tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post6868865936019594038..comments2024-03-15T12:42:11.939-04:00Comments on Noblemania: The Indigenous people of Montgomery County, MarylandMarc Tyler Noblemanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10732005290440645718noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post-85994168345485440372021-05-25T21:44:42.597-04:002021-05-25T21:44:42.597-04:00Thanks for your understanding. Here is link to mor...Thanks for your understanding. Here is link to more information on DC’s Indigenous people. http://yamaye-mike.blogspot.com/2021/04/indigenous-dc-hidden-history.html?m=1Yamaye-mike.blogspot.comhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04767360853086257210noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post-33949876539604551722021-05-25T08:50:29.994-04:002021-05-25T08:50:29.994-04:00Mike, thank you for taking the time to contribute ...Mike, thank you for taking the time to contribute here, and in such detail. Greatly appreciated!Marc Tyler Noblemanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10732005290440645718noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post-61293413693122061412021-05-25T04:34:26.291-04:002021-05-25T04:34:26.291-04:00Sorry about the duplications shown here. Segments ...Sorry about the duplications shown here. Segments shown here were deleted during the edit... But showed up anyway. Hope you can make sense of it.Mike Auldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17513493493379446238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post-6988503142582757872021-05-25T04:26:29.783-04:002021-05-25T04:26:29.783-04:00You may want to check out the Maryland Government’...You may want to check out the Maryland Government’s site with some locations of its Indigenous people via the link below.<br /> The Nacotchtank was one of three major tribes in Washington DC’s Federal City’s boundary stones layout which was carved out of Maryland and Virginia “Indian’s” territories. The remaing nations are the Powhatan Paramountcy’s Pamunkey and Tauxenent or Dogue. You may want to check out the Maryland Government’s site on the locations of its Indigenous people via the link below.<br /> <br />The Nacotchtank was one of three major tribes in Washington DC’s Federal City’s boundaries which was carved out of Maryland and Virginia “Indian’s” territories. The remaining nations/“tribes” are the Powhatan Paramountcy’s Pamunkey and Tauxenent or Dogue. <br /><br />Prince Georges was shared by the Pamunkey, the leading nation in Powhatan’s Paramountcy, the county had other tribes within its boundaries such as a small scattering of the original Piscataway. These original Algonquian Piscataway were forced out of Maryland by 1711 and went back north from where they had been forced south to the Chesapeake shore in the 1300s because of the Little Ice Age which began in the mid 1200 to the 1700s. It is unclear who the contemporary Piscataway are, since they claim that they returned to Southern Maryland as Iroquoian.<br /><br />As for the Nacotchtank of SE Washington DC, remnants from their destroyed town in Anacostia, went west (into Virginia), south into Southern Maryland to join a number of tribes in that highly populated Indigenous area), and north towards Ohio (in 1685 after stopping on the Tauxenent’s Roosevelt Island). This event occurred after the bombardment by the Jamestown colonists (with the help of the Patawomeck of Stafford County, VA).<br /><br />Montgomery County is more likely Iroquoian <br /> Susquehannock or possibly Algonquian Delaware. The Susquehannock were considered tall warriors who, upon English encroachment were pushed north into Pennsylvania and New York.<br /><br />https://msa.maryland.gov/msa/mdmanual/01glance/native/html/01native.htmlMike Auldhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17513493493379446238noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6611875170009784219.post-72472619860228456862021-04-23T10:55:47.038-04:002021-04-23T10:55:47.038-04:00Thanks for sharing this. I've been a long-time...Thanks for sharing this. I've been a long-time Montgomery County resident, and it's great to learn about the folks who resided here.Gwenhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01347717787089185396noreply@blogger.com