I find Adjunct Professor Meli's certainty that this is a burial site disturbing. Read how, in the course of a couple of paragraphs that certainty becomes an established fact. Comments on this topic are most welcome, especially from anyone who knows Meli, or has information about the site.
"...“I’ve never seen anything like this,” said William S. Simmons, a Brown University professor, chair of the anthropology department and expert in New England tribal folklore. “These are definitely human construction. Whoever built these built them carefully. ... One thing you can say about it for sure is that it’s old.”
Frederick F. Meli, an adjunct professor in anthropology at the University of Rhode Island, has toured the area four times. He said he found more cairns in the surrounding woods. He said he is certain they mark a burial ground.
“That type of burial mound is consistent with peoples in this area,” he said of the burial styles of New England’s native tribes.
THE ACADEMICS were brought to the woodland site by Wilfred Greene, chief of the Seaconke Wampanoags, whose tribal name is Eagle Heart. Greene and his 250-member tribe have appointed themselves the spiritual caretakers of the site in hope that the rediscovered burial ground might help the rebirth of their tribe...."
This really bother me, so I offer Meli a challenge: instead of lecturing innocent Indians and reporters of the Providence Journal, come over to this blog and explain yourself to the real rock-pile community. How do you know this is a burial ground? What research or scholarship do you have to back up your claim? What is the basis for your expertise?
Peter: Is this a new link to a new article or the one you already posted. I also found this searching the name Nipsachuk: http://www.mawrey.com/inman.htm
ReplyDeleteI should have added to the previous comment: If you scroll down to the part that says “Agreement between the Town of Providence and Edward Inman. ------“
ReplyDeleteThere’s mention of “a heape of stones set for a southwesterne cornner boundes,” and “wcst to a low Rock which is a southwesterne cornner bound; and from ye said Rock to range north to a bigg Rock standing in Pautuckett River, the which said Rock is a northwesterne cornner bound.”
There’s mentions of cedar swamps and even "an Indian field belonging to Philips men called Nipsachick."
And there’s a “the Keyes,(which) was a pine swamp or woods lieing on the eastern side of the eastern branch of Wanasquatucket river and about a mile and a half north of Stillwater; this branch was sometimes called the Nipsachuck river.”
Anyone have any idea why a swamp(or woods) was called the Keyes?
And the other result was: http://killinglyhistory.org/forum/viewtopic.php?p=437&sid=0eff7b83374662784d0f8bc4015cb00d
ReplyDeletewhich are inquiries from a year ago which ask "stone questions" of the Killingly Historical Society - with typical answers.