JANUARY
2001. PETER POND SOCIETY NEWSLETTER, Number 6
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Things are going great with this web site. The
hits have exceeded 3000, and many appear to be school children
commenting that they are using PP as a history sunject. One
is going to portray PP in a project. But now comes an actual
PPS member with a truly gratifying email to profoundly validate
and justify my work so far. Hence the subject of this latest
newsletter.
Meet Judith Pond of Norwich, VT ( Judith.Pond@valley.net
). She teaches eighth grade in Richmond School, just across
the Connecticut River in Hanover, NH. Claiming to be a PP
descendant and inspired by my site, she has acquired a \\$4000
grant from her school district to truly research this fellow
and his glory years in Canada, i.e., the fur trade and his
dealing with the Indians, and apply it to her school curriculum.
I can separately email her five-page grant proposal to anyone
upon request. Those who do request it will see her allude
to my historical novel on Pond which I haven't told the general
PPS membership about. I never felt it was the time, but now
I guess it is. It almost had a publisher, but is still seeking
one. That's enough of that for now.
But Judy's study will examine:
historical novel writing,
whiteman's treatment of the Indians,
seeking family roots,
and just how much PP influenced North American history.
She plans to visit Fort McMurray, where PP is honored in
several sites; Fort Chipewyan, near where he built his first
post and Mackenzie embarked on his famous 1793 voyage; Prince
Albert, where the PP cairn is; and Sorel, Quebec, a Montreal
suburb where supposedly a half-breed PP offspring, Peter Pond
of Sorel, settled as a blacksmith in 1820 after growing up
out west in the fur trade. From January to June she will read
all she can, visit me, establish email contacts at various
places to visit along the way that will include both fellow
teachers and fur trade experts, get in better physical shape,
and sharpen her paddling skills. In July, she will do her
traveling around Canada. This will include (7/15-20) taking
the same canoe trip I did in 1988 with the same outfiffer,
Ric Dreidiger of Horizons
Unlimited, La Ronge, SK, down the Clearwater River, which
Pond was the first white man to descend in 1788. In fact,
it was Ric, a PPS charter member, who sent Judy to me after
she started searching through Canada for PP-related canoe
trips. I don't know how fast the trip is filling up, but Judy
invites any PPS member to sign on. You will see that Horizons
Unlimited is one of the links on my site. I can't make
it, as I'm planning a family trip out to California this summer.
But some day I really would like to take that Clearwater trip
again, hopefully with one or all of my kids. As of now their
ages are: Meghan, 20; Liam, 17; and Maura, 13.
In August, Judy plans to write up the report and prepare
her curriculum for the school year. I am flattered beyond
belief that someone has taken the ball and run with it on
the scale that Judy has, based on my initial input. I know
some of you already have done the Clearwater trip. But you
should all visit PP Country in the Saskatchewan-Alberta area
some day. It's fascinating. What's more, Judy is using me
as mentor in her research and coming for a visit to Milford
here, offering to take me out to lunch. I can offer a small
PP tour, including the gravestone of his mother and a plaque
marking the spot where the house stood in which a serving
girl started tearing up some of his diary for stove kindling
in the 1880s. It was Mrs. Nathan Gillett (Sophia) Pond who
stopped the servant and read the diary, sent inquiries to
Canada asking who this guy was, and later had the diary originally
published in Connecticut Magazine in 1906, that caught the
notice of Minnesota Historical Society, which led it off in
the heavily-annotated "Five Fur Traders of the Northwest,"
published in 1935. The original diary is among the Pond Family
Papers donated to Yale University. I have seen it, but it
takes a while to get through the bureaucracy for access.
Oh, and Judy is not the Beaver Club medal holder. That person
is another descendant and PPS member, who still wishes to
be anonymous.
So we should all wish Judy good luck and thank her for working
to enhance PP.
Bon voyage et bonne chance, Judy.
Au revoir,
Bill
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