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Niverville in Columbia County, New York — The American Northeast (Mid-Atlantic)
 

Mohican Homelands

 
 
Mohican Homelands Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Steve Stoessel, July 22, 2023
1. Mohican Homelands Marker
Inscription.
The Albany-Hudson Electric Trail crosses the ancestral lands of the Muhheconneok, "People of the Waters that are Never Still," Native Americans whose name refers to the tidal Hudson River. Called Mahicans by early Dutch settlers and Mohicans by the English, they inhabited the upper Hudson Valley and parts of western Massachusetts and Connecticut until the American Revolution.

Mohicans lived in settlements along streams, with families sharing bark-covered wigwams. They grew crops of corn, squash, and beans in fertile river lowlands and hunted deer and small game and gathered plants in forests and meadows. Mohicans also relied on fish from the valley's many waterways.

European arrival in the Hudson Valley in the early 1600s presented opportunities - and great challenges - for the Mohicans. Dutch traders offered valuable goods such as metal tools and kettles, blankets, and firearms in exchange for beaver pelts and the furs of other animals. They also brought with them deadly diseases that killed more than half the Mohicans and other Native Americans in the region. By the mid-1700s, conflict with other Native Americans and colonists, the loss of land, and missionary activity saw many Mohicans move to Stockbridge, a "praying town" in Massachusetts.

After the Revolutionary War, the Mohicans resettled in central
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New York in the hopes of reestablishing their communities, but by the 1820s and 1830s they had made their way to Wisconsin under the federal Indian removal policy. There they joined with Munsees, people originally from the lower Hudson Valley. Today, the federally recognized Stockbridge-Munsee Community continues to assert their cultural ties to New York's Hudson Valley.

(right inset)
Artifacts, left to right
PROJECTILE POINT
Archaeologists call this a Madison projectile point, on arrowhead used by regional Native Americans from about 1350 until Europeans arrived in the early 1600s. This example is made of chert, a flint-like stone prized for making tools and weapons

TRADE BEAD
Early Europeans traded colorful beads such as this example from the late 1600s recovered from a Mohican site in the upper Hudson Valley. Beads made from shell called wampum, were used by natives and Europeans as a medium of exchange in the trade for furs.

POTTERY SHARDS
The Mohicans mode clay pottery recovered fragments of which are shown here, to store and cook their staple foods, which included meat com squash, and beans.
Source (for all artifacts) Hartgen Archaeological Associates Inc.

(photos, top to bottom)

"THE GRANDFATHER"
Contemporary artist Len Tantillo painted this early 1600s
Mohican Homelands Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Steve Stoessel, July 22, 2023
2. Mohican Homelands Marker
scene of a tribal elder retelling a story to a captivated audience of a Mohican village on the Hudson River near present-day Castleton, New York. Source: Len Tantillo

ETOWAUKAUM
Mohican leader Etowaukaum visited England in 1710 to meet with Queen Anne to warn her of rising tensions with the French and their Indian allies. During the visit, Dutch artist Jan Verst painted this portrait of Etowaukaum. Source: Library and Archives Canada.

ARTIFACT REPATRIATION
An archaeologist and members of the Stockbridge-Musee Community examine artifacts recovered from a Mohican site in the Hudson River Valley. Source: Stockbridge-Munsee Community.
 
Erected by Empire State Trail.
 
Topics. This historical marker is listed in this topic list: Native Americans.
 
Location. 42° 26.535′ N, 73° 38.884′ W. Marker is in Niverville, New York, in Columbia County. Marker is on Albany-Hudson Electric Trail south of Sutherland Road, on the right when traveling south. Marker is not accessible by car. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Valatie NY 12184, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies. Electric Park (approx. 0.7 miles away); The Empire State Trail (approx. 0.9 miles away); The Valatie Kill (approx. 1.4 miles away); a
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different marker also named The Valatie Kill (approx. 1.6 miles away); J. Miller House (approx. 2 miles away); Van Alstyne House (approx. 2.2 miles away); Quackenboss Tavern (approx. 2.2 miles away); G.W. Bulkley House (approx. 2.3 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Niverville.
 
Also see . . .  Mohicans (Wikipedia). (Submitted on August 9, 2023, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York.)
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on August 17, 2023. It was originally submitted on August 9, 2023, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York. This page has been viewed 94 times since then and 45 times this year. Photos:   1, 2. submitted on August 9, 2023, by Steve Stoessel of Niskayuna, New York. • Andrew Ruppenstein was the editor who published this page.

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Apr. 29, 2024