Monday, August 16, 2021
Garfield Park Native History Day 2021
Wednesday, January 27, 2021
How Did The Anacostia River Get Its Name?
During a zoom presentation to the St Peter School in November, a student asked me about how the Anacostia got its name and made me realize I was unclear about that.
Pdf online: https://library.si.
2. loc.gov call number for Ellicott 1793 map - G3850 1793 .E42 1898)
Friday, December 4, 2020
Martin Luther King/DC Public Library - Native Land Acknowledgement, Nov. 15, 2020
The DC Public Library linked to the Once As It Was Map of DC on it's page for Native American Heritage Month!
Then they invited a small group of us (you'll see folks in the video below), for a tour of the new remodeled MLK building and an Anacostan Land Acknowledgement.
Many thanks to Richard Reyes-Gavilan, the Executive Director, and Ryan Williams and the rest of the great staff!
Wednesday, November 25, 2020
St Peter School Presentation and Native Land Acknowledgement
Principal, Karen Clay, of the St. Peter School, reacted enthusiastically to the information on the Garfield Park poster. She asked an excellent question, which will be the base of a new project - can the park be renamed "Garfield-Anacostan Park?" We shall see!
Working with Erica Lopez, we did a zoom presentation for Native History Family Day and closed with everyone reading a Native Land Acknowledgement for the school.
Afterward, Prin. Clay emailed that she would include the Acknowledgement in the school's morning prayer!
It was terrific to work with Erica Lopez & Prin. Clay!
Sunday, November 1, 2020
Garfield Park History Poster - Nov. 1, 2020
To mark the beginning of Native American Heritage Month, this poster was put on the Garfield Park bulletin board on Nov. 1, 2020!
It's only a start, but it is the 1st version of a Native Village Marker on Capitol Hill!
Wednesday, July 29, 2020
Native Land Acknowledgment for the NMAI in DC?
Wednesday, May 27, 2020
DC Water Awareness of DC Native History
DC Water has facilities at several sites that are very important in the Native history of Washington. For example, Blue Plains is part of the site where the chief of the Nacotchtank Indians lived before being displaced by settlers in the late 1600s. The Clean Water initiative aims to make swimmable the Anacostia, a river named for our Native people. Soon, DC Water will undertake work in Soapstone Valley, which amounts to what is left of one of 2 major DC quarries once worked by the Anacostans and other Native Americans for hundreds or thousands of years before the English settlers arrived.
Before going into any details, allow me to explain that I am working with the DC Native History Project to promote a recognition of the Native people who once lived, farmed and quarried in what is now Washington, DC. Among those involved in this group, we are honored to include Chief Jesse James Swann of the Piscataway-Conoy Tribe, based in nearby southern Maryland. The Nacotchtank, who later got their name Anglicized to the “Anacostans,” lived on both sides of the Anacostia River and southern Maryland when John Smith first visited in 1608.
And a 2018 Google map image of the Blue Plains construction site which was almost completed:
Out of interest to learn if any mention was made of the archaeological history of the site, I inspected the final version of the Combined Sewer System Long Term Control Plan. The description given in that document states only that the the site was "an athletic field."
Any archaeological information from an earlier Environmental Assessment was not included in the final report.
“Ancient Cemetery in Anacostia Yields Bones Held Prehistoric,” Washington Post, September 11, 1936.
“Skeletons Unearthed at Bolling Field,” Washington Evening Star, September 11, 1936.)
Nor does it mention the much older ceramic Native bowl that had been found in 2009, in Bellevue, less than a mile from the Blue Plains site.
DC Water Bill Insert: Restoring the Anacostia River
I was excited when I found an article on restoring the Anacostia River in the August 2018 edition of “What's on Tap.” It opened with a brief review of the Nacotchtanks who had lived along the river. Yet the article never informed readers of how the name of the river had been derived from the name of the tribe. One is left to wonder how many staff at DC Water, who had seen and reviewed the contents prior to publication, missed the glaring omission of this basic fact about the river they are so painstakingly working to restore. It does not speak well of the corporate awareness of the Native history of the Anacostia.
Soapstone Valley Park
Finally, there are the documents on the upcoming Rehabilitation of Sewer Infrastructure in Soapstone Valley Park. As noted in the environmental assessment, “No archaeological sites have been identified within the APE; [area of potential effect].” There is no clear reason to challenge that conclusion, but what is not mentioned in any of the DC Water documents, what is not publicly explained in or around Soapstone Valley, is the history of quarrying by the Native Americans who lived in the area for several thousand years, and who produced and traded bowls, pipes and various other useful items from the soft stone that still sits in the stream bed of the valley.
Clean and plentiful water is a powerful symbol of the District’s bountiful past, historical legacy, and exciting renewal. Contacting you on these matters is not intended to suggest that DC Water is uniquely at fault in neglecting the Native history of Washington. However, the connection between DC Water and the city’s waterways offers a unique and powerful opportunity to inform the public of the historical bounty from which its residents’ continually benefit.
Those of us involved in the DC Native History Project will be happy to work with DC Water to improve what the public learns as you improve our public life through your ongoing water and sewer projects.
Please contact us to open a dialogue about our concerns and to learn more about the enhanced role DC Water may play in honoring the Native history of DC, while protecting the city’s natural resources.
Best wishes,
Armand
Armand Lione, Ph.D.
Director, DC Native History Project
202.487.7092
CC: Chief Jesse James Swann
Piscataway Conoy Tribehttp://www.piscatawaytribe.org/
CC:Tommy Wells
Chair, Board of Directors DC Watertommy.wells@dc.gov













