INHCC would like to honor the memory of member, Mary Ellen Lepionka, who passed away in October 2024. She contacted us (INHCC) in 2021, when she introduced herself and the research work that she h…| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
Retracing Footsteps: Hannah Dustin and the Abenaki is a documentary that reexamines Hannah Dustin’s story from an Indigenous perspective, addressing themes of colonization and justice. Commun…| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
By Elliott Lelaure, UNH History Program Graduate Student Located near Tamworth at the eastern end of the Wobanadenok’s (White Mountains) Sandwich range, Mount Chocorua is widely known among Granite…| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
By Jennifer Carr, Interim Executive Director for the American Independence Museum Detail view of one of the new gardens (Carr 2024) This summer the American Independence Museum (AIM) in Exeter, NH …| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
Once known to the Pennacook Abenaki as Cocheco (meaning “place of the rapid current”) and known to early English colonists as the Cocheco Plantation, Dover New Hampshire is a city familiar with Major Richard Waldron. Many streets, buildings, and civic properties bear his name. In 1698, Waldron was executed by the Pennacooks in an event […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
How do we achieve true energy justice? That was one of the many questions that Dartmouth students Megan Hagge, Anna Chabica, Jacob Garland, and Nitin Venkatdas explored as part of a course on energy and the environment taken in the spring of 2023. This video, produced in collaboration with Paul and Denise Pouliot, head speakers […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
Editor’s Note: This is one of a series of blog posts written by students in Professor Martin’s NAIS 400: Introduction to Native American and Indigenous Studies at the University of New Hampshire. To learn more about the Native American and Indigenous Studies minor, visit https://cola.unh.edu/interdisciplinary-studies/program/minor/native-american-indigenous-studies By Andrew “Dewey” Bell ‘24 The New Hampshire climate ranges […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
by Ashley Carnes With the grant from the National Trust for Historic Preservation, Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective has partnered with Film Unbound and Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook-Abenaki People to create an augmented reality app called Homelands. The app developers worked with three local partner sites: Strawbery Banke Museum in Portsmouth, NH, the Seacoast […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
By Anne Jennison & Hunter Stetz Adapted from NH Historical Marker Application from the Indigenous NH Collaborative Collective A new historical marker sponsored by INHCC and the Cowasuck Band of the Pennacook-Abenaki People from a grant funded by the American Council for Learned Societies has been installed by N.H. Division of Historical Resources. This New Hampshire Historical Highway Marker clarifies the […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective
By Anne Jennison Adapted from NH Historical Marker Application from the Indigenous NH Collaborative Collective For several decades after the arrival of the first English colonists in Massachusetts in 1620, the Wampanoag sachem (leader), Massasoit, maintained peace with the English through diplomacy.1 After Massasoit passed away in 1661, his son Pometacomet, known to the English […]| Indigenous New Hampshire Collaborative Collective