Because the Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center
is closing seasonally this year, the Research Library, the Children’s Library,
and Archives & Special Collections are closed beginning December 1, 2014.
Please call (800) 411-9671 for additional information.
Saturday, November 22, 2014
Friday, October 24, 2014
Maps of Early New England
Saturday, Nov 1, 1-2:30 pm
The European Mapping of Early New England
If you like maps, here's an opportunity to see some rare early maps in the Museum's Archives and Special Collections. Our guest is Matthew Edney, Osher Professor in the
History of Cartography and director of the History of Cartography Project at
the University of Maine. He plans to discuss early representations of European
exploration and North American colonization with a look at historical maps and
the cartographic shaping of New England during the 17th and 18th centuries. We will have examples from Museum’s collection of maps depicting New England from the 16th
to the 20th centuries. In the Fleet Room. $10 for the lecture; Museum admission
is not required. To register, call (800) 411-9671 or email
rsvp@pequotmuseum.org by Oct. 29.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
Books and Authors
October is a time to fall back into reading! We have two authors visiting the Museum this month which is great for all of us who love to read and who enjoy meeting authors.
On Saturday, October 11, Major Jason Warren lectures about his book, Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675-1676. Why and how did the Connecticut colony survive King Philip's War without heavy involvement in the fighting? Dr. Warren lectures at 1:30 pm in the Auditorium. You don't have to pay admission to the Museum for the lecture, which has costs $10, but you might want to because there is a 17th century encampment happening that day on the Farmstead. Call (800) 411-9671 or email rsvp@pequotmuseum.org to register.
The second author is Gerald Vizenor (White Earth Nation of the Anishinaabeg). He is an award winning well-known and respected writer who is professor emeritus of American Studies at Berkeley. His newest historical novel, Blue Ravens, was published this year by Wesleyan Press which is sponsoring his visit here.
"Aloysius Hudon Beaulieu created marvelous blue ravens that stormy summer." That's the first sentence of the story of two brothers who live on, and then leave, the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota. From 1907, when they are twelve to 1924 when they are living in Paris, after serving in France during World War I, they travel far from their home but remain visionary painters and storiers. Come to the Research Library on Oct. 18, 1:30-3 pm. FREE.
On Saturday, October 11, Major Jason Warren lectures about his book, Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675-1676. Why and how did the Connecticut colony survive King Philip's War without heavy involvement in the fighting? Dr. Warren lectures at 1:30 pm in the Auditorium. You don't have to pay admission to the Museum for the lecture, which has costs $10, but you might want to because there is a 17th century encampment happening that day on the Farmstead. Call (800) 411-9671 or email rsvp@pequotmuseum.org to register.
The second author is Gerald Vizenor (White Earth Nation of the Anishinaabeg). He is an award winning well-known and respected writer who is professor emeritus of American Studies at Berkeley. His newest historical novel, Blue Ravens, was published this year by Wesleyan Press which is sponsoring his visit here.
"Aloysius Hudon Beaulieu created marvelous blue ravens that stormy summer." That's the first sentence of the story of two brothers who live on, and then leave, the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota. From 1907, when they are twelve to 1924 when they are living in Paris, after serving in France during World War I, they travel far from their home but remain visionary painters and storiers. Come to the Research Library on Oct. 18, 1:30-3 pm. FREE.
Thursday, September 11, 2014
Gerald Vizenor
We are pleased that Gerald Vizenor (White Earth Nation of the Anishinaabeg) is visiting the Research Library on Saturday, October 18, 2014. He reads from, and talks about, his new novel, Blue Ravens, recently published by Wesleyan University Press which is supporting, in part, his visit here.
Join us to hear from one of the most well-known and respected Native writers of our time.
1:30-3 pm in the Research Library. FREE! Call 860-396-6897 or email reference@pequotmuseum.org for more information.
Friday, August 15, 2014
Dawnland Voices
Dawnland Voices: An
Anthology of Indigenous Writing from New England. Siobhan Senier, editor. Lincoln,
NE: University of Nebraska, 2014.
Mi’kmaq, Maliseet, Passamaquoddy,
Penobscot, Abenaki, Nipmuc, Wampanoag, Narragansett, Mohegan, and Schaghticoke voices,
past and present, are collected in this hefty paperback. We turned first to the
Schaghticoke section to read the essays by Trudie Lamb Richmond, former director
of Public Programming here at the Museum, and who is, in the words of a
colleague, “a living legend.” The writings gathered together here highlight the
rich literary traditions of Native New England.
Friday, August 1, 2014
Major Jason W. Warren
What was Connecticut's role in King Philip's War? Why did the colony remain unscathed when many towns in Rhode Island and Massachusetts were destroyed? Find out the answers on October 11, 2014, when Major Jason W. Warren visits the Research Library. Major Warren lectures at 1:30 pm and signs books afterwards. Buy a copy of the compelling book at the Gift Shop!
$10 for the lecture; Museum admission is not required. Please call (800) 411-9671 or email rsvp@pequotmuseum.org to register.
Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675–1676
Volume 45 in the Campaigns and Commanders Series published by the University of Oklahoma Press, 2014.
$10 for the lecture; Museum admission is not required. Please call (800) 411-9671 or email rsvp@pequotmuseum.org to register.
Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675–1676
Volume 45 in the Campaigns and Commanders Series published by the University of Oklahoma Press, 2014.
Major Jason W. Warren, U.S. Army, received his doctorate in history from Ohio State University and served as an Assistant Professor of history at West Point. He is a strategist at the Army War College. Major Warren conducted research at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum & Research Center about the participation of Pequot and Mohegan forces in King Philip's War.
Book cover and photo courtesy of the University of Oklahoma Press.
Saturday, July 26, 2014
American Indian Youth Literature Award Ceremony
On June 29, the American Indian Library Association hosted the
2014 American Indian Youth Literature Award ceremony at ALA in Las Vegas. The
audience cheered the winners and laughed with multiple award-winning author Tim Tingle, whose key note speech was filled with humor and emotion.
Click here to go to Tu Books site with more photos of the ceremony. Tu Books, an Imprint of Lee and Low Books, published the Young Adult award winning book, Killer of Enemies, by Joseph Bruchac (Abenaki).
Friday, July 18, 2014
Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675-1676
Saturday, Oct. 11, 1:30-4:30 pm
Meet the Author: Major Jason Warren
Learn about King Philip’s War through a modern
military lens in this intriguing presentation by U.S. Army Major (Dr.) Jason
Warren about his book, Connecticut
Unscathed: Victory in the Great Narragansett War, 1675-1676. King Philip’s
War, one of the bloodiest conflicts in American history, saw many towns in
Rhode Island and Massachusetts destroyed, while Connecticut remained unscathed. The book refocuses Connecticut’s role
in the war and discusses how the colony achieved success by establishing a
policy of moderation towards the Native groups living within its borders. Major
Warren lectures at 1:30, and signs books, 2:30-4:30, in the Research Library.
$10 for lecture; Museum admission is not required. To register, call (800)
411-9671 or email rsvp@pequotmuseum.org by Oct. 9.
Gerald Vizenor

Gerald Vizenor
Saturday, October 18, 2014
1:30-3 pm
In the Research Library
Gerald
Vizenor, prolific novelist, poet, literary critic, and citizen of the White
Earth Nation of the Anishinaabeg in Minnesota, reads from and signs copies of
his new novel, Blue Ravens. Vizenor retells
his uncles’ stories of growing up on the White Earth Reservation, where their
family was known for operating tribal newspapers. He follows their saga as
soldiers, fighting on the battlefields of Château-Thierry, Montbréhain, and
Bois de Fays, during WWI. After their service, his uncles return to the White
Earth Reservation, only to find that they are captives in their own land.
Eventually, they leave again, going to Paris to pursue their creative
dreams.
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Gerald Vizenor in Paris |
Gerald Vizenor
is Professor Emeritus of American Studies at the University of California,
Berkeley. His novel Griever: An American Monkey King in China, won the
American Book Award and the New York Fiction Collective Award. He was the
primary author of the White Earth Nation's newly ratified constitution. Mr. Vizenor's appearance at the Mashantucket Pequot Museum is supported in part by the Wesleyan University Press, publisher of Blue Ravens.
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
2 New Pathfinders Books
7th Generation, an imprint of Book Publishing
Company in Summertown, Tennessee, has added two new titles in their high
interest, quick-read series, Pathfinders.
Tim Tingle (Choctaw) continues Danny
Blackgoat’s story in the second of three books about the Navajo teenager taken
prisoner during the Long Walk of 1864. Look for Danny Blackgoat: Rugged Road to
Freedom and you will want go back and read the first book, Danny Blackgoat,
Navajo Prisoner which was named the 2014 American Indian Youth Literature Award
Honor Book for Middle School.
Gary Robinson writes about contemporary American Indian boys
exploring their heritage through sports, canoe trips, powwows, and more. His
latest book is Son Who Returns. Fifteen
year old Mark Centeno spends the summer with his Chumash grandmother: “I had attended
one of the largest gatherings of Native people in the country. And I had danced
the Men’s Traditional style like my grandfather before me.”
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
Russ Cohen
Russell A. Cohen stopped by the Research Library last
fall and noticed that we did not have a copy of his book, Wild Plants I Have Known…and Eaten, in our reference collection. He
promptly gave us a copy and generously included a large handful of shelled shagbark
hickory nuts and some delicious cookies made with hickory nuts. The cookies
disappeared the next morning at a staff meeting, but we saved the nuts and shared
them during the Native Cooking demonstration on the Farmstead. We all now know
how hard it is to crack and pick the meat out of shagbark hickory nuts.
Russ, who is Rivers Advocate, Division of
Ecological Restoration, Department of Fish and Game, Commonwealth of Massachusetts,
is coming the Museum on Wednesday, April 23. At 11:30-12:15 pm, he talks about
the food we can find in the spring. From 1-2 pm, he talks about finding and
preparing summer and fall foods. Maybe you will be able to "shop" in the fields and forests this spring and summer.
His talks are part of our Earth Week celebration
and are free with Museum admission and free to Museum members. If you have ever wanted to forage for food,
this is a wonderful opportunity to learn about eating wild plants and to meet an engaging forager.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
John Eliot
Want
to know more about John Eliot and the influence of the first bible printed in
any language in America? The Museum’s copy of the second edition (1685) of the Eliot Bible is on display in the
Research Library, Wed.-Sat., 1-5 pm, through April 26, 2014. In addition to the
Bible, we have a small display of works about John Eliot, including a handful
of theses devoted to him, and we have many microfilms of historical documents including: A brief
narrative of the progress of the gospel amongst the Indians in New-England, in
the year 1670, written by John Eliot. London: Printed for J. Allen, 1671.
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Eliot Bible |
Friday, February 28, 2014
Eliot Bible on Display
Saturday, Mar. 1-Saturday, Apr. 26, 1-5 pm
Eliot Bible on Display in the Research Library
Here’s a rare opportunity to see our second edition of the Eliot Indian Bible, which was printed in 1685, and combines both the Old and New Testament in one volume. Missionary John Eliot translated the Old and New Testaments into the Natick dialect of the Massachusetts language by taking the phonetic form of the Algonkian/Massachusetts language and using the English (Roman) alphabet to convey the words. His translation was aided immensely by Native preacher and Harvard student Job Nesutan, and the printing was made possible by the assistance of James Printer, a Nipmuc printer’s apprentice. The Bible’s legacy represents a complex history of cultural interaction involving literacy education, religious conversion, and challenges to Native oral tradition. Free.
Saturday, Mar. 1, 1-3 pm
A Conversation
about America’s Oldest Bible
Join a conversation in the Research Library about the Eliot
Bible with two of the nation’s leading scholars on the intersection of Indians,
language, and religion. Jessie Little Doe Baird, Wampanoag
Language Reclamation Project founder and director, vice-chairwoman of the
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe, and MacArthur Foundation Genius Award recipient
presents with Brown University history professor Linford Fisher, author of The
Indian Great Awakening. The discussion is in War Theater I and is free with Museum admission, free to Museum
members. Plan to visit the Research Library after the talk to view the Bible.
Saturday, February 15, 2014
2014 American Indian Youth Literature Awards
2014 American Indian Youth Literature Awards
The American Indian Library Association is pleased to
announce the 2014 American Indian Youth Literature Award winners. The awards
were created to identify and honor the very best writing and illustrations by
and about American Indians, Alaska Natives, Canadian First Nations, and Native
Hawaiians. The winning and honor
titles convey the past and present of the American Indian experience and are given in three
categories—Picture Book, Middle School and Young Adult.
Picture Book
Award Winner:
Caribou Song:
Atihko Nikamon/Ateek Oonagamoon
Tomson Highway, author
Atihko Nikamon/Ateek Oonagamoon
Tomson Highway, author
John Rombough,
illustrator
Fifth House, 2012
Middle School
Award Winner:
How I Became a Ghost: A
Choctaw Trail of Tears Story
Tim Tingle
The Roadrunner Press,
2013
Middle School
Honor Book:
Honor Book:
Danny Blackgoat, Navajo
Prisoner
Tim Tingle
7th Generation, 2013
Young Adult
Award Winner:
Killer of Enemies
Joseph Bruchac
Tu Books, 2013
Young Adult
Honor Book:
If I Ever Get Out of
Here
Eric Gansworth
Arthur A. Levine Books,
2013
Friday, February 7, 2014
Rachel Sayet
Moshup: Enduring Aquinnah Wampanoag
Stories
Fortunately the
snow held off on Saturday, January 25, when Rachel Sayet gave an excellent talk
based her extensive research about Moshup which culminated in her Master’s
thesis from Harvard University Extension.
As a young girl living at Mohegan, Rachel learned traditional stories of
giants and little people from her elders. The giant, Moshup, is always
connected to the land and sea of southern New England. Mohegan and Pequot
people as well as Aquinnah and Mashpee Wampanoags have many stories about
Moshup which have been passed down for hundreds of years. In the 1920s,
Rachel’s great-aunt Gladys Tantaquidgeon began recording Moshup stories among
the Aquinnah of Martha’s Vineyard. Rachel demonstrated that while many
different people have recorded Moshup stories, each from a unique perspective
and for different purposes, these stories have always connected the Aquinnah
Wampanoag people to the landscape, thereby reinforcing sovereignty for their
nation and ensuring their survival. Rachel’s engaging presentation was well
received by an interested and thoughtful audience in the Research Library.