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Friday, October 29, 2010

Preliminary Report on Abenaki Petition for Tribal Recognition - [Exhibits]: March 12, 2002: Exhibit 3 Continued:

Census Reports Volume 1
Twelfth Census of the United States
Taken in the year 1900.
Printed 1901
Sex, General Nativity, and Color Page 561
Table 19. White, Negro and Indian Population
By Counties: 1880 to 1900 Continued.
1920 Fourteenth Census of the United States
Taken in the year 1920.
Volume III
Printed 1922
Page 1049
Composition and Characteristics
Table 5. Population 21 Years of Age and Over
By Sex, Class of Population,
and Citizenship, for the State of Vermont.
1930 Federal Census
FIfteenth Census of the United States
POPULATION VOLUME III, Part 2.
M to W
Printed 1932
Page 1131 Composition and Characteristics
Table 16. Composition of the Population, For Incorporated Places of 2,5000 to 10,000: 1930.
Table 17. Indians, Chinese, and Japanese, 1910 to 1930, and Mexicans, 1930, For Counties.
Sixteenth Census of the United States: 1940
POPULATION Volume II
Part 7 U to W
Printed 1943
Page 90 Table 6.
Minor Races, by Nativity and Sex,
For the State, Urban and Rural, 1910 to 1940.
Seventeenth Decennial Census of Population: 1950
Part 45 Vermont
Printed 1952
Page 45-14 Vermont
Table 13.
Table 14.
Page 45-47 General Characteristics
Table 46. Income in 1949
Table 47. Indians, Japanese, and Chinese, By Sex, For Selected Counties and Cities: 1950
The Eighteenth Decennial Census of the United States
Census of Population: 1960
Volume 1
Characteristics of the Population
Part 47
Vermont
Printed in (Early to Mid March-May) 1961
Page 47-13 Vermont
General Population Characteristics
Table 15. Census: 1960
Page 47-38 Vermont
Table 28. Census 1960
1970: Census of Population
Volume 1 Characteristics of the Population
Part 47 Vermont
Issued January 1973
Table 34. Race by sex, for Counties: 1970 Census.
General Population Characteristics
Page 47-61 Vermont
Table 38. General Characteristics of the Rural Population for County: 1970
1980 Census of Population and Housing: Vermont
Issued August 1982
Page 47-1 Vermont
Table 1. Summary of General Population Charastics: 1980
Page 47-2 Vermont
Table 1: Summary of General Population Characteristics: 1980 (continued)
Page 47-3 Vermont
Table 1. Summary of General Population Characteristics: 1980 (continued)
Page 47-4 Vermont
Table 1. Summary of General Population Characteristics: 1980 (continued)
1990 Census of Population
General Population Characteristics
Vermont
Issued June 1992
Page 09 Vermont
General Population Characteristics
Table 5. Race and Hispanic Origin: 1990
Page 10 Vermont
General Population Characteristics
Table 5. Race and Hispanic Origin: 1990 (continued)

NOTE: These are the Federal Census Records from 1860 to 1990. ANYONE can claim on the Census, that they are "Abenaki" or "Indian" WITHOUT ANY GENEALOGICAL EVIDENCE HAVING TO BE SUBMITTED BY THAT PERSON, TO SUBSTANTIATE those CLAIMS of those that SELF-IDENTIFY as "BEING ABENAKI", "NATIVE AMERICAN," OR "INDIAN."
Subsequently, the "JUMP" in the Federal Census Records for Vermont Counties, in those that SELF-IDENTIFIED as to their ALLEGEDLY BEING ABENAKIS/ INDIANS. The more people who claim to be Indians, per county, the MORE Federal Monies and Grants these Incorporations can possibly obtain, and the distorted "ILLUSION" of their representing "Abenaki Tribes" or "Abenaki Communities."

Preliminary Report on Abenaki Petition for Tribal Recognition - [Exhibits]: March 12, 2002: Exhibit 3 Continued:

Ninth Census
The Statistics of the Population of the United States,
embracing The Tables of Race, Nationality, Sex,
Selected Ages, and Occupations.
To which are added
The Statistics of School Attendence and Illiteracy, of Schools, Libraries, Newspapers and Periodicals, Churches, Pauperism and Crime, and of Areas, Families, and Dwellings.
COMPILED
From the Original Returns of the Ninth Census
June 01, 1870
Printed in 1872
Page 68
Population By Counties 1790-1870
Table II. State of Vermont
Continued.
Page 277
Population of Civil Divisions Less Thank Counties.
Table III. State of Vermont.
Department of the Interior
The Census Office
Report on Indians Taxed and Indians Not Taxed
in the United States (except Alaska)
at the Eleventh Census: 1890
Printed 1894
Page 23 Introduction
Census of 1880
Page 24 Report of Indians Taxed and Not Taxed.
Sex of the Civilized Indian Population,
with General Nativity, 1880-Continued.
Page 25
INTRODUCTION
Indians, Census of 1890 (Alaska excepted).
Page 26 Report o Indians Taxed and Not Taxed.
Indians, Census of 1890 (Alaska excepted) - Continued
Page 28 Report on Indians Taxed and Not Taxed.
Indians who are citizens of the United States.
Civilized Indians OFF RESERVATIONS, taxed, at Census of 1890, 1880,1870, and 1860.
Page 602
VERMONT
The civilized (self-supporting) Indians of Vermont, counted in the general census, number 34 (23 males and 11 females), and are distributed as follows:
Chittenden County: 8
Essex County: 13
Windsor County: 8
other counties (3 or less in each): 5.

Preliminary Report on Abenaki Petition for Tribal Recognition - [Exhibits]: March 12, 2002: Exhibit 3:

Exhibit 3
Summary of Indian Population in Vermont
as shown in Federal Census Reports
Notice that in Franklin County, Vermont in 1910 there are only 5 Native People's indicated. None in 1920. Only 3 in 1930. None in 1940 and 1950. One Indian in 1960, 9 Indians in 1970. Ten years later....in the 1980 Federal Census(after the group of people INCORPORATE in 1976 as the St. Francis/ Sokoki Abenaki - Abenaki Selp Help Association) all of a sudden in Franklin County, Vermont.....there are 422 alleged and reinvented "Abenaki Indians." In 1990, there are 584 self-identifying "Indians."
In other Vermont Counties, there is also the same dynamic of a seemingly increase in self-identifying "Indians" such as in Chittenden County, VT per the 1950-1960-1970-1980-1990 Federal Census. Notice that Arthur "Bill" William Seymore (including the Phillips Family) and other such families, etc come geographically FROM the Burlington, Chittenden County, Vermont area, BEFORE 1990.
Population of the United States
in
1860;
Compiled from
the original returns of the 8th Census
under the direction of
the Secretary of the Interior
By Joseph C.G. Kennedy
1864
Page 01
Table No. 1 Population By Age and Sex.
White.
Free Colored.
Indian
(Chittenden County, Vermont)
Page 02 (493)
Table No. 1 Population By Age and Sex.
Page 03 (494)
State of Vermont
Table No. 2 Population By Color and Condition
Page 04 (498)
State of Vermont
Table 04 Population,Native and Foreign, By Counties

Preliminary Report on Abenaki Petition for Tribal Recognition - [Exhibits]: March 12, 2002: Exhibit 2 - Continued:

WE HAVE NOT VANISHED
Eastern Indians of the United States
By
Alfred Tamarin
Illustrated with Photographs
Follett Publishing Company, Chicago
1974
Photo Credits
Text Copyright © 1974 by Alfred Tamarin. Illustrations © 1974 by Follett Publishing Company, a division of Follett Corporation. All rights reserved.
Second Printing
~
Contents 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Page 08
Acknowledgments
(continued)

Page 10 FORWARD
Page 11 PREFACE

Page 12 PREFACE (continued)
Page 13 OHNGWAYHOHWAY
People of the Land
Page 42 New Hampshire
PENNACOOK
"at the bottom of the hill"
....language family, linked intimately to the Penobscot, the Passamaquoddy, and the Malecite Indians nearby. In the seventeenth century, after several bloody encounters with settlers from Europe, most of the original Pennacook Indians of New Hampshire abandoned their homes and joined communities in Canada. Some wandered westward into the valley of the upper Hudson River, where they settled for a while.
New Hampshire has no special reservation lands for Indians, and no speical governmental agency exists to look after them and their needs.
Page 43 VERMONT
Vermont is the home of over 200 American Indians, probably from tribes throughout the East as well as the rest of the country. There are no official tribal groupings registered in the state and no state agency concerned with Indian affairs.
Vermont's modern Indian citizens are not descended from the State's original inhabitants. Before the area was settled by Europeans, Indians from surrounding states made their homes in the Vermont hills, and valleys. Abnakis from Maine settled along one of the eastern rivers. Bands of Mahicans from New York state hunted in the southwestern and western sections and probably set up temporary settlements. The eastern edges of Vermont were occupied by Pennacook from.....
Page 44 Vermont
....New Hampshire and the southern parts by Indians from Massachusetts.
The 229 Indians listed in Vermont in 1970 represent a fourfold increase since 1960 and a sixfold increase since 1930. In 1900 only five Indians were listed in the state's population. Three-quarters of the Vermont Indians live in rural areas.
Page 45 Rhode Island
Page 82 New York
(lower section)
A few other Algonquian groups live along the Hudson River and in the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. They do not occupy reservation land nor.....
Page 83 New York (continued)
Illustration of Poospatuck Indian spearing eels at mouth of Mystic Creek, Long Island.
Page 84 New York (continued)
....receive special services from the state or federal governments. Near Lake George is a community of about twenty-five Abnakis, or Wabankis, the "people of the sunrise," who at one time lived in New England. A few of these Algonquians still speak their native language.
Page 85 New Jersey

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