WATCH OUR NTERVIEW WITH SOME OF THE
WOMEN AND GIRLS FROM THE MASHPEE WAMPANOAG TRIBE
WHO WE MET ON TUESDAY, JULY 30TH AT 1PM
AT THE CENTERVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY
THEN USE OUR RESEARCH BELOW TO CREATE NOTES
TO HELP US WRITE THE MAGAZINE ARTICLE
DIRECTIONS | Independent Research Guide
Interview with Girls from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe
WOMEN AND GIRLS FROM THE MASHPEE WAMPANOAG TRIBE
WHO WE MET ON TUESDAY, JULY 30TH AT 1PM
AT THE CENTERVILLE PUBLIC LIBRARY
THEN USE OUR RESEARCH BELOW TO CREATE NOTES
TO HELP US WRITE THE MAGAZINE ARTICLE
DIRECTIONS | Independent Research Guide
Interview with Girls from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe
1. READ the notes below about the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe and the women and girls (dancers!) who you will be meeting on Tuesday, July 30th.
2. REFLECT by jotting down your own notes and questions on a laptop, iPad or in a favorite notebook.
3. RESEARCH more about anything that interests you below (optional for now since we are short on time – but in the future we will do more of this together as part of our journalism coaching / workshops).
4. WRITE later this summer you will collaborate with other Nika V. “girl power journalists” on the Cape (virtually and/or in person) to write a story in our new magazine about these empowering and inspiring girls! Your coaches at Nika V. will help you to make a plan using your research and what you’ve learned from your interview.
Brief History of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe
- Mashpee (the original name is Marshpee) is located on Cape Cod and is surrounded by the towns of Falmouth, Sandwich and Barnstable
- The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe is 11,000 years old – and is one of only 3 tribes remaining in our country from the original 69 tribes from the Wampanoag Nations
- The other two remaining Wampanoag tribes are the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquinnah) on Martha’s Vineyard and the Herring Pond Tribe in Bourndale (just a few miles from the Sagamore and Bourne Bridges)
- The first visitors to the Mashpee Tribe’s land were the Vikings who came to Mashpee in the year 1004 (2024-1004 = 1,020 years ago!)
- The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe was controlled by English settlers for hundreds of years. These settlers unfairly took away a lot of the Tribe's freedom, many of their rights and much of their land.
- The culture of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe includes being kind and friendly. This tradition of hospitality helped colonists from England to settle into the Tribe's land.
- Today the Mashpee Indian population is very small – for example out of 100 people in Mashpee only 10 are from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe. As of 2015, there were about 3,200 citizens of Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe.
- Hunting, fishing, and planting have been a part of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe for thousands of years
- When the English came to their land, the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe began to trade fur, rope, timber, and sassafras (a plant used for medicine)
- The Mashpee Wampanoag men also got involved in whaling where they would be out to sea for a year at a time!
- Fishing in Mashpee is still very common with many rivers “loaded with herring during the spring months”
- Today, many Mashpee Natives work in construction/building and health care industries or they work for the tribe doing many different jobs
- The Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe works with the U.S. government to support health, education and other needs of the Tribe
- The leaders of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe make sure that the culture and social justice of the Tribe remain strong.
- Some of the titles of Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe leaders include
- The Chief and his Circle of advisors
- The Medicine Man
- Clan Mothers
The 103rd Mashpee Wampanoag Powwow : “Understanding the Ways of the Fire”
- The Mashpee Wampanoag Powwow is a 3-day event that takes place every year on the Cape in the town of Mashpee. Earlier this month (July 5-7) the 103rd event was held.
- At this event, the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe’s family and friends gather together to honor “The People of the First Light.”
- The Powwow celebrates Wampanoag culture, community, and traditions including competitions for drumming, singing, and dancing.
- At this festival there are also many tables where you can buy traditional food and crafts from the tribe. Some of the crafts include:
- Regalia – ceremonial clothing
- Painting
- Jewelry
- Woodwork
- Pottery / ceramics
- Leather goods
- Dolls / Toys
- Sculptures, carvings, pipes
- Traditional ceremonies and events are also held including fireball, the Sly Fox Mishoon Race, and the sunrise naming ceremony.
- The tribe gives prize money to dancers and drummers who compete during the Powwow weekend including the Wampanoag Powwow Princess Contest and the Little Miss Wampanoag Contest
- The girls who are visiting us today from Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe include:
- Ciara Hendricks: The 2024 Powwow Princess
- She won the annual competition to be honored with this title !!
- Brooklynne Ennes: A Celebrated “Fancy Dancer”
- Dictionary.com: Fancy Dancing is a fast Native American powwow dance that features jumping and twirling, with participants wearing bright colors and flying feathers and ribbons.
- Sherae Miranda: A Celebrated “Eastern Blanket Dancer”
- The blanket dance tells the story of a woman’s life, her coming of age and becoming a woman.
- This kind of dance is only celebrated in the Eastern region of our country.
Questions for Our Visitors from Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe
- Email us your questions and we will print them and bring to the event on Tuesday !!
- Or write your questions in a favorite notebook and bring to the event!
- We will also have small (free) NikaVika notebooks and pens available for you at the event!
- Our plan is to video the interview (we only include the first names of our journalists – or they may remain anonymous if they choose!).
- You may also just come and listen, learn and enjoy if you choose not to be a "journalist" (yet !)
- We will edit the video and post it on our website and include a link in the digital version of our magazine.
- Later in the summer – using the video – and our notes – we’ll gather together to write our magazine article about the girls who we met from the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe !!
- We will publish our magazine "as we go" -- digitally -- and then by the end of 2024 we will print our first “edition” of Nika V. which will include many more stories from various regions throughout Massachusetts (Cape & Islands, Boston, MetroWest, North Shore, South Shore, Western Mass) -- so think about other women and girls who have interesting stories to share / tell and we will work on meeting them!