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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nansemond
Regions with significant populations
Virginia
Languages
English, formerly Algonquian
Religion
Traditional Religion, Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Nottoway, Chowanoke, Chesapeake, Pamunkey, Mattaponi, Chickahominy, Meherrin, Haliwa-Saponi

The Nansemond are the Indigenous people of the Nansemond River, a 20-mile-long tributary of the James River in Virginia. Nansemond people lived in settlements on both sides of the Nansemond River where they fished (with the name "Nansemond" meaning "fishing point" in Algonquian), harvested oysters, hunted, and farmed in fertile soil. Today, Nansemond people belong to the federally recognized Nansemond Indian Nation.[1]

Gradually pushed off their lands in the colonial and following periods, the Nansemond struggled to maintain their culture. They reorganized in the late 20th century and gained state recognition from Virginia in 1985.[2] They gained federal recognition in 2018 after Congress passed a bill.[3] Many members of the tribe still live on former ancestral lands in Suffolk, Chesapeake, and surrounding cities.

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Transcription

Language

The Nansemond language is believed to have been Algonquian, similar to that of many other Atlantic coastal tribes. But only six words have been preserved, which are not enough to identify it.[4] The six words, which may have been corrupted in memory by the time they were written down in 1901, are nĭkătwĭn (one), näkătwĭn (two), nikwásăti (three), toisíaw’ (four), mishä́naw (five), and marímo (dog).[5]

History

The Nansemond people were members of the Powhatan Paramount Chiefdom, which consisted of about 30 tribes, estimated to have numbered more than 20,000 people in the coastal area of what became Virginia. They paid fealty to a paramount chief, known as the Powhatan.[6] They lived along the Nansemond River, an area they called Chuckatuck.[6] In 1607, when a group of settlers led by the explorer John Smith arrived on the north side of the James River and established the settlement of Jamestown, the Nansemond were initially wary.[7]

In 1607, the Jamestown settlers had begun to explore the Nansemond River, following the river's oyster beds. Relationships between the colonists and the Nansemond, already strained by Indian raids, deteriorated further in 1609 when a group of Jamestown settlers were sent to the Indians to trade ratchets and copper for food. The colonists never returned. A search party was formed and coming upon some Indians, were told the group was sacrificed, their brains cut and scraped from their skulls with mussel shells. In retaliation the colonists went to Dumpling Island, where the head chief lived and where the tribe's temples and sacred items were kept.[8] The raiding party destroyed the burial sites of tribal leaders and temples. Houses and religious sites were ransacked for valuables, such as pearls and copper ornaments, which were customarily buried with the bodies of leaders.[6] By the 1630s, colonists had begun to encroach on Nansemond lands. The two peoples had differing ideas about the concept of ownership of land.[7]

Marriage of John Bass and Elizabeth

Members of the Nansemond tribe, mostly members of the Weaver and Bass families, c. 1900, Smithsonian Institution

John Bass, a colonist in early 17th-century Virginia, married Elizabeth, the daughter of the leader of the Nansemond Nation. After she was baptized into the established Anglican Church of the colony, they married on August 14, 1638. Bass had been born 7 September 1616; he died in 1699.[9] They had eight children together (Elizabeth, John, Jordan, Keziah, Nathaniel, Richard, Samuel, and William). Although Christianized, Elizabeth likely raised their children in Nansemond culture. The tribe had a matrilineal kinship system in which the children were considered to be born into their mother's clan and people.

Some Nansemond claim descent from this marriage.[6] Based on her research, Dr. Helen C. Rountree says that all current Nansemond descend from this marriage.[7]

William H. Weaver is sitting; Augustus Bass is standing behind him. The Weaver family were indentured East Indians (from modern-day India and Pakistan) who were free in Lancaster County by about 1710. By 1732 they were "taxables" [note: free blacks (generally free people of color) and Indians (Native Americans) had to pay a tax] in Norfolk County, and taxable "Mulatto" landowners in nearby Hertford County, North Carolina by 1741. By 1820 there were 164 "free colored" members of the family in Hertford County. In the 1830s some registered as Nansemond Indians in Norfolk County. Smithsonian Institution, "Nansemond Indians, ca. 1900."[10]

Affected by encroaching colonists throughout the 17th century, the Nansemond tribe eventually split apart. Those who had become Christians adopted European manners of living and stayed along the Nansemond River as farmers. The other Nansemond, known as the "Pochick," engaged in an unsuccessful war with New England colonists in 1644, and the survivors of the conflict fled southwest to the Nottoway River, where they were assigned a reservation by the House of Burgesses. By 1744 they had ceased using the reservation and gone to live with the Nottoway Indians [note: this was an Iroquoian-language tribe] on another reservation nearby ... The Nansemond sold their reservation in 1792 and were known as "citizen" Indians.[7]

Restoration of Mattanock

Aerial View of Mattanock the Day After the 31st Annual Nansemond Indian Pow Wow
Aerial View of Mattanock the Day After the 31st Annual Nansemond Indian Pow Wow

In 2013 the Nansemond came to an agreement with the City of Suffolk, which transferred 100 acres (0.40 km2) to them from an 1,100-acre (4.5 km2) riverfront park along the Nansemond River, their ancestral territory.

The agreement was the result of many years of discussion. The City of Suffolk established a task force to consider the project, which supported giving the site to the Nansemond despite being composed mostly of non-Indians. The tribe had to supply detailed plans for the project, including drawings, and they also had to submit documentation to the Mattanock Town task force explaining the type of non-profit foundation that would be created once the deed to the land was given to the tribe.[11] Helen C. Rountree, whose research helped identify the location of Mattanock Town, helped the tribe, which planned to base their reconstruction on archaeological and other research to ensure that longhouses and other structures had the proper historic dimensions.[11]

In November 2010, the Suffolk City Council agreed to transfer this land back to the Nansemond. In June 2011, everything stalled because of concerns that the tribe had with the proposed development agreement. In August 2013, the City of Suffolk transferred Nansemond ancestral lands back to the tribe.[12] That November, members of the Nansemond Tribe gathered at the historic site of Mattanock Town and blessed the land.[13]

The tribe will use this site to reconstruct the settlement of Mattanock, as well as a community center, museum, pow wow ground, among other facilities. They plan to attract tourists by demonstrating their heritage.[14] This project was developed, explored and negotiated between the tribe and city over a period of more than ten years.

Description

The Nansemond have about 400 tribal members.[14] As a "citizen tribe", they gained state recognition in 1984[15] and federal recognition in 2018. The current chief is Keith Anderson.[14]

They hold monthly tribal meetings at the Indiana United Methodist Church (which was founded in 1850 as a mission for the Nansemond). The tribe hosts a powwow every year in August. The tribe has also operated a museum and gift shops.[8]

Federal recognition

The Nansemond and other landless Virginia tribes did not gain federal recognition until Congress passed a bill for it in 2018. A bill to recognize six Virginian tribes was introduced into both houses of Congress. It covered the following: the Chickahominy Indian Tribe; Eastern Chickahominy Indian Tribe; Upper Mattaponi Tribe; Rappahannock Tribe, Inc.; Monacan Indian Nation; and Nansemond Indian Tribe.[16]

These landless tribes had each applied for federal recognition since the late 20th century through the regular process of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, in the Department of Interior. They had difficulty showing cultural and political continuity since the period of their tribes' dealings with the colony and state. In part this was due to racial discrimination by the European Americans, magnified by Virginia's having been a slave society. As the Nansemond and other tribal peoples intermarried with whites or African Americans, European Americans assumed they were no longer "Indian". But if the mother was Nansemond, she usually raised her children in their tradition. During the early 20th century, Virginia passed a law establishing a binary system of the "one drop rule", requiring each individual to be classified as white or colored (the latter covered anyone with any known African ancestry, regardless of other ancestry or cultural context). Administrators refused to acknowledge families who claimed to be Indian and generally classified them as black, destroying the continuity of records. By contrast, tribal members who were Catholic continued to be registered by churches as Indian for baptisms, marriages, and funerals.

Supporters of these tribes gaining federal recognition proposed a bill in 2003, the "Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act". In 2009 supporters again proposed this bill and by June 2009, the bill passed the House Committee on Natural Resources and the US House of Representatives. A companion bill was sent to the Senate the date after the bill was voted on in the House. That bill was sent to the Senate's Committee on Indian Affairs. On October 22, 2009, the Senate committee approved the bill, and on December 23 was placed on the Senate's Legislative calendar.[17][18] The bill had a hold placed for "jurisdictional concerns" by Senator Tom Coburn (R-OK), who urged they apply for recognition through the BIA.

But as noted above, the Virginia tribes have lost valuable documentation because of the state's passage of the Racial Integrity Act of 1924, requiring classification of all residents as white or black (colored). As implemented by Walter Plecker, the first registrar (1912–1946) of the newly created Virginia Bureau of Vital Statistics, records of many Virginia-born tribal members were changed from Indian to "colored" because he decided some families were mixed race and was imposing the one-drop rule.[19] After more delays, the bill was finally passed in January 2018, and six tribes in Virginia gained federal recognition.

References

  1. ^ Speidell, Phyllis (June 3, 2023). "The Nansemonds Now". Suffolk News-Herald. Retrieved May 9, 2023.
  2. ^ "Secretary of the Commonwealth – Virginia Indians". The Commonwealth of Virginia. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
  3. ^ Robert, Wittman (January 29, 2018). "H.R.984 – 115th Congress (2017–2018): Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act of 2017". US Congress. Retrieved November 14, 2018.
  4. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on December 31, 2018. Retrieved December 31, 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ A Vocabulary of Powhatan, compiled by Captain John Smith, with two word-lists of Pamunkey and Nansemond from other sources. Evolution Publishing, 1997.
  6. ^ a b c d Waugaman, Sandra F. and Danielle-Moretti-Langholtz, Ph.D. We're Still Here: Contemporary Virginia Indians Tell Their Stories, Richmond, VA: Palari Publishing, 2006 (revised edition)
  7. ^ a b c d Dr. Helen C. Rountree, "Nansemond History" Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Nansemond Tribal Association, accessed 16 Sep 2009
  8. ^ a b Karenne Wood, ed., The Virginia Indian Heritage Trail Archived 2009-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, Charlottesville, VA: Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, 2007
  9. ^ Sermon Book of John Bass, owned by the Nansemond Tribe.
  10. ^ Heinegg, Paul (1995). Free African Americans of Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Maryland, and Delaware: Indian Families Bass & Weaver. Baltimore: Genealogical Publishing. Retrieved December 24, 2019.
  11. ^ a b Bobby Whitehead, "Nansemond Indians seek to reconstruct Mattanock Town", Indian Country Today, accessed 16 September 2009.
  12. ^ "Nansemond Indian Tribe Reclaims Native Land in Suffolk". publicnewsservice.org. Retrieved September 20, 2015.
  13. ^ "Tribe blesses land – The Suffolk News-Herald". suffolknewsherald.com. November 26, 2013. Retrieved September 20, 2015.
  14. ^ a b c Tribal Leaders Directory. Tribal Leaders Directory | Indian Affairs. (n.d.). Retrieved December 4, 2022, from https://www.bia.gov/bia/ois/tribal-leaders-directory/tribes/nansemond-indian-tribe
  15. ^ Dr. Helen C. Rountree, "Powhatan History" Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine, Nansemond Tribe Website, 2009, accessed 16 Sep 2009
  16. ^ "Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act of 2003, 108th Congress bill S.1423" Archived 2016-07-04 at the Wayback Machine, introduced by then-Sen. George Allen (R-VA), not enacted.
  17. ^ "H.R. 1385, Thomasina E. Jordan Indian Tribes of Virginia Federal Recognition Act", GovTrack.us
  18. ^ "Statement of Governor Kaine Submitted to the United States Senate Committee on Indian Affairs" Archived 2009-10-24 at the Wayback Machine Official Site of the Governor of Virginia
  19. ^ ABP. "Baptist executives urge federal recognition of Virginia tribes". Baptist News Global – Conversations that Matter. Retrieved September 20, 2015.

External links

This page was last edited on 27 February 2024, at 06:44
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