“One
day I'll be old gray grandpa
All
the pretty girls will call me "sir, "
Now,
where they're asking me how things are
Soon they'll ask me
how things were…”
- Jesse Winchester
I guess that is what
I have been trying to tell you about, “how things were,” here in Nonnewaug, a
little section of a town in western CT. Much has disappeared from the
landscape, much has changed – from the stones along the roadways to the stones
in the Nonnewaug River and anything along the powerlines – you know, I felt the
rumble of those big machines sometimes before I ever saw what they were doing
just like I felt an earthquake one morning not all that long ago.
“How things were”
isn’t just the changes on the landscape since 1650, but it’s the changes in the
landscape since 1970 when I first visited Nonnewaug Falls as well as those
changes in the landscape since 1990 when I read William Cothren’s History of
Ancient Woodbury and realized that there was a village right here on the
floodplain when the English settler colonists arrived in 1673, a permanent
Indigenous settlement that continued to be occupied up to around 1740.
“How things were” has also been greatly changed, like I said, by those big machines in an archeologically sensitive area, without any investigation I’m aware of, no thought given to these culturally stacked stones that may well predate colonization and Euro-American settlers in the Paugussett Homeland.
There’s a bright spot in this ‘how things were” business. That old “History of Indians in Connecticut” by John Deforest can be retired as the “go to history.” Dr. Lucianne Lavin’s “Indigenous Peoples of Connecticut” is a remarkable book that replaces older 1850s misinformation and misconceptions with reliable information and reinterpretations of those misconceptions.
And then of course
there are other bright spots, other recent publications such as Curtiss
Hoffman’s “Stone Prayers” and “Our Hidden Landscapes” edited by Dr. Lavin and
Elaine Thompson, two more books I highly recommend.
In the meantime,
I’ll keep trying to tell you, like an old grey grandpa, about “How Things
Were.”
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