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  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/home</loc>
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    <priority>1.0</priority>
    <lastmod>2025-09-24</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Home</image:title>
      <image:caption>Salt marsh at Menuncatuck</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Home - Make it stand out</image:title>
      <image:caption>Whatever it is, the way you tell your story online can make all the difference.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1664162364354-9JKMBMA499ER6RZ801LS/MooseBeach2022.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Home</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/contact</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2019-07-01</lastmod>
    <image:image>
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      <image:title>Contact</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/teaching</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2023-02-10</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1594780489345-0638BZ74T487I5U06U6J/FurnitureVisit1March2020.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Teaching - Object-based learning</image:title>
      <image:caption>Tangible objects can convey stories about the past and its peoples that are absent in written documents, or difficult to access. Many of my courses use material culture--ceramics, furniture, tavern signs, garments, tools, and other items--to investigate how diverse individuals and communities made sense of the world around them. I have often collaborated with curators and educators at the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum and the Williams College Museum of Art to bring students into gallery and study spaces. Photo: Material Culture research seminar visit to Williams College President’s House to examine historical furniture, 2020</image:caption>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502683987164-9UW8F9GHVXN0BEGREF7W/TFFieldTrip04.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Teaching - Place-based learning</image:title>
      <image:caption>Field trip with History majors from Mount Holyoke College (2015), Peskeomskut/Turners Falls, Massachusetts.</image:caption>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1594781058494-0WIG7YJRH3UIVREABNGC/SpecialCollectionsVisit+-+1.jpeg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Teaching - Original research</image:title>
      <image:caption>I strongly believe that students can begin to explore research processes as soon as they arrive on campus. In all of my classes, from first-year seminars to upper-level research seminars, students have opportunities to engage in original investigations of historical topics. I help introduce them to research methodologies and resources, including campus professionals in Libraries, Archives, and Special Collections. When appropriate, advanced students who are thinking about pursuing independent study or a senior thesis project are welcome to talk further with me about possibilities. Photo: Native American Histories class visit to Special Collections, Williams College Library, 2019</image:caption>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/writing</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2025-03-13</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1506553806649-LQPICEQBZ727WMN2ZM3K/DeLuciaMemoryLandsCoverArtSmaller.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Writing</image:title>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502668289833-ETIIJNVCK9BT5AUMLTJ0/NOrthfieldTracks1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Writing</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/make-connections</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2025-03-13</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502676574997-TX6CP3Y73OS1EDRJCOX6/TFFieldTrip01.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Make Connections</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/biography</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2025-03-13</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/8dd50ffd-1219-4a95-b60e-9935dc28341d/DeLuciaHeadshotOct2023Smaller+-+1.jpeg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Biography</image:title>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1503973563528-G58LFRYSX0FQS4DH6KJ1/FullSizeRender.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Biography</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/gallery</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2017-08-16</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502680136216-081K8QPTSUQU74A83WXG/DeLuciaHarvardIndianCollegePlaque.png</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery</image:title>
    </image:image>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681266688-NWLI924YHMMOZVG8DVBL/CTRiverHolyoke1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - The Great River</image:title>
      <image:caption>The Kwinitekw (Great or Connecticut) River runs 400 miles through the Northeast, from headwaters in the North Woods south to Long Island Sound.  It has been a major travel route and source of sustenance for Algonquian peoples for thousands of years.  Near its midpoint (shown here by Holyoke/Hadley), the river became the site of intense contestation when English colonizers, notably the Pynchon fur-trading family based at Agawam/Springfield, Massachusetts, established an outpost in the mid-seventeenth century.</image:caption>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681323467-49RVTGJCRWUFHEFIO6Y4/DinoTracksClapp.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Dinosaur Tracks</image:title>
      <image:caption>Impressions of dinosaur tracks are amply present in certain stretches of the Kwinitekw River Valley, where the geology has preserved ancient traces like these over long spans of time.  This set of tracks, presently on view in the Clapp Laboratory building at Mount Holyoke College, were removed from the river valley by scholar-enthusiasts, many of whom were also involved in the disruption and disinterment of Indigenous remains and objects.  These materials present challenges today around interpretation and origin stories, as well as repatriation and appropriate handling of objects.</image:caption>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681401740-MDIKLE1FPRSBVOKQY5LU/HollyDeerfieldSign1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Pocumtuck-Deerfield</image:title>
      <image:caption>Indigenous Pocumtuck people inhabited the sandy river valley in the place presently known as Deerfield, Massachusetts.  Prior to seventeenth-century colonization, land loss, dispossession, and violence, Pocumtucks thrived in this region, maintained complex oral traditions about its features, and engaged in regional and long-distance trading networks.  They also navigated challenges to survival and regrouping at mid-century.  Today historical signage around Deerfield endeavors to interpret some of these dimensions of a multi-layered landscape (shown here in 2012 during a Mount Holyoke History Department field trip).</image:caption>
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    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681531383-JHHJUFAZOIYSWAJXWH7H/MarkRocklage1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - "Mark Rock"</image:title>
      <image:caption>This rock lies at the edge of the water, on the western shore of Narragansett Bay.  This area has been part of Narragansett tribal homelands since time out of mind.  The feature, like a number of others throughout the Dawnland, bears many marks on its surface: incised shapes and symbols (petroglyphs), likely from ancient times as well as more recent ones.  Marked stones such as this one have been critical conduits of memory, navigation, border-formation, and communication in the Native Northeast, though in the colonial era some were defaced or outright destroyed by those who didn't comprehend their importance--or actively disparaged it.</image:caption>
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    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681573259-U8QT9M7U8WF3RWNFY4V0/Ponkapoag1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Ponkapoag Plantation</image:title>
      <image:caption>Across Algonquian homelands of central and eastern Massachusetts, a series of so-called "Praying Towns" developed in the mid-seventeenth century, at the instigation of Protestant missionaries such as John Eliot and Daniel Gookin.  These places were intended to gather in Native people for conversion to Christianity and acculturation to English colonial ways.  Yet Native peoples actively shaped these sites in ways English organizers did not anticipate, making them hybrid communities that maintained many important connections to pre-European geographies, social networks, and spiritual practices.  Ponkapoag, one of these locations, is memorialized on this commemorative marker erected during the Massachusetts Bay Colony Tercentenary in 1930.  Its brief text only hints at larger complexities of Native-colonial relations and negotiations over land.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681636654-2JF6OA12O05CXZ1F443B/TFFieldTrip07.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Fishing Places on the Great River</image:title>
      <image:caption>At the place known as Peskeompskut, by the sizable waterfall at the midpoint of the Kwinitekw River, Native people from multiple tribal communities gathered for thousands of years during the spring fish runs.  Here they knew that protein-rich food sources would be plentiful in order to replenish their bodies and spirits after a long winter.  This area came under violent colonial attack in May 1676 when troops under William Turner attacked at daybreak during the conflict known as King Philip's War, deliberately targeting a place of peace and sustenance in order to wreak highest casualties upon Indigenous men, women, children, and elders.  In recent times scientists and environmentalists have struggled to help restore fish populations to the river, which have faced challenges owing to industrial development, damming, and ecological changes.  This signage interprets some of these fish-stories for the public.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681688887-AEPVJMRILOA76AN0V40B/DeerIsland2013Memorial12.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Deer Island Memorial</image:title>
      <image:caption>In the cold months of late 1675 Native people from inland Massachusetts were forcibly rounded up and removed from their homes by English colonial troops, forced downriver on the Charles, and interned upon windswept Deer Island during King Philip's War.  Many died on that exposed, under-resourced location, making it a painful site of memory for generations of Natives descendants of survivors.  In recent times Native community members and allies have commemorated this difficult history by padding canoes along the river and Boston Harbor, honoring ancestors and affirming solidarities for the future.  Here is shown one of the modern canoes from a recent memorial, passing under a bridge near downtown Boston and Cambridge.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502681737378-TQW55OXVI4QB6XY9PIM5/PemiRiver1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery - Pemigewasset River</image:title>
      <image:caption>In the northern elevations called the White Mountains, a series of rivers begin their journeys down into far-flung parts of the Dawnland.  The Pemigewasset River is one of these important waterways, having acted as a vital travel corridor, trade route, and ecological resource for numerous generations of Abenakis and other Natives in the north country.  During the middle and latter stretches of King Philip's War, Pennacook people under the leadership of Wonalancet strategically retreated to these northern locations for safety from escalating tensions in southern New England.  Moving well beyond the sightlines and geographical horizons of English colonial leaders, they regrouped and also absorbed Native kin seeking refuge.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1502680450253-ZV60O7NA34VQUQQ9QKZA/NationalDayOfMourning+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Gallery</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/terrapolitics</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2020-03-28</lastmod>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562884465195-SZKM1IUF7LY7B8UW0LR1/NausetMarsh+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - Salt Pond by Nauset Marsh</image:title>
      <image:caption>This kettle pond, created by glacial actions, is one of many such bodies of water across Wampanoag homelands. Tidal movements mix salt and fresh water, supporting a wide range of plants, animals, birds, and marine life. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879039975-KZBT32UX3BR5C6M3P9ET/NausetMarshClosedShellfishingSign+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - "Closed to Shellfishing"</image:title>
      <image:caption>A sign by Salt Pond warns against quahog harvesting, reflecting long processes of environmental change and degradation.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879040700-LQCO8UUSPRHK35QFKDQU/SaltPondVisitorCenterLivingCultureExhibit+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - "A Living Culture"</image:title>
      <image:caption>Interpretive materials inside the Salt Pond Visitors Center of the Cape Cod National Seashore educate about Wampanoag people, past and present, and the deeply storied meanings and significances of specific places on the land and water. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879038788-45PVB24QVZVMLLDL6CKF/CornHillBeachSign+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland</image:title>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881785211-7H71KW6F4JJLVJDS7UHV/AmericasFirstRegistryPlymouth+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - "America's First Registry of Deeds"</image:title>
      <image:caption>The entrance signage to the Plymouth County Registry of Deeds emphasizes the repository’s significance to early colonial processes of ascertaining claims over land. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881796256-LOMIQ9E84KTIAQJXKC0Y/EstablishmentNewPlymouthRegistry+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - "Establishment of New Plymouth"</image:title>
      <image:caption>This section of the public exhibitions at the Plymouth County Registry of Deeds focuses on social and legal processes that led to the establishment of “New Plymouth” colony, which lasted as an independent entity until 1692 when it merged with the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881796416-5GV07NCHZP7OP4RKQXL9/LandTransactionsWampanoagPlymouthRegistry+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland</image:title>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881804780-S47LDOWEDB9FPC6Y116T/SamsonPetersJoshuaMarksRegistry+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland</image:title>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879040254-BKRGX8K6ABTXAJYTVV93/PotonumecotRoadSign+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland - Potonumecot Road</image:title>
      <image:caption>This sign for Potonumecot Road, a present-day location in the town of Chatham, Massachusetts, references a longstanding Wampanoag name for the area. The road, like most areas of Cape Cod, is presently divided into privatized (residential) property. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/materialities</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2019-11-04</lastmod>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562877732856-36G3VD4CYRBWFHT5N263/PegboardFullViewSmaller.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Materialities of Memory - Pegboard: Full item</image:title>
      <image:caption>A view of the full pegboard.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562877950546-ROGRVTMUU2OG14NLZE92/PegboardFullDetailedLabelSmaller.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Materialities of Memory - Pegboard: Reverse side</image:title>
      <image:caption>The label affixed to this surface of the pegboard reads: “Wall hanger salvaged from the ruins of Israel Hobart’s (b. 1622-d. 1722) house burned by Indians on April 20, 1676 during Indian Chieftain King Philip’s War against the colonists. This hanger was a part of Hingham historian George Lincoln’s Archives, then purchased by historian Mason Foley who nailed to his barn wall (note holes). When Mason died in 1968 I purchased the hanger along with many other George Lincoln archival things from Mrs. Foley. I took this hanger down from the barn wall. The “No. 51” and “From Israel Hobart’s house burned by Indians” is in the hand of George Lincoln. The “No. 51” is probably identification for an exhibit. —John P. Richardson, Hingham, 1975”</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562877871458-MU0K8RWXA4KUSIGV95C6/PegboardLeftDetailSmaller.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Materialities of Memory</image:title>
    </image:image>
  </url>
  <url>
    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/recovering-material-archives</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2020-03-22</lastmod>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898792850-BKNOJ8PUCN4BUA54Q5XR/IMG_5292.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Registry of Deeds, Springfield MA</image:title>
      <image:caption>Consulting one of the compilation land document books from the seventeenth century at the Registry of Deeds, Hampden County Court House, Springfield, MA. Photo by Christine DeLucia, August 2018.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898549838-BOE88I6533ZUM1U8Z7MJ/mh_2000_585_inv_v1_ref.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Native lithics and deep-time histories</image:title>
      <image:caption>Three arrowheads from Mount Holyoke College campus, various dates; Native American (various communities); chert and quartz. Image courtesy of Mount Holyoke College Art Museum, South Hadley, Massachusetts. Photo by Laura Shea. 2000.585.INV.</image:caption>
    </image:image>
    <image:image>
      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898560121-K97UIHX41W1ZQ5DF08OS/SpaceingToponyms.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Paleographic variances in early land records</image:title>
      <image:caption>This detail from one of the seventeenth-century land documents, detailing a negotiation between Native and colonial participants, shows how Native place-names were written down by a colonial scribe in more open handwriting. Records from Registry of Deeds, Hampden County Court House, Springfield MA. Photo by Christine DeLucia, August 2018.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898560718-YV4A5JM7RPG8OTABTC64/TakawampabitDeskDeLucia+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Desk associated with Daniel Takawampbait</image:title>
      <image:caption>Desk associated with Daniel Takawampbait, Native minister at Natick, Massachusetts. Image courtesy of the Natick Historical Society, South Natick, Massachusetts.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898560432-XXYOHXOBWBDMVBEL1GQT/TakawambaitGravestoneInSituDeLucia+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Gravestone of Daniel Takawampbait</image:title>
      <image:caption>The carved gravestone of Daniel Takawampbait, Native minister at Natick, has been relocated over the course of multiple centuries. It presently is located in South Natick, Massachusetts, next to the Eliot Church of Natick (named after the seventeenth-century missionary John Eliot).</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898538371-BMDAXZ0BR9KDBBF66JV7/DanielTakawambaitGravestoneFarber.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Gravestone of Daniel Takawampbait (detail)</image:title>
      <image:caption>Gravestone for Daniel Takawampbait, South Natick, Massachusetts, 1716, Carved by the Lamson family of carvers, displaying characteristic winged death’s head on tympanum and side panels with elaborate vines. Farber Gravestone Collection database and American Antiquarian Society, http://farber.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/FBC~100~1: Takawampbait, Daniel. 1716. Natick MA. Region 31, photo no. HF1087.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1584898561230-I1DRH92X3CNIRT1DM1VB/ThoamsSewallGravestoneCambridge.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Gravestone of Thomas Sewall</image:title>
      <image:caption>Gravestone of Thomas Sewall, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1716. Carved by Lamson family of carvers (Nathaniel Lamson), displaying characteristic winged death’s head on tympanum and side panels with elaborate vines. Farber Gravestone Collection database and American Antiquarian Society, http://farber.davidrumsey.com/luna/servlet/FBC~100~1: Sewall, Thomas. 1716. Cambridge MA. Region 30, photo no. 7450.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Colonial stone memorials</image:title>
      <image:caption>This gravestone commemorates three colonial children who perished in a house fire in the Kwinitekw/Connecticut river valley. The losses sustained by the Butts family have remained legibly memorialized through this inscription across multiple centuries. The digital image is in the Farber Gravestone Collection Database (Butts family, 1798, South Hadley MA, Region 34, photo no. 519).</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast - Butts family gravestone in situ</image:title>
      <image:caption>The Butts family gravestone is presently located in the historic area of the Evergreen Cemetery in South Hadley MA. Grave markers from the 18th-19th c. were relocated here in the 20th century. Photo by Christine DeLucia.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Recovering Material Archives in the Native Northeast</image:title>
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    <loc>https://www.christinedelucia.com/terrapolitics-in-the-dawnland-1</loc>
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    <lastmod>2020-03-22</lastmod>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562884465195-SZKM1IUF7LY7B8UW0LR1/NausetMarsh+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - Salt Pond by Nauset Marsh (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>This kettle pond, created by glacial actions, is one of many such bodies of water across Wampanoag homelands. Tidal movements mix salt and fresh water, supporting a wide range of plants, animals, birds, and marine life. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879039975-KZBT32UX3BR5C6M3P9ET/NausetMarshClosedShellfishingSign+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - "Closed to Shellfishing" (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>A sign by Salt Pond warns against quahog harvesting, reflecting long processes of environmental change and degradation.</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562879040700-LQCO8UUSPRHK35QFKDQU/SaltPondVisitorCenterLivingCultureExhibit+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - "A Living Culture" (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>Interpretive materials inside the Salt Pond Visitors Center of the Cape Cod National Seashore educate about Wampanoag people, past and present, and the deeply storied meanings and significances of specific places on the land and water. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy)</image:title>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881785211-7H71KW6F4JJLVJDS7UHV/AmericasFirstRegistryPlymouth+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - "America's First Registry of Deeds" (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>The entrance signage to the Plymouth County Registry of Deeds emphasizes the repository’s significance to early colonial processes of ascertaining claims over land. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881796256-LOMIQ9E84KTIAQJXKC0Y/EstablishmentNewPlymouthRegistry+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - "Establishment of New Plymouth" (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>This section of the public exhibitions at the Plymouth County Registry of Deeds focuses on social and legal processes that led to the establishment of “New Plymouth” colony, which lasted as an independent entity until 1692 when it merged with the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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      <image:loc>https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5990d559db29d643eb0e8556/1562881796416-5GV07NCHZP7OP4RKQXL9/LandTransactionsWampanoagPlymouthRegistry+-+1.jpg</image:loc>
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      <image:title>Terrapolitics in the Dawnland (Copy) - Potonumecot Road (Copy)</image:title>
      <image:caption>This sign for Potonumecot Road, a present-day location in the town of Chatham, Massachusetts, references a longstanding Wampanoag name for the area. The road, like most areas of Cape Cod, is presently divided into privatized (residential) property. Photo by Christine DeLucia, July 2019</image:caption>
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