LaKeisha Williams was Miss Moheconneew.
As he has for the last few years, Bear Man made an appearance.

See these and many other photos on the Mohican News website!
The Algonkian Church History Blog is about the various tribes or nations of Algonkian (or "Algonquian")-speaking Indians who voluntarily accepted Christianity. No other website is more comprehensive on the history of the Stockbridge Indians.

In 1824 the Stockbridge tribal council formally adopted William Gardner, identifying him as Narragansett. But in 1826 the legislature of New York defined Gardner as "coloured," and by the 1870s the tribe sought to exclude the Gardners by characterizing the family as "negro."2. Rev. John Sergeant [Jr.] "mentioned preaching to a small nearby settlement of mulattoes."
“through the judicious arrangements of Capt. Hendrick, the influence of the Prophet is nearly at an end.”That statement was preserved for us in a book written by Electa Jones of Stockbridge, Massachusetts, printed in 1854. Unfortunately, Jones doesn't say when John Sergeant made that statement, making it more difficult to prove its relevance in the course of American history.
[I]f religious ideas only have social functions, then religion basically *is* sociology, when you get down to it, and although religion has many social functions, I don't think it's ALL social functions.I get the impression from reading the book that Adam Jortner, on the one hand, has a lot of respect for religion, but, on the other hand, he doesn't study religion per se. What he studies is people's religious beliefs that make up the contents of American history.
So I don't think the witch hunt had a "role." I think the Delawares...had fears about witches, and the purpose of the hunt was to initiate a supernatural war against them. I think Tenskwatawa was invited because of his presumed supernatural powers, and while he benefitted politically from the event, I don't think he manipulated the proceedings--I think he also was concerned about witches.
In my opinion, the witch hunts aren't a front for something else--they are just hunts for witches.
If he really is a prophet, ask of him to cause the sun to stand still - the moon to alter its course - the rivers to cease to flow - or the dead to arise from their graves. if he does these things, you may then believe he has been sent from God.The prophet, still known as Lalawethika at that time, claimed to receive revelations from the "Master of Life," his term for the Great Spirit. He answered Governor Harrison's challenge by predicting that the Master of Life would turn the sun black on June 16, 1806.
There had appeared to her one evening while she was alone in front of her house , two men, whom she could not recognize, and whose voice alone she could hear. These told her..... "We came to tell you that God is not satisfied with you Indians, because at your sacrifices you do so many strange things with wampum and all kinds of juggling.....You Indians will have to live together again as in olden times, and love one another sincerely. If you do not do this, a terrible storm will arise and break down all the trees in the woods, and all the Indians will lose their lives in it."It so happened that "a bilious fever was raging" and it took the lives of many White River Delawares in the period of just a few days. Knowing little about modern medicine, the Delawares blamed the fever and deaths on witchcraft. For some time Beata was believed to be a good witch finder. But before long Beata felt that witchcraft had become so rampant that the task of witch-finding was overwhelming. This ended her career as a spiritual leader and from then on we hear no more about her.
Alfred Cave's Prophets of the Great Spirit: Native American Revitalization Movements in Eastern North America is a remarkable book. I also found it to be readable.
Secretary of the Interior Harold L. Ickes hands the first constitution issued under the Indian Reorganization Act to delegates of the Confederated Tribes of the Flathead Indian Reservation (Montana), 1935. (LIBRARY OF CONGRESS, PRINTS AND PHOTOGRAPHS DIVISION)Land owned by Indians decreased from 138 million acres (560,000 km2) in 1887 to 48 million acres (190,000 km2) in 1934.I took that from Wikipedia, but I remember seeing the same numbers in my notes recently.
