Brown University has transferred 255 acres of land in Rhode Island to the Pokanoket Indian Tribe, recognizing the area’s cultural and historical significance. This action follows a 2017 agreement between the university and the tribe, which began after members of the Pokanoket set up an encampment on the property. The land, known as the ancestral home of Metacom (or King Philip), holds deep meaning as it is tied to King Philip’s War and the leader’s death in 1676. Brown’s decision, rooted in a cultural sensitivity assessment, ensures tribal access and preservation of the land.
As part of its efforts, Brown also sold 120 adjoining acres to the Town of Bristol for $1.7 million for conservation. The site, previously housing Brown’s Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology, was initially donated to the university in 1955 by the Haffenreffer family. The Pokanoket Tribe has committed to engaging with other Native groups who may have historical ties to the land. Brown highlighted this step as a continuation of its commitment to honoring the site’s legacy and preserving it for future generations.
Key Points:
- Land transfer: Brown University gave 255 acres of culturally significant land to the Pokanoket Tribe.
- Preservation efforts: 120 acres were sold to the Town of Bristol for conservation.
- Historical ties: The land, connected to King Philip’s War, is sacred to multiple Native communities.
Brown University gave a portion of its Rhode Island property to a Native American Tribe in November after years of negotiations.
The Ivy League university transferred approximately 255 acres of “traditional cultural property” to the Pokanoket Indian Tribe who claimed ownership of the land after the school commissioned a “cultural sensitivity assessment” of the site, according to a Nov. 15 announcement. The land was transferred at no cost to the Native American group as part of an agreement reached in 2017 by Brown and the tribe after several Pokanoket people set up a month-long encampment on the university’s property.
“Brown University has transferred ownership of a portion of its land in Bristol, Rhode Island, to a preservation trust established by the Pokanoket Indian Tribe, ensuring that access to the land and waters extends to tribes and Native peoples of the region for whom the land has significance,” Brown wrote in a statement announcing the transfer. “As the ancestral home of Metacom, known also as King Philip — the leader of the Pokanoket people — and the site of his 1676 death during King Philip’s War, the land holds great historical and cultural significance to members of many Native and Indigenous communities.”
Brown’s Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology, named after the family that donated the land to the university in 1955, currently occupies the property and now has to be moved, the announcement states. The university confirmed to the Daily Caller News Foundation Tuesday that it also sold 120 acres of adjoining land for $1.7 million to the Town of Bristol for “preservation and conservation.”
“The 1955 letter from the Haffenreffer Family upon the donation of the Mount Hope property to the University noted that the family felt ‘sure that the Trustees of an institution like Brown will not be unmindful of the property’s great natural beauty, its historical background or the best interests of the Bristol community,’” Russell Carey, executive vice president for planning and policy at Brown, said in the announcement. “Those words remain as true and relevant today as when they were written nearly 70 years ago, and the steps we are taking to preserve the land in perpetuity are, we believe, fully consistent with that vision.”
The agreement calls on the Pokanoket Tribe to negotiate with any other Native American tribe that may have had historical ownership of the land.
In response to a request for comment, Brown University confirmed the land transfer and sale, and referred the DCNF to the press release previously issued by the school.
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