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Item | Title | Type | Subject | Creator | Publisher | Date | Place | Address | Description | |
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5226 | Champlain Society - Camp Pemetic - "View up Somes Sound from the Old Campground" |
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5114 | Hadlock Pond Brook in 1890 |
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| ...This is one of locations frequented by the Champlain Society. See item 9607 for view of members of the Champlain Society in this same location... | Description: ...This is one of locations frequented by the Champlain Society. See item 9607 for view of members of the Champlain Society in this same location... | ||
16578 | Asticou's Island Domain: Wabanaki Peoples at Mount Desert Island 1500-2000. |
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| Acadia National Park Ethnographic Overview and Assessment Volume 1 and Volume 2 This two-volume historical-ethnographic overview of Acadia National Park spans almost 500 years and covers a wide coastal stretch between Penobscot and Gouldsboro Bays – and sometimes much beyond. Such breadth of coverage is necessary in order to take in the park’s center piece on Mount Desert Island, plus Isle au Haut and Schoodic Peninsula, along with various land holding arrangements (including easements) on numerous offshore sea-islands in this area.1 The study explores the shifting but ongoing relationship between this habitat and Wabanaki peoples – a group of northeastern Algonquianspeaking ethnic groups or tribal nations today distinguished as the Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi'kmaq, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot. | Description: Acadia National Park Ethnographic Overview and Assessment Volume 1 and Volume 2 This two-volume historical-ethnographic overview of Acadia National Park spans almost 500 years and covers a wide coastal stretch between Penobscot and Gouldsboro Bays – and sometimes much beyond. Such breadth of coverage is necessary in order to take in the park’s center piece on Mount Desert Island, plus Isle au Haut and Schoodic Peninsula, along with various land holding arrangements (including easements) on numerous offshore sea-islands in this area.1 The study explores the shifting but ongoing relationship between this habitat and Wabanaki peoples – a group of northeastern Algonquianspeaking ethnic groups or tribal nations today distinguished as the Abenaki, Maliseet, Mi'kmaq, Passamaquoddy and Penobscot. [show more] File Attachments: wabanaki_peoples_vol1-optimized.pdf …Lescarbot 1609-1612, vol.3, pp25-26 16 Champlain (1618), vol. 2:329-31. 17 Champlain vol.1, p246. 18 Champlain vol.1, p.246. …Champlain 1922, vol.1, p.321. 62 Champlain 1922, vol.1, p.316. 63 Champlain 1922, vol.1, p.333. 64 Champlain 1922, vol., p.364. 65 Champlain 1922, vol.1 …Champlain 1922, vol.1, pp.395-96. 74 Champlain 1922, vol.1, p.436. 75 Champlain 1922, vol.1, p.436. …(American Philosophical Society. BP31.15d, #209.) wabanaki_peoples_vol2-optimized.pdf …Toronto: The Champlain Society. (Contains detailed account of 17th-century Mi kmaq culture. …The Works of Samuel de Champlain. Edited by H.P. Biggar. (6 vols). Toronto: The Champlain Society. …Toronto: The Champlain Society. …Toronto: The Champlain Society. 597 Annotated Reference List Lesourd, Philip. 2000. |