Photo essay: How Native Tribes in New England are taking back their culture

By Gian­ni Sal­is­bury, UConn Jour­nal­ism
Decem­ber 2025

An Indige­nous vet­er­an dances to the drum­beat at the Vet­er­ans Pow­wow on Nov. 8, 2025 at the Mashan­tuck­et Pequot Muse­um. Pho­to by Bai­ley Wright

When most peo­ple pic­ture Native tribes, they think of Indige­nous groups out west such as the Chero­kee or Nava­jo, not real­iz­ing the strong pres­ence of native peo­ples in New Eng­land. Con­necti­cut has five rec­og­nized tribes: Mashan­tuck­et Pequot and Mohe­gan tribes, which are fed­er­al­ly rec­og­nized, and the Gold­en Hill Pau­gus­sett, Pau­catuck East­ern Pequot and Schaghti­coke tribes, which are state rec­og­nized. In Rhode Island, the Nar­ra­gansett tribe is the only fed­er­al­ly rec­og­nized tribe. In Mass­a­chu­setts, the Mash­pee Wampanoag and the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head (Aquin­nah) are fed­er­al­ly rec­og­nized while the Nip­muc Nation is state rec­og­nized. A full list of rec­og­nized tribes in New Eng­land can be found on the Uni­ver­si­ty of Mass­a­chu­setts Boston web­site.

Sandy Grande, a polit­i­cal sci­ence and Native Amer­i­can and Indige­nous stud­ies pro­fes­sor at the Uni­ver­si­ty of Con­necti­cut and a Quechua nation­al, said the rea­son peo­ple for­get about the native pres­ence here is because the geno­cide of Indige­nous peo­ple actu­al­ly began in Con­necti­cut and New Eng­land. 

“It all comes back to the Mys­tic Mas­sacre, the Pequot War and the 1638 Treaty of Hart­ford, which worked to remove Pequots alto­geth­er,” Grande said. 

The Mys­tic Mas­sacre and the Pequot War killed between 400–700 Pequots. Treaty of Hart­ford abol­ished the Pequot tribe and made the name Pequot ille­gal.

“They were for­bid­den and it is under­stood to be the only doc­u­men­tary or evi­den­tiary his­to­ry of a geno­cide,” Grande said.

After those major events, Grande explained, the push of all native peo­ples west­ward occurred. What young Amer­i­cans learn in school often reflects the lack of knowl­edge peo­ple have about tribes in New Eng­land, she said. 

“When kids here in Con­necti­cut learn about Native his­to­ry, it almost always starts with the Trail of Tears, maybe the pil­grims. So you go from the pil­grims to the Trail of Tears,” Grande explained. “So while there are five rec­og­nized tribes in the state of Con­necti­cut, it’s just miss­ing in the school cur­ricu­lum.” 

Fed­er­al­ly-rec­og­nized tribes have sov­er­eign­ty and are con­sid­ered dis­tinct nations with their own trib­al gov­ern­ments. State-rec­og­nized tribes also have sov­er­eign­ty but at a much more lim­it­ed lev­el.

Since the Treaty of Hart­ford more than three cen­turies ago, Indige­nous peo­ple in the region and across the nation have lost land, lan­guage, tra­di­tion and cul­ture through prac­tices of era­sure, includ­ing the enforce­ment of board­ing schools, failed treaties and shrink­ing of reser­va­tions. 

This pho­to essay aims to show how the Mashan­tuck­et Pequot, Nar­ra­gansett and oth­er tribes in New Eng­land –  through edu­ca­tion, cel­e­bra­tion, cre­ativ­i­ty, arti­fact recla­ma­tion, land preser­va­tion and com­mu­ni­ty engage­ment – are work­ing to reclaim these loss­es and show that their peo­ple and cul­ture are still here.