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‘We still live here’: Native Americans affirm their New Hampshire roots

This creel basket, made by Bill Gould, is on exhibit at Mt. Kearsarge Indian Museum as part of an art show by Abenaki artists.

For years, Darryl Peasley and Sherry Gould, two friends and members of the Nulhegan Band of the Coosuk Abenaki Nation, heard stories about various Native American sites dotting the region around their small southern New Hampshire hometowns. 

There was the Indian Tie Up in Henniker, an overhanging rock formation said to have been a site where Native Americans camped or spent winters; a mineral springs sacred site in Bradford; and an old chimney in the woods in Hopkinton rumored to hold ties to Native culture. 

Before last summer, Mr. Peasley and Ms. Gould had visited only a few spots. That’s changed since they launched the Abenaki Trails Project in August 2020 and organized outings to

Bringing the Native “presence into the light”Living in a “dual reality”

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