We are on native land
We would like to acknowledge that the State of Connecticut occupies the unceded homelands, for 13,000 years, of the
Eastern Nehantics, along the border of Connecticut and Rhode Island
Hammononassetts, in the Clinton and Killingworth area
Matabesecs (or Wappingger) Confederacy, in the Western part of Connecticut/Eastern New York
Menunkatucks, in the Guilford area
Mohegans, in the Thames River valley between Norwich and Uncasville
Narragansetts, in the Rhode Island area
Nipmunks, in Tolland and Windham counties
Paugussetts, (Golden Hill) of Stratford and Huntington, and surrounding townships on both sides of the Housatonic River in New Haven and Fairfield counties
Pequots, (Mashantucket), from the Niantic River, west, along the hills of New London County to a point ten miles east of the Paucatuc River, and North ten to twelve miles from Long Island Sound
Podunks, River Tribe, on the East side of the Connecticut river, in East Windsor, South Windsor and East Hartford
Quinnipiacs, extended along the shore from Milford to Madison
Schaghticoke, in West-Central, Litchfield County, near Kent
Sepous, Tunxis, located on the Farmington river 8-10 miles west of the Connecticut
Wangunks, river tribe, in Wethersfield and Middletown
Wepawaugs, on the East bank of the Housatonic river
Western Nehantics, from the Connecticut River, eastward along the seashore, to a small steam which retains their name.
They have and continue to steward this land through the generations. We thank them and aspire to uphold our responsibilities according to their example.
For more information about whose land we are occupying and to learn more about the Land Back movement, visit:
Tribes in Connecticut (CT State Library)
Quinnehtukqut, origin of the state name
Exactly How New England’s Population Was Decimated (New England Historical Society)
Connecticut: A Guide to Its Roads, Lore, and People
The Golden Hill Paugussett Tribe
What is the LandBack Movement?
What is LandBack, and Can It Help the Climate?
Legal Precedent: How McGirt v. Oklahoma Revives Aboriginal Title
Mashantucket Pequot Museum and Research Center
110 Pequot Trail, Mashantucket
Pequotmuseum.org, 800-411-9671