November 2002. PETER POND SOCIETY NEWSLETTER,
Number 14
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Happy Holidays to all. Let this be my holiday newsletter unless something else
comes up before the end of the year.
1. I feel I owe an explanation after alluding to something big on the horizon
for the past six months. In fact, I have been expecting all this time a written
proposal from Connecticut State Archeologist Nicholas Bellantoni on his interest
to examine the area around that gravesite in Milford Cemetery that was the focus
of a professional radar scan in October 2001. You may remember that the scan
taken next to the headstone of PP's mother, Mary, showed her grave plus two
next to her that were unmarked. He is interested in seeing who is in those two
unmarked graves.
I wrote to Bellantoni, he visited the site in February 2002 with his associate,
David Poirier, staff archeologist and environmental review coordinator with
the Connecticut Historical Commission. They looked around, looked at the radar
scan report, checked my website, and expressed interest in doing an archeological
dig. First they said they'd come in August, then in October, each time putting
me off due to other similar projects. Now the goal is for spring/summer 2003.
Nick notes the possibility of using state-of-the art DNA analysis which has
not yet been part of his budget.
A television show on using DNA to identify those in unmarked graves is set for
PBS in the USA 8 p.m. Nov. 20. It's called "Titanic's Ghosts" and
deals with how modern DNA testing was used to identify unknown Titanic dead
buried in Halifax, Nova Scotia.
You can find out more about that program at:
www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/case_titanic/index.html
and more about Nick Bellantoni and his work at:
archnet.asu.edu/archives/crm/conn/ctosa/ctosa.html
On DNA, Nick said in an 11/14 email: "In the past, we have not used DNA
analysis due to its expense - when you do not have a budget!! Anyhow, the Henry
Lee Institute for Forensic Science is in the process of purchasing the lab equipment
for DNA and has offered to assist us in identification projects we encounter.
So, by next year, we may have an opportunity to test PP. We would need a portion
of bone or tooth (if it has survived), and a sample (hair with roots) from a
descendent - primarily a descendent from Peter's mother's family."
PP descendants, take note.
Nick also requires permission from a family member to work at the site, which
I have obtained. The cemetery commission is reserving comment until they see
the proposal. One concern I have is if they are both Pond siblings in those
2 unmarked graves, what then? Mary had eight children, PP being the oldest.
Nick did say that bones could still exist, and PP was supposed to be a big man.
Hopefully some Indian artifact unique to Western Canada might be buried with
him. We'll see when and if the time comes.
If all this comes to fruition, a proper reburial would ensue. From there I would
see to it that a proper grave marker is installed. I believe it could be done
for free since the federal government would cover the cost of a marker for a
war veteran, inasmuch as PP served in a Connecticut regiment during the French
and Indian War.
2. A new and valued contact as the result of this website is Claire Dickens,
of Albuquerque, New Mexico. She claims to be a half-breed (metis) descendent
of PP through Augustus Peter Pond, born at Athabasca around 1790. She showed
me her card claiming membership in the Chipewah tribe. I believe Augustus is
the same one identified in Duckworth's "English River Book" who was
a blacksmith and later settled in Sorel, Quebec. Claire called me in early September,
passing through Milford on a two-month quest to seek her roots which would take
her to her native Orwell, VT and into Canada. I gave her the Milford tour of
PP sites and she treated me to dinner, as some of you other visiting PPS members
so graciously have. She didn't make it to Sorel but plans to spend the whole
winter on geneology. She is also willing to take a DNA test to establish her
connection to PP.
3. Finally, a small note from Judy Pond of Vermont led me onto a rather interesting
weekend quest this fall. You'll remember Judy is the middle school teacher who
obtained a grant to visit PP country in Saskatchewan and Alberta to study the
fur trade and establish her roots, plus paddle the Clearwater River. So she
took a canoe trip in Maine last summer and the guide said he had heard of PP,
through reading of the John McPhee book, "The Survival of the Bark Canoe,"
(Farrar, Straus and Giroux, New York, 1975). That is a small but lyrical book
on Henri Vaillancourt of New Hampshire as one of the last to preserve the native
art of making birch bark canoes. I had read the book about 15 years ago but
did not remember the PP reference. Judy said it was on page 57, the only name
mentioned in a discussion of the Canadian fur trade period and how birch bark
canoes were a valuable part.
So I re-read the book and enjoyed it again. I even took Vaillancourt's Bible
out of the library, "The Bark Canoes and Skin Boats of North America"
by Adney and Chapelle and read the chapter on fur trade canoes. Then on pages
62-63 of the McPhee book was the part about the only actual fur trade canoe
Vaillancourt ever made, a 25-foot North canoe for a graduate school program
out of Shokan, N.Y. The director, Kent Reeves, ordered the canoe and used it
for years in Canadian trips using authentic clothing and equipment ie paddles
students made themselves. This was part of the State University of New York
at New Paltz' Ashokan Field Campus for which I soon found the website.
To make a long story short, I found the Ashokan Field Campus deep in the Catskills
on the way back from my sister's house in Canaan, N.Y. in the Berkshires in
early October. Reeves had passed away but his successor and participant on many
Canadian trips, Andy Angstrom, let me see the canoe, now tucked away in a large
barn and hanging on wooden racks. I could reach up and touch it, pat it, and
was fascinated to see how it felt and sounded like a thick wad of paper, every
component - thwarts, floor slats and root wrappings inserted by hand - the first
time I had seen and touched a bark canoe. This was the way PP got around. Thanks,
Judy, for mentioning the McPhee book that set me on another PP Pilgrimage. I
can send photos of the canoe on request and will eventually put some on the
website.
Once again, Happy Holidays and best of the New Year.
Au revoir, Bill
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