Information
About the Shinnecock
Indian Nation
Since the beginning, Shinnecock time has been measured in moons
and seasons, and the daily lives of our people revolved around the
land and the waters surrounding it. Our earliest history was oral,
passed down by word of mouth from generation to generation, and as
far back as our collective memory can reach, we are an Algonquin
people who have forever lived along the shores of Eastern Long Island.
Scientists say we came here on caribou hunts when the land was covered
with ice. But our creation story says we were born here; that we
are the human children of the goddess who descended from the sky.
It was she, the story goes, who caused the land to form beneath her
feet from the back of Great Turtle, deer to spring forth from her
fingertips; bear to roar into awakening, wolf to prowl on the first
hunt. It was she who filled the sky with birds, made the land to
blossom and the ponds and bays to fill with fish and mollusks. And
when all was done, the Shinnecock, the People of the Shore, appeared
in this lush terrain. We are still here.
As coastal dwellers, we continue to prize the bounty of the sea,
the shellfish, the scaly fish, which for thousands of years provided
the bulk of our diet. We were whalers, challenging the mighty Atlantic
from our dugout canoes long before the arrival of the big ships,
long before the whaling industry flourished in the 19th century.
In the 1700's, we became noted among the northeastern coastal tribes
for our fine beads made from the Northern quahog clam and whelk shells.
The Dutch, who arrived on our shores before the English, turned our
beads (wampum) into the money system for the colonies.
The
Shinnecock Nation is among the oldest self-governing tribes of
Indians in the United States and has been a state-recognized tribe
for over 200 years. In 1978, we applied for Federal Recognition,
and in 2003, we were placed on the Bureau of Indian Affairs' "Ready
for Active" list.
Traditionally, decisions concerning the welfare of the tribe were
made by consensus of adult male members. Seeking to shortcut the
consensus process in order to more easily facilitate the acquisition
of Indian lands, the Town of Southampton devised a three member trustee
system for the Shinnecock people. This system of tribal government
was approved by the New York State legislature in February of 1792.
Since April 3, 1792, Shinnecock Indians have gone to the Southampton
Town Hall the first Tuesday after the first Monday in April to elect
three tribal members to serve a one- year term as Trustees. In April
of 2007, the Shinnecock Indian Nation exercised its sovereign right
as an ancient Indian Nation and returned to one of its basic Traditions:
it bypassed the Southampton Town Hall and for the first time since
1792 held its leadership elections at home, where they will remain.
The Trustee system, however, did not then and does not now circumvent
the consensus process, which still remains the governing process
of the Shinnecock Indian Nation. Major decisions concerning the tribe
are voted yea or nay by all eligible adult members, including women,
who gained the right to vote in the mid-1990s. Also in that period,
the Shinnecock Nation installed a Tribal Council, a 13 member body
elected for two years terms. The Council is an advisory body to the
Board of Trustees.
Today, we number over 1300 people, more than 600 of whom reside
on the reservation adjacent to the Town of Southampton on the East
End of Long Island. While our ancestral lands have dwindled over
the centuries from a territory stretching at least from what is known
today as the Town of Easthampton and westward to the eastern border
of the Town of Brookhaven, we still hold on to approximately 1200
acres.
With modest resources, we have managed to build a community to help
us better meet the demands of an ever expanding and intrusive world.
In addition to the Shinnecock Presbyterian church building and its
Manse, our infrastructure includes a tribal community center, a shellfish
hatchery, a health and dental center, a family preservation and Indian
education center, a museum, and playgrounds for our children. Also
on our list of recent achievements is the design and development
of an official Shinnecock Indian Nation flag and an official seal.
Our skilled craftspeople and fine artists find employment within
the Tribe as well as the surrounding area. The number of tribal members
holding advanced degrees in law, business, medicine, social sciences
and liberal arts continues to grow, and tribal members hold positions
of responsibility in all areas, including teaching, banking and counseling,
both within and outside the Shinnecock community.
One of the earliest forms of economic development that the Shinnecock
Nation undertook was to lease Reservation acreage to local area farmers
for their crops, mainly potatoes and corn. While the project did
bring in a small income for the Tribe, the resulting damages from
pesticides leaking into the ground water and polluting our drinking
water supply were enormous. We had great expectations for our shellfish
hatchery (The Shinnecock Shellfish Hatcheries and Environmental Center)
but brown tide and general pollution forced it to close before it
had the chance to develop into the business enterprise it was planned
to be. In the summer of 2005, the Tribe began reseeding parts of
its waterways with oysters, and celebrated a renewal harvest of Shinnecock
chunkoo oysters at the Tribal Thanksgiving Dinner, November 2006.
At the present moment, the Shinnecock annual Powwow is the economic
development project of record for the Shinnecock Nation. Revived
in 1946 as a benefit for our church, the Powwow has evolved into
an event that hosts thousands of visitors. But we are at the mercy
of the weather. For the past two years, rainstorms have forced us
to drastically revise our budgeting plans. We are now exploring Indian
Gaming as a means of attaining the much needed self-sufficiency that
will enable us to perform the sacred duties laid out for us by the
Ancestors — to protect, manage and maintain the Shinnecock Indian
Nation.
By Bevy Deer Jensen
Shinnecock Nation Communications Officer