History Matters: Nanticoke tribe seeks to sustain its identityPosted in Articles, Audio, Autobiography, History, Media Archive, Native Americans/First Nation, United States on 2015-12-20 00:02Z by Steven |
History Matters: Nanticoke tribe seeks to sustain its identity
Delaware Public Media: Delaware’s source for NPR News
WDDE 91.1, Dover
WMPH 91.7, Wilmington
2015-06-26
Anne Hoffman, Youth Producer and General Assignment Reporter
History Matters examines the Nanticoke Tribe of Delaware’s fight to maintain its identity.
They’re called Delaware’s Forgotten Folks.
In the second part of a two-part History Matters – produced in conjunction with the Delaware Historical Society, we continue our in-depth look at the Nanticoke Tribe.
“My name is William Daisey. And my Native American name is Thunder Eagle. And I’m chief of the Nanticoke Indian Tribe of Delaware.”
Chief Daisey was born in 1931 in Millsboro. Back then, he says, transportation was just “Model T’s” and “horse and buggies.” So the farming town in Southern Delaware where he grew up felt a million miles away from bustling Wilmington or even Dover.
“We were taught how to hunt, fish make bow and arrows, rabbit traps. We were taught which berries to pick, which fruit was edible,” said Daisey.
Families back then passed on what are called lifeway traditions, curing illnesses with old remedies and using Native American ways to gather more food than just that year’s harvest. From the time he could walk, Chief Daisey was learning…