  |

Cover detail of Women of the Dawn by Bunny McBride.
|
Begin at
Augusta City
Center (16
Cony Street)
behind Fort Western on the bank of the Kennebec
River. Across the water you see the back side of Water
Street, which is part of present-day
downtown Augusta. Some nineteenth century buildings remain and
offer a pleasant image of an earlier century.
Women of the Abenaki tribe were the first women to inhabit the Kennebec River area where the city of Augusta now stands. The name Abenaki derives from the Algonquin
term Wabanakiak
meaning "people living in the land of the dawn." Today, all American Indian tribes in Maine are collectively identified
as Wabanaki
(derived from Wabanakiak)
because of related Algonquin languages and certain common
cultural traditions and beliefs.
However, the sovereignty and group identity of
the many villages, family groups, bands, and tribes that
inhabited Maine are
complex and not easily understood in generalizations. Abenaki is the general
term used to identify the American Indians in the central
and western Maine regions, and the specific
name Canibas
(also Kennebec) identifies those who lived
in the present-day Augusta area. There are no written records from them, but
historical records and anthropological study inform us
that people inhabited the Kennebec River area thousands of years before
European contact and that Augusta was an important site.
|
| Names
of specific Abenaki women
prior to European contact are not known, but it is easy
to imagine them in bark canoes, possibly with passengers
or cargo, quietly gliding their way along the river. Their spirits remain and memory of their presence
on the river can be felt in a quiet, contemplative moment.
|
Site 1.1 Sources:
|
|
Bourque, Bruce J. "Prehistoric
Indians of Maine." In Maine The Pine Tree State, eds. R. W. Judd, E. A. Churchill, and
J. W. Eastman, 12-30. Orono, ME: University of Maine Press, 1995.
|
|
|
Bourque, Bruce J., Kennebec Historical Society Lecture,
19 September 2001.
|
|
|
McBride, Bunny. Women of the Dawn. Lincoln, Nebraska: University of Nebraska Press, c1999.
|
|
|
McRae, Jill F. Kealey.
"The Fannie Hardy Eckstorm
Collection: An Eethnopoetic Analysis Penobscot Ways
with Story, by Jill F. Kealey
McRae, 1995." Dissertation, Harvard
Graduate School
of Education, 1995.
|
|
|
Nash, Charles Elventon. The History
of Augusta: First Settlements and Early Days as A Town. Augusta, ME: Charles E. Nash & Son,
1904.
|
|
|
Prins, Harald
E. L. "The Wabanaki Frontier,
1524-1678." In Maine The Pine Tree State. Edited by R. W. Judd, E.
A. Churchill, and J. W. Eastman, 97-119. Orono, ME: University of Maine Press, 1995.
|
|
|
The Davistown Museum. On line resource available at http://www.davistownmuseum.org/bibMEprimary.htm.
Accessed 6 March 2001.
|
|
|
Willoughby, Charles Clark. Indian Antiquities of the Kennebec Valley. With a foreword and notes
by Arthur E. Spiess. Augusta, ME: Maine Historic Preservation Commission,
Maine State Museum, c1980.
|
|
|
|