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Penobscot |
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| Original Text Source: - Northeast Wigwam -Penobscot | ||
| In the 19th century, much of the Penobscot traditional hunting lands was sold without their consent and they were forced to rely on other means of subsidence such as farming, basket making and canoe building at which they excelled. | ||
| What does Penobscot mean? | The name Penobscot comes from panawahpskek, "the
place of the white rocks," or "where the rocks widen." It is a word in the Penobscot language that
means "the place where the rocks open out."
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| What are Penobscot arts and crafts like? | Penobscot Indian artists are best known for
their beadwork and basket-weaving. Penobscot baskets were originally
made from birchbark, but over the past 200 years ash splint basketry
has become more popular with Penobscot artists. Penobscots and other
eastern Native Americans also crafted wampum out of white and purple
shell beads to use as regalia, currency, and commemoration of important
events. The designs and pictures
on Penobscot wampum often told a story or represented family affiliations.
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| Where do the Penobscot live? | The Penobscots themselves are original natives
of Maine. They still live there today, on a reservation at Indian Island
near Old Town.
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| What were Penobscot homes like? | The Penobscot villages were communal wigwams
covered with bark or woven mats, each village also having a larger
central town-house
for public gatherings. They were primarily an agricultural people who built their villages
on the shores of a river or stream. |
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| What was Penobscot clothing like? | Usually they wore a headband with a feather
in it or a pointed cap. Sometimes a chief or other important Penobscot
Indian would wear a headdress made of feathers pointing straight up from
a headband. The Penobscots did not paint their faces. Women wore their
hair loose or braided on top of their heads, and Penobscot men sometimes
wore their long hair in topknots. Penobscot Indians often wore special
cloaks with pointed hoods, moccasins on their feet, and nose rings. The
women wore long dresses with removable sleeves and the men wore breechcloths
with leather pant legs tied on. Here is a turn of the century (19th to
20th) clothing photo.
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What was their barter system like?
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Passamaquoddies and Penobscots traded furs
with the English and French. They traded the furs for goods and other supplies. Source: |
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What kinds of food did they eat and how did they get it?
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They fished in the Penobscot River and hunted
deer and moose, traditional activities Penobscots still cherish today
(though most hunters use guns now instead of arrows and spears). Penobscot
Indians also planted corn and beans, picked berries, and made maple syrup
from tree sap just as Maine people do today.
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What kinds of weapons or tools did they use to get their food?
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Penobscot hunters and warriors used bows
and arrows, spears, and heavy wooden clubs. Penobscot fishermen used
special pronged fishing spears and nets, not fishhooks.
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| What kinds of games did they play? | Snow snake was a popular Penobscot winter
game. The "snakes" were three to six feet long and carved from
wood. The game was played by sliding the snakes down a track in the snow
on a
hill. The snake that went the farthest won. The winner took all the snakes.Cat's
Cradle was another amusement. It is the same game that many of us learned
as children. A piece of sinew was tied end to end to form a loop. The
loop was threaded through and around the player's fingers to form a design.
The next player took the string in such a way as to form another design.
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| What kinds of stories do the Penobscot tell? | There are lots of traditional Penobscot legends
and fairy tales. Storytelling is very important to Penobscot Indian culture.
Here's one legend about why humans need the wind. Story
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What was their transportation like?
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The Penobscot tribe was well-known for their
birchbark canoes. Canoeing is still popular among Penobscots, though
few people handcraft their own canoe from birch bark anymore. When they
were
on dry land, the Penobscots usually just walked, though they did have
sleds and snowshoes to help them in the winter (they learned to make
those tools
from northern neighbors like the Cree Indians.)
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