Exhibition
Adaptation and Resistance: Indigenous History of the Pejepscot RegionNotes
The Euro-American history of Abenaki people in this region often ends around 1800. Unfortunately, the stories of Abenaki individuals after this point are also few and far between. Occasional accounts, like this manuscript, reveal clues about Indigenous persons living in the area between 1800 and today. Such documents are key to recognizing the experiences of Abenaki people in the nineteenth century. This forms the critical bridge to Abenaki people and culture in Maine and the Pejepscot region today.
This document from 1873 contains information about Mary Elizabeth Williams, who was of mixed race, including Native American. She was married to Rufus Griffin, a Black man with an independent settlement in Phippsburg, Maine. At some point, Mary Elizabeth was also married to Native American Paul Williams and Charles Chambers, a Black man. It contains information about her financial situation, family, and other biographical information.
Three pieces of lined notebook paper with handwriting in pencil and pen.