In an address to the citizens of Windham on the occasion of the town’s 100th
anniversary in 1839, historian Thomas Lauren Smith referred to the region’s
early Indian population as an “incursion from the savages” and “the subtle and
savage enemy lurking in ambush.”
One
hundred years later, in his “History of Windham, Maine”, author Frederick Dole
described the Presumpscot chief, Polin, as “in possession of all the inherent
cruelty of his race.”
From
the 18th through the 20th centuries, students of local
history might well have been left with the impression that early Native
Americans of the Sebago region were instinctively brutal, bent on the
annihilation of European colonists at any cost.
While
both sides were responsible for growing tensions and hostilities during the
white man’s early settlement and expansion along the 26-mile Presumpscot River
corridor, modern historians have recently taken a fresh look at those early
events. The result is a re-interpretation, of sorts, that doesn’t change the
historical record so much as, well, correct it.
The
first public acknowledgement of this historical “update” will take place this
Saturday, September 29 off Conant Street in Westbrook. Friends of the
Presumpscot River (FPR) has announced the establishment of a memorial garden in
honor of Polin, the leader of a 1700’s band of Wabanaki Natives who returned to
the Presumpscot (river of many falls) each spring to harvest migratory fish,
including Atlantic salmon, shad, alewives and other species. The small band was
fluid and mobile. Its aboriginal homeland was known to have included villages
all along the Presumpscot, including Sebago Basin and the shoreline near the
current historic Conant Farm, where anthropologists have interpreted that the
Natives engaged in fish harvesting and planting corn, beans and squash.
FPR
president Michael Shaughnessy, a former Windham resident who now lives on the
old Conant Farm in Westbrook, says the long-overlooked aspect of Polin’s
history in the region is his early attempt to maintain peace.
“He
traveled to Boston twice (putting extra emphasis on “twice”) to negotiate for
fishways on dams that blocked passage of anadromous fish,” referring to Polin’s
personal meeting with Jonathan Belcher, then governor of the Province of
Massachusetts Bay.
The
Presumpscot was known to early explorers as one of the finest salmon rivers in
what is now Maine and was a vital food source for Natives.
Polin’s
plea for fishways was granted by the governor but ignored by Col. Thomas
Westbrook of Saccarappa, who saw power and prosperity in the promotion of
various mills and logging – all with little or no regard to the health of the
river.
Long
before the term ecology entered the lexicon, Polin and his contemporaries
instinctively understood the concept of a sustainable relationship between
people and the natural resource. They would take only what was needed and live
within the natural world as one. This wholistic relationship was best described
by Polin when asked by the Gov. Belcher where the Indian was from; “Pesumpscott
is the river I belong to,” was Polin’s reply.
According
to FPR’s Shaughnessy, the Conant Farm Memorial Garden is not only a recognition
in honor of the early Native existence and their contributions but a
celebration of triumph over ourselves, referring to the organization’s 25-year
effort to restore fish migration and river quality.
In
tribute to the river’s early Wabanaki presence, the garden features a series of
strategically placed granite stones, or benches (from the old Conant barn
foundation). Four large, rectangular stones lie prone facing east/west
representing the four remaining tribes of the Wabanaki nation (Passamaquoddy,
Micmac, Maliseet, Penobscot), another points north/south to represent the
Presumpscot Natives and a standing stone which, according to Shaughnessy, is a
counterpart to the memorial stone off Anderson Road in Windham that
memorializes Chief Polin’s death in battle in 1756. Low-bush blueberry and
elderberry plantings, indigenous to the area at the time of the early Natives,
surround each stone. “A symbolic sense of connection,” says Shaughnessy.
One
compelling feature in the garden is a plaque, in-laid on the upright stone,
dedicated to the venerable Chief Polin, “First Advocate of the River of Many
Falls.”
The
Chief Polin Memorial Garden celebrates the Presumpscot River’s past, present
and future (presumpscotriver.org).
An
unveiling and dedication, along with a celebratory fall harvest dinner takes
place Saturday, September 29th at 5:30 p.m. What’s on the menu? It includes
corn, beans and squash – to be enjoyed near the banks of the river we belong
to. <
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