July 2003. PETER POND SOCIETY NEWSLETTER,
Number 16
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1. I hope everyone has had an enjoyable patriotic celebration in our respective
North American nations: July 1 Dominion Day in Canada, July 4 Independence Day
in USA.
It's time to make another auspicious announcement in the life of PPS. I can
finally state, with receipt of written permission, that an archeological dig
is set to take place by summer's end toward ascertaining the location of Peter
Pond's grave.
As the day draws closer - probably sometime in late August - I have to admit
I feel funny going about this ie. digging up a grave and maybe confronting a
skeleton which may not be him. But the fact remains I am driven by a sense of
history and an obligation set things right for a person who remains controversial
to this day, who had both pluses and minuses going for him, but still did some
amazing things and deserves more recognition than he has received, at least
in this country and his hometown. That said, I will get on to particulars.
The letter of permission below is dated July 1, 2003 from Robert D. Beard,
Milford Cemetery Association president. It is addressed to Connecticut State
Archeologist Nicholas Bellantoni who will be conducting the work with crew of
about a half dozen student volunteers. Bellantoni's proposal showing his interest
in the project is found in PPS
15. Beard's letter mentions the work taking place in July, but that date
has been changed. Bellantoni says he will provide certificate of insurance once
he receives the permission letter.
This approval follows a May 13 slide presentation to the cemetery board (Pres.
Robert Beard, V.P. James Beard, Ray Oliver, board attorney Steve Rogers and
cemetery director Ray Scholl) in which Nick showed his work on three past similar
projects. He has worked on 150 projects involving skeletal remains since the
1970's. Of the three shown, one dealt with the 100-year-old body of a 14-year-old
girl found during a construction project, another on the excavation of a family
tomb containing about seven coffins circa 1700's that had fallen in and needed
to be refurbished, and the exhumation of a Hawaiian man who died with a marker
in 1818 in a remote rural lot and the family wanted him transported back to
Hawaii, which happened.
In our case, we don't have a marker, but indications of disturbed earth found
through a ground radar scan near his mother's headstone that could be two unmarked
graves. We have family permission to proceed. It's a matter of checking those
two apparent graves to see what's there, which should take about four days.
Once down to about five feet, you can start finding the outline of a coffin,
if one was used, and maybe a skeleton. How dry and acidic the soil is determines
how well a skeleton can be preserved. If there is a coffin, identification can
be made through brass tacks in the wood marking the deceased's initials and
age at death. If no coffin, forensic analysis comes in, ie if the skeleton appears
around age 67, that he died of consumption and appears to be a large robust
male who led an active life. DNA testing will not be used, too expensive at
around $1,000. The remains will not be moved, just examined and reburied. We'll
decide at that time how definite we can make the identification. As I said before,
it would help if we found an Indian artifact unique to Western Canada. Someone
also remarked even if we never find him or can't confirm identification, some
kind of permanent marker might still be in order.
You've probably read more about the slide presentation than you'd like to know.
A little more discussion and fine tuning led to this letter:
2. There are similar occurrences to this grave search. J.B. Tyrell located David
Thompson's unmarked grave in Montreal in 1923 (DT died too poor to afford one
but Tyrell was directed to it by the family) and made sure he got a proper marker
in 1926. I just heard plans are afoot for a DT bicentennial in Canada's Pacific
Northwest in 2007. Go to:
www.davidthompson200.ca
Then there was a recent news item about exhuming the bones of none other than
Christopher Columbus. It seems authorities are not sure whether he's in Spain
or Santo Domingo, so they exhumed both places toward conducting DNA testing.
Read it at:
http://www.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,4057,6537405%255E401,00.html
I would like to get a marker for PP if we are successful. I think we can get
it for free if we go through the federal government, which I might have mentioned
before. If the feds don't agree or if we're not successful, maybe we can just
raise money, but that's for another discussion.
A free grave marker goes to any USA war veteran. Pond fought in the French
and Indian War but that would not qualify him since it was before USA existed.
He was in Canada for much of the American Revolution. But on return to Milford
in 1790, his reputation was apparently known enough to have War Secretary Henry
Knox send him on a secret mission to quell an Indian uprising in the Niagara
area in 1792. All indications are that Pond went, was unsuccessful and returned
home. But the fact that he was sent on a secret mission as a spy by the war
secretary might fill the bill.
Here is the document (thanks to PPS member John C. Jackson for alerting us)
with instructions for "Captain" Pond and William Steedman to conduct
the mission. Ask for page 227 after going to the following link:
http://memory.loc.gov/cgi-bin/ampage?collId=llsp&fileName=007/llsp007.db&recNum=4
Here is how one can qualify for a federal marker, go to:
http://www.cem.va.gov/eligible.htm
I think PP could qualify as follows:
"(2) A Commissioned Officer who served before July 29, 1945, and;
(a) Was assigned to an area of immediate military hazard while in time of war,
or of a Presidentially declared national emergency as determined by the Secretary
of Defense
"
3. Finally, from to two interesting messages in the PPS guest book.
One is from David Black, communications professor at Wilfrid Laurier University,
Waterloo, Ontario. He is writing an academic article on Mary Quayle Innis, an
American born writer and popular historian who met and married Harold A. Innis
while both were studying at University of Chicago. H.A. Innis, as many of you
must know, wrote the first of only two books devoted solely to PP, the other
being by Yale Prof. Henry B.Wagner in 1955. I asked more about Innis (1894-1952)
and found while originally an economic historian, he was able to transfer parallel
theories from that specialty into communication studies that strongly influenced
fellow Canadian Marshall McLuhan (1911-1980), known for his famous book, "The
Medium is the Massage." I am told "Massage" is not misspelled.
Innis, wounded in World War I, canoed through Northwest Canada in the late 1920's
and wrote "The Fur Trade in Canada" published in 1930 and since reprinted
several times. His book "Peter Pond: Fur Trader and Adventurer," came
out the same year and never reprinted, as a way to better examine the fur trade
"through the life of one extraordinary person deeply involved in a particular
commodity," Black said. Innis taught at University of Toronto from 1920
to his death in 1952. See my PPS bibliography for more information on the two
books. The only Innis biography is Donald Creighton's 1957 book, "Harold
Adams Innis: Portrait of a Scholar." Another WLU communications professor,
Dr. Paul Heyer, is currently working on an Innis biography due out this fall.
I must add WLU has become a great resource with the input of Black, Heyer and
my main Canadian PP expert, Barry Gough. Here is something on Innis from the
web:
http://collections.ic.gc.ca/heirloom_series/volume5/58-59.htm
Another message is from Betty Deck of Chetwynd, British Columbia. She is looking
for families of fur traders who may wish to be included in her part of Canada's
Historical Garden Trail. Have a look and see what you think of her pretty Memory
Lane International Friendship Gardens based on 1800's Victorian gardens at:
www.grannymacs.com
click on "The Fur Traders Mile."
That should be enough for now. Until later.
Au revoir,
Bill
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