- Webster/Dudley Band of
Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck Indians, also
known as the Chaubunagungamaug,
Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck,
Pegan or Dudley/Webster Indians, is...
- The
Nipmuc or
Nipmuck people are an
Indigenous people of the
Northeastern Woodlands, who
historically spoke an
Eastern Algonquian language.
Their historic...
- The
Nipmuck Trail is a Blue-Blazed
hiking trail system which meanders through 34.5
miles (55.5 km) of
forests in
northeast Connecticut. It is maintained...
- varieties, Loup A and Loup B. Loup A,
which may be the
language of the
Nipmuck, is prin****lly
attested from a word list
recorded from
refugees by the...
- The
Nipmuc River is a
river in the U.S.
state of
Rhode Island. It
flows 2.7
miles (4.3 km).
There are no dams
along the river's length. The
river is named...
-
Nipmuc Nation, a
union of the H****anamisco
Nipmuc and the
Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck bands,
during their attempt to
receive federal acknowledgment as a Nation...
- (Chaubunagungamaug Reservation, H****anamisco Reservation)
Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck, H****anamisco Nipmuc,
Nipmuc Nation Niueans Austronesian → Malayo-Polyesian...
-
examples were the
Algonquian peoples such as (Pequots, Wampanoags, Podunks,
Nipmucks, Narragansetts,...), who were
exiled from the New
England colonies and...
- M****achusetts. The
Nipmuc Nation also used to work with the
Chaubunagungamaug Nipmuck, of
Worcester County, M****achusetts. Most of the group's more than 500...
- (Narragansett) "at the
fishing promontory" or "place of
small pines" Agawam: (
Nipmuck or Pennacook) "low land" (with water) or "place to
unload canoes" (possible...