The original Vermonters : native inhabitants past and present /

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Haviland, William A
Other Authors: Power, Marjory W., 1930-
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Hanover, N.H. : Published for University of Vermont by University Press of New England, [1994], ©1994
Hanover, N.H. : c1994
Hanover, N.H. : [1994]
Edition:Rev., expanded ed
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Early Woodland Habitation Sites. Early Woodland Culture. The Middle Woodland Period and the Winooski Site. Other Middle Woodland Sites in the Winooski Intervale. Middle Woodland Sites Elsewhere in Vermont. The Late Woodland Period. The Skitchewaug Site and the Adoption of Horticulture. Other Connecticut Valley Sites. Horticulture in the Champlain Valley: The Donohue Site. Other Late Woodland Sites in the Champlain Valley. The St. Lawrence Iroquois and the "Iroquois Problem"
  • 5. Life in Vermont at the Dawn of Recorded History. The Western Abenakis and Their Neighbors. Western Abenaki Settlement and Subsistence. Technology. Western Abenaki Social Organization. Political Organization. Western Abenaki Life Cycle. Western Abenaki Worldview. Social Control in Western Abenaki Society. Roots of Abenaki Culture
  • 6. The European Takeover of Vermont: Two Hundred Years of Turmoil. Epidemics and Plague. The Fur Trade. The British Menace. The Abenaki-Iroquoian Wars. The Abenaki-British Wars. British Encroachment
  • The Allens and Usurpation by the New United States
  • 7. Survival and Renewal: The Last Two Hundred Years. The Continuing Abenaki Presence. The Survival of Abenaki Traditions. The Abenaki Renewal. The Abenakis Today
  • App. A. Lease to James Robertson, Swanton Falls (1765)
  • App. B. Odanak and Becancour Abenaki Band Council Resolution of 1976
  • App. C. Odanak and Becancour Abenaki Band Council Resolution of 1977
  • App. D. State of Vermont Executive Order of 1976
  • App. E. State of Vermont Executive Order of 1977
  • 1. Introduction. Native Peoples of Vermont. Linguistic Affiliations. The Environmental Setting. Chronology. Radiocarbon Dating. Archaeological Method. Ethnohistoric Method
  • 2. The Beckoning Country: Paleoindians Come to Vermont. Late Glacial Environments. The Reagen Site. Other Paleoindian Sites in Vermont. Paleoindians and the Late Glacial Environment. How Paleoindians Came to Vermont
  • 3. The Archaic: A New Way of Life Comes to Vermont. The Origin of Archaic Culture. Early Archaic Culture in Vermont. Middle Archaic Culture in Vermont. Late Archaic Culture in Vermont. Ketcham's Island and the Vergennes Archaic. Other Vergennes Archaic Sites. The Age of the Vergennes Archaic. The Origin and Significance of Ground Stone Tools. Linguistic Relationships. Evolution of the Vergennes Archaic. Glacial Kame Burials. The Archaic as a Way of Life
  • 4. The Woodland Period in Vermont: Variations on the Archaic Theme. The Early Woodland Period. The Boucher Site. Other Early Woodland Cemeteries
  • 1 Introduction. Native Peoples of Vermont. Linguistic Affiliations. The Environmental Setting. Chronology. Radiocarbon Dating. Archaeological Method. Ethnohistoric Method
  • 2. The Beckoning Country: Paleoindians Come to Vermont. Late Glacial Environments. The Reagen Site. Other Paleoindian Sites in Vermont. Paleoindians and the Late Glacial Environment. How Paleoindians Came to Vermont
  • 3. The Archaic: A New Way of Life Comes to Vermont. The Origin of Archaic Culture. Early Archaic Culture in Vermont. Middle Archaic Culture in Vermont. Late Archaic Culture in Vermont. Ketcham's Island and the Vergennes Archaic. Other Vergennes Archaic Sites. The Age of the Vergennes Archaic. The Origin and Significance of Ground Stone Tools. Linguistic Relationships. Evolution of the Vergennes Archaic. Glacial Kame Burials. The Archaic as a Way of Life
  • 4. The Woodland Period in Vermont: Variations on the Archaic Theme. The Early Woodland Period. The Boucher Site. Other Early Woodland Cemeteries. Early Woodland Habitation Sites. Early Woodland Culture. The Middle Woodland Period and the Winooski Site. Other Middle Woodland Sites in the Winooski Intervale. Middle Woodland Sites Elsewhere in Vermont. The Late Woodland Period. The Skitchewaug Site and the Adoption of Horticulture. Other Connecticut Valley Sites. Horticulture in the Champlain Valley: The Donohue Site. Other Late Woodland Sites in the Champlain Valley. The St. Lawrence Iroquois and the "Iroquois Problem"
  • 5. Life in Vermont at the Dawn of Recorded History. The Western Abenakis and Their Neighbors. Western Abenaki Settlement and Subsistence. Technology. Western Abenaki Social Organization. Political Organization. Western Abenaki Life Cycle. Western Abenaki Worldview. Social Control in Western Abenaki Society. Roots of Abenaki Culture
  • 6. The European Takeover of Vermont: Two Hundred Years of Turmoil. Epidemics and Plague. The Fur Trade. The British Menace. The Abenaki-Iroquoian Wars. The Abenaki-British Wars. British Encroachment. The Allens and Usurpation by the New United States
  • 7. Survival and Renewal: The Last Two Hundred Years. The Continuing Abenaki Presence. The Survival of Abenaki Traditions. The Abenaki Renewal. The Abenakis Today. App. A. Lease to James Robertson, Swanton Falls (1765)
  • App. B. Odanak and Becancour Abenaki Band Council Resolution of 1976
  • App. C. Odanak and Becancour Abenaki Band Council Resolution of 1977
  • App. D. State of Vermont Executive Order of 1976
  • App. E. State of Vermont Executive Order of 1977.