Hello, my name is Zachary Dann. I am excited to be apart of the Spring 2015 internship team working with the Yale Indian Papers Project. I am a student at Central Connecticut State University majoring in history with a minor…
Last week I was given the opportunity to attend the speaker series “Interpreting Nipmuc” with Chief Holley at UMASS. It was fascinating listening to the Nipmuc peoples’ goals as a community moving into the future. I have spent so much…
While the lives of Native women in colonial New England were generally not well documented, occasionally enough of a story can be recovered from the shadows of the archives to provide some insight into the roles of Native women in…
On Thursday, February 12th, Chief Cheryll Holley of Nipmuc Nation will be speaking at UMASS/Amherst in a series titled “Interpreting Nipmuc.” Open to the general public, the talk will go from 2:30 pm-5:00 pm in room 112 of Dickinson Hall,…
Editor’s Note: One of the purposes of Op-Ed is to stimulate thoughts and conversations about Native New England through the varying materials within the New England Indian Papers Series electronic archives. Since the blog’s inception, project editors have written the…
My name is Kyle Armstrong, and I am a student at Central Connecticut State University studying History Secondary Education. I am excited to be working as an intern for the Yale Indian Papers Project and to finally discover just what…
Please join us in welcoming our colleague Dan Carpenter to Yale Wednesday, January 21, 2015 from 12:00-1:15 p.m. at the Institution for Social and Policy Studies, 77 Prospect Street, Room A002, New Haven, CT “Indigenous Representation by Petition: Transformations in Iroquois…