Allies: People connected by an agreement for a mutually beneficial
reason. The Wampanoag and English colonists signed an agreement
that helped both cultures. They were considered allies.
Bulrush: This swamp plant has a rounded stalk
and was harvested, processed and dried and later woven into useful
mats by the Wampanoag of the 17th century and before. These were
commonly used on the interior walls of the Wampanoag wetu (house).
Other uses for the mats were to put them on top of the benches of
the Wetu and on the earthen floor, especially in winter. The mats
were also used outside on a drying rack or on the ground, on which
to dry foods. The English colonists also used Bulrush to make the
roofs on their houses.
First Thanksgiving: A myth associated with the 1621 harvest
celebration at Plymouth. Historians at Plimoth Plantation do not
use this name because what happened in 1621 wasn't a part of how
our modern Thanksgiving was started.
Harvest: To cut and gather a plant for food, medicine
or shelter.
Hearth: A place on a house floor where the fire
is. Used for cooking, warmth and light.
Historian: Someone who studies the past; a history detective.
Historians gather evidence and use that evidence to make their best
guesses about what really happened in the past.
History: A branch of knowledge that records and
explains past events
Indian: Lots of people use the word “Indian,” but it is not
a word that many Native People like. It is respectful to use the
name of the particular Native Nation or People, such as Wampanoag
. “Native People” is also a good choice.
Indian corn: Corn was and is native to the Americas.
Native People in this country called this grain by its name in their
own language. Years after English colonists came, the Wampanoag
also called it by the English name; “corn.” The English colonists
called it “Indian corn” because it was so different from the types
of corns (or grains) they were used to eating in England, such as
wheat, rye, barley and oats.
Maize: Another name for Indian corn. However, maize
is not a Native word, but was popularized by the Spanish when they
referred to corn in this country.
Oral History/Tradition: History and ways of life
that are passed on by speaking and listening. For the Wampanoag
, each village had a Keeper of the History and it would be related
and told each year by this person to the rest of the village.
Massasoit : A word which means “great leader.”
The English colonists called this man “ Massasoit ,” but his given
name was Ousamequin . He was the leader of only one village called
Pokanoket . He was not the king of all the Wampanoag as the English
thought.
Mishoon : The Wampanoag word for boat. The boats
in the 17th century were dugout canoes. First they were burned out
and then scraped out. Mishoons were seaworthy vessels for travel
or fishing, even whaling.
Mother Earth: Wampanoag name for this planet because
Earth nourishes all of us and gives us all the materials that enable
us to live. Mother Earth and Father Sky give us all we have and
are considered great gifts from The Creator.
Myth: A popular belief that is false or unsupported
by facts.
Patuxet : The Wampanoag name for the area now
known as Plymouth. Patuxet had been a thriving Wampanoag village
until a plague/the great sickness came in 1616 to 1618 and killed
most of the inhabitants of that village. The English colonists decided
to settle there partly because they saw cleared fields and no people
living there.
Pilgrims: This is not a name that the English people at Plymouth
called themselves, but one that became popular many years later.
Historians at Plimoth Plantation call these people English colonists.
Plantation: A place of planting. The colonists
at Plymouth (and other colonies such as Jamestown in Virginia) were
farmers. They called their settlements plantations. They sometimes
called themselves “planters.”
Tisquantum : The given name of the Wampanoag man
who was kidnapped, taken to Europe and returned in 1619. After discovering
his People had been killed by the great sickness, he remained around
the English and assisted them. The English nicknamed him, “ Squanto
.”
Sabbath: A day of rest and worship; for the English
colonists it was Sunday.
Samp : A Eastern Native word for a thick porridge
made from coarsely ground Indian corn. Samp could be cooked with
nuts, berries, or vegetables.
Stereotype: An mistaken idea that many people
have about a culture different from their own. Stereotypes are often
hurtful and damaging.
Thatched Roofs: Roofs made of layers of straw,
reeds or other grassy materials.
Wampanoag : People of the First Light. The original
Native People that livedand continue to livein southeast
Massachusetts, including present day Plymouth, Cape Cod, and eastern
parts of Rhode Island.