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Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

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Nội dung chi tiết: Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-BaseThe Pamunkey Indian Tribe The Upper Mattaponi TribePrepared For: National Park Service Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail Chesapeak

e ConservancyThe Pannmkey Indian Tribe Pamunkey Reservation^ King William, VirginiaThe Upper Mattaponi Tribe Adamstown. King William. VirginiaThe Matt Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

aponi Indian Tribe Mattaponi Reservation. King William, VirginiaSt. Mary s College of Maryland St. Mary’s City. Maryland43770Defining the Greater York

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared by:Scott M. Strickland Julia A. KingMartha McCartneywith contributions from:The Pamunkey Indian Tribe The

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Basehesapeake Conservancy Annapolis. MarylandThe Pamunkey Indian Tribe Pamunkey Reservation. King William. VirginiaThe Upper Mattaponi Indian Tribe Adamst

own. King William. VirginiaThe Mattaponi Indian Tribe Mattaponi Reservation. King William. VirginiaSt. Mary’s College of Maryland St. Mary’s City. Mar Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

yland43770Executive SummaryAs part of Its management of the Captain Joint Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail, the National Park Service (NPS) co

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

mmissioned this project in an effort to identify and represent the York River Indigenous Cultural Landscape. The work was undertaken by St. Mary's Col

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Basees in the Chesapeake Bay and their interaction with the landscape." Identifying ICLs is important for raising public awareness about the many tribal c

ommunities that have lived ill the Chesapeake Bay region for thousands of years and continue to live in their ancestral homeland. ICLs are also import Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

ant for land conservation, public access to. and preservation of the Chesapeake Bay.The state- and Federally-recognized Pamunkey and upper Mattapom tr

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

ibes and the state-recognized Mattaponi tribe, who are today centered in their ancestral homeland in the Pamunkey and Mattapom river watersheds, were

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Basee time involved in a project focused on identifying their historic resources, leaving time for participating in only one.Project methodology included

the completion of historical background research: driving tours, face-to-face meetings, and interviews; and the collection of large data sets includin Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

g environmental, archaeological, and land use data. Geographical Information Systems (GIS) technology was used to identify relationships between all t

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

hese data forms to model the historical and contemporary Native landscape. These data sets are curated by the National Park Service, the Chesapeake Co

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Baseces in the Pamunkey and Mattapom river watersheds. For each tribe, the contemporary everyday landscape is relatively localized to those spaces. The Pa

nnmkey also include diasporic communities located in Richmond. Virginia and in Philadelphia. Pennsylvania. For the upper Mattapom and the Mattaponi. m Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

any tribal members work in and are therefore tied to Richmond. Virginia.The analysis of the various data sets reveals both continuity and change in te

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

rms of Native use. stewardship, and meaning of the landscape. Settlements or towns occupied between 1200 and 1610 CE were often sited along waterways

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Basees supported by this environment persisted through the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries even as the three tribes became active particip

ants in the market economy.While all three tribes recognize the Significance of Werowocomoco. Powhatan's principal town at the time of English invasio Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

n, and all three tribes are actively involved in the National Park Service's efforts to preserve and interpret the site. Werowocomoco IS not part of t

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

he three tribes' everyday landscape. The reasons for this could be Werowocomoco's early abandonment (by 1610 CE) m the face of an unleashing invasion

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Basenkey and Mattapom rivers (above the York).Following a discussion of the York River ICL as represented by tribal members and through spatial analysis,

ten recommendations are presented. These include:• Connect modern-day Native communities to the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century landscapes.iii Homelessness-Prevention-Strategy-Review-and-Evidence-Base

Defining the Greater York River Indigenous Cultural LandscapePrepared By: Scott M. Strickland Julia A. King Martha McCartneyWith Contributions From: T

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