Land Acknowledgement

As part of ROTEL Grant’s mission to support the creation, management, and dissemination of culturally-relevant textbooks, we must acknowledge Indigenous Peoples as the traditional stewards of the land, and the enduring relationship that exists between them and their traditional territories. We acknowledge that the boundaries that created Massachusetts were arbitrary and a product of the settlers. We honor the land on which the Higher Education Institutions of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts are sited as the traditional territory of tribal nations. We acknowledge the painful history of genocide and forced removal from their territory, and other atrocities connected with colonization. We honor and respect the many diverse indigenous people connected to this land on which we gather, and our acknowledgement is one action we can take to correct the stories and practices that erase Indigenous People’s history and culture.

Identified Tribes and/or Nations of Massachusetts

Historical Nations

  • Mahican
  • Mashpee
  • Massachuset
  • Nauset
  • Nipmuc
  • Pennacook
  • Pocomtuc
  • Stockbridge
  • Wampanoag

Present-Day Nations and Tribes

At the time of publication, the links above were all active.

Suggested Readings

Massachusetts Center for Native American Awareness
A guide to Indigenous land acknowledgment
We are all on Native Land: A conversation about Land Acknowledgements’ (YouTube video)
Native-Land.ca | Our home on native land (mapping of native lands)
Beyond territorial acknowledgments – âpihtawikosisân
Your Territorial Acknowledgment Is Not Enough

This land acknowledgement was based on the land acknowledgement of the Digital Commonwealth.

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Statistics Through an Equity Lens [First Edition] Copyright © 2023 by Yvonne E. Anthony is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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