EDN's Cultural Center on Rt. 6 near Wyalusing will provide a more comprehensive understanding of regional cultural heritage. Heritage, history, and academic visitors to the Cultural Center, as well as those attracted to Wyalusing Rocks' scenic beauty, will positively impact the region's economy. While the project promotes regional growth, it also promotes cultural sustainability through a redefinition against acculturation.
EDN's property is in the center of the Endless Mountains Heritage Region. It is also within the Rt. 6 Heritage Region, and the Susquehanna River Greenway.
         The Cultural Center will be less than two miles from the new Endless Mountains Visitors Center at the Marie Antoinette Overlook on Rt. 6. EDN's facility is poised to become an anchor visitor destination, interpreting the overall history of American Indians in Pennsylvania and serving as a hub pointing visitors toward regional museums and other facilities with specific collections and archives.
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Project Model
         
The Center for Anti-Slavery Studies (CASS) in Montrose successfully researched and presented the story of another invisible minority in Northeastern Pennyslvania. Their groundbreaking research revealed Underground Railroad activity in the region based on oral histories. Their research and interpretation "A Place I Call Home" will serve as a successful working model for this project.
CASS research, and oral history of EDN members, indicates some fugitive slaves were sheltered within local 'refugee' communities of American Indian descendants. This research thread will interweave stories presented by CASS and EDN.
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Summation
          This local history project reflects experiences common among American Indian peoples living along the East Coast and west to the Mississippi. Eastern woodland and southern tribes were among the first impacted by European exploration and colonization, but scant records of the Indian experience exist from that time period. Of the surviving documents, many are fragile, difficult to read, or require translation into English.
          In contrast, information about later interactions in the west involving Indian peoples and explorers or settlers, or about later government policies, are more readily available and understood. The stories of western tribes, while often tragic, are fairly well known as most played out during our grandparents' lifetimes. But stories of eastern tribes from 200 or more years ago remain fragmented. Uncovering, exploring, and interpreting this lost regional story will document research methods and reveal previously untapped resources.

Further and perhaps foremost, this story will validate oral histories of people in Pennsylvania families whose American Indian ancestors chose to remain against all odds within the Commonwealth.
         
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       The Cultural Center will offer a new interpretation of American Indian presence, history, culture, and contributions in the Endless Mountains Region. Vistors wll be able to find information about other places to explore, from historic sites and museums with specific types of collections, and upcoming events such as seminars, workshops, and pow-wows.
         The cultural center is necessary for EDN to present the findings of this interpretive history project and provide a center for continued scholarship on American Indians and their lineage in Pennsylvania. The heritage, cultural knowledge, and history of EDN's people will be tied together, connecting past, present, and future. The center will be a place of learning and interaction with Pennsylvania's American Indians for all people and will provide the necessary space to share these experiences. The interpretive history project will outline the story and framework for involving communities in the knowledge of Pennsylvania's American Indian history, heritage, culture, and regional contributions. According to our belief system, our efforts are planned and directed seven generations into the future. Our cultural center will be a shared community asset and a gateway to better intercultural understanding for the future of the Commonwealth.
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              We invite you to participate as we enter the construction phase of this project. Eastern Delaware Nations is a 501c3 organization. Donations are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. Any amount is appreciated. If you would like to designate your donation as a Memorial Gift please provide the correct spelling of the person's name you wish to honor.
Names of honorees will be included on a plaque displayed in the building.

To donate send a check or money order made out to: Eastern Delaware Nations.
Please specify in the memo if it is for the building project, and if it is a memorial gift. Please note new 911 address changes.
Send to:
John Taffe
Treasurer, Eastern Delaware Nations
10 Boro Line Rd.
Dushore, PA. 18614

If you have questions please contact:

Mollie Eliot
35 Morgan Circle
Troy PA 16947
quest12@epix.net

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Previous, Pending and Pledged Funding - All Projects

Endless Mountains Heritage Region

2003 - $15,000 for Master Plan Development
2005 - $15,000 for Architectural Blueprints & Site Plans
Allen F. Pierce Foundation
2005 - $10,000 for Architectural Blueprints & Site Plans
2007 - $10,000 Phase II Pre-construction costs
2008 - $10,000 Research & Interpretation Project
2009 - $10,000 Research & Interpretation Project & Operating Expenses
2010 - $10,000 Research & Interpretation Project & Operating Expenses
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts -Programming and Events Grants
2005 - $1,667 for workshop/creation of cloth banner
2006 - $1,383 for Dance Troupe workshop at Pow-wow
2007 - $265 for art exhibit
2008- $1,881 for Pow-wow expenses
2009 - $1,782
for Pow-wow expenses
2010 - $1,068 for Pow-wow expenses
PA Humanities Council - Programming and Events Grants
2004 - $1,000 for Public Seminar event expenses
2005 - $1000 for two "Celebration of Dance" Workshops
2008 - $2,500 for Research & Interpretation Project for three Community Forums
DCED - Tourism Festival Funds
2007 - $500 for EDN art exhibit at PA Heritage Festival
Private & Corporate Donors
1999 - $65,000 - Property Purchase
2005 -06 - $6,000 - Planning Phase/Building Project
2008 - P&G Mehoopany - $25,000 for Building Project
2008, 2009, 2010 - Mohegan Sun at Pocono Downs - $500 Pow-wow Sponsorship
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