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Contribution to Passamaquoddy Folklore. The study of aboriginal folklore cannot reach its highest scientific value until some method is adopted by means of which an accurate record of the stories can be obtained and preserved.
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  1. Contribution to Passamaquoddy Folk-Lore!
  2. Satans Biggest Lie.
  3. Life These Days: With Family And Friends;
  4. Contribution to Passamaquoddy Folk-Lore by J. Walter Fewkes, Paperback | Barnes & Noble®;
  5. The Passamaquoddy Native American People and Songs.

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    Author J. Title Contribution to Passamaquoddy Folk-Lore. Format Paperback.

    Page:The Folk-Lore Journal Volume 3 1885.djvu/103

    Publisher Createspace Independent Publishing Platform. In the summer, they gathered more closely together on the coast and islands, and primarily harvested seafood, including marine mammals, mollusks, crustaceans, and fish.

    About This Item

    The Passamaquoddy were pushed off their original lands repeatedly by European settlers from the s. It has a land area of The population was at the census. Passamaquoddy have also lived on off-reservation trust lands in five Maine counties; these lands total almost four times the size of the reservations proper. They are located in northern and western Somerset County , northern Franklin County , northeastern Hancock County , western Washington County, and several locations in eastern and western Penobscot County. The total land area of these areas is As of the census, no residents were on these trust lands.

    The Passamaquoddy also live in Charlotte County, New Brunswick , Canada, where they have a chief and organized government. They maintain active land claims in Canada, but do not have legal status there as a First Nation. Some Passamaquoddy continue to seek the return of territory now within present-day St.

    Andrews, New Brunswick , which they claim as Qonasqamkuk , a Passamaquoddy ancestral capital and burial ground. The total Passamaquoddy population is around 3, people. About people, most if not all over the age of 50, speak the Malecite-Passamaquoddy language , shared other than minor differences in dialect with the neighboring and related Maliseet people. It belongs to the Algonquian branch of the Algic language family. The University of Maine published a comprehensive Passamaquoddy Dictionary in Another resource for the language is the online Passamaquoddy-Maliseet Language Portal, which includes many videos, subtitled in English and Passamaquoddy, of native speakers conversing in the language.

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    Most of the people speak English as their first language. While the Passamaquoddy population in Canada is much smaller than that in Maine, it has a formal structure and a chief, Hugh Akagi. Most of its people speak French and English. It is not recognized by the Canadian government as constituting a First Nation. In , Chief Akagi was authorized to represent the Passamaquoddy at events marking the th anniversary of French settlement of St Croix Island the first French effort at permanent settlement in the New World. This indicates that the government had acknowledged the tribe to some extent, and progress is being made in formal recognition.

    The Passamaquoddy, along with the neighboring Penobscot , are given special political status in the U. Both groups are allowed to send a nonvoting representative to the Maine House of Representatives. Although these representatives cannot vote, they may sponsor any legislation regarding American Indian affairs, and may co-sponsor any other legislation. Maps showing the approximate locations of areas occupied by members of the Wabanaki Confederacy from north to south :. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

    Algonquin Legends of New England or Myths and Folk Lore of the Micmac, Passamaquoddy, and - 3/6

    Ethnic group. For other uses, see Passamaquoddy disambiguation.