Kinzua Vigil, 1961
1 2018-07-20T15:20:49-07:00 Dana Reijerkerk 3c44fb85ab096c2290175e81dd4f16f0002a41e0 30861 6 On August 12, 1961 a small group of Quakers and our Seneca people gathered for a protest vigil against the construction of the Kinzua Dam. Identified in the photograph is Harold Parker, standing center; third from the left facing front is Bessie Parker, Harold Parker's wife. plain 2018-08-22T19:21:33-07:00 Seneca-Iroquois National Museum stillimage 85.1003.0201 independent sovereign nations, native peoples reservations, flood dams, gravity dams, rolled-fill dams Seneca-Iroquois National Museum eng On August 12, 1961 a small group of Quakers, who named themselves the Treaty of 1794 Committee, and our Seneca people gathered in Kinzua, Pennsylvania for a protest vigil against the construction of the Kinzua Dam. The Society of Friends has historically been involved with the Seneca people and the Seneca Nation of Indians since the Pickering Treaty (Treaty of Canandaigua) was signed in 1794, the same treaty which would be broken by the building of Kinzua Dam. Since 1795 the Society of Friends has maintained an Indian Committee as part of their Philadelphia Yearly Meeting of the Religious Society of Friends. Many of their Quaker allies like Walter Taylor and Theodore "Ted" Hetzel were a part of said committee. Identified in the photograph is Harold Parker, standing center; third from the left facing front is Bessie Parker, Harold Parker's wife. image/jpeg photoprint, electronic reformatted digital Record has been transformed into MODS from the original accession record. Metadata originally created in a locally modified version of qualified Dublin Core. languageOfCataloging authority = "iso639-2b"; dcTerm:language recordCreation Date encoding = "w3cdtf"; dcTerm:date subject authority = "aat"; dcTerm:subject subject authority = "tgn"; dcTerm:coverage dcTerm:temporal is formatted for Timeline JS. Pennsylvania (state), Warren (county), Kinzua (deserted settlement), Allegany River Ted Hetzel This record was created by Dana Reijerkerk. 1 photograph, originally part of a photo album; Black and White, Glossy 4" x 6" 09/15/1961 Dana Reijerkerk 3c44fb85ab096c2290175e81dd4f16f0002a41e0This page has tags:
- 1 2018-08-08T17:31:19-07:00 Dana Reijerkerk 3c44fb85ab096c2290175e81dd4f16f0002a41e0 Reaching out to the American Public Dana Reijerkerk 9 Our Seneca people and our supporters worked to bring attention to what was going to happen to our aboriginal homelands. structured_gallery 2018-08-24T19:05:50-07:00 Dana Reijerkerk 3c44fb85ab096c2290175e81dd4f16f0002a41e0
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2018-08-08T17:33:47-07:00
"Silent" Protests
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In the 1950s and 1960s our elders protested Kinzua Dam through publications, legal action, and symbolic protests. On August 12, 1961 a small group of Quakers, the self-proclaimed Treaty of 1794 Committee and some of our Seneca people gathered in Kinzua, Pennsylvania for a silent vigil in protest of the dam.
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2018-08-23T15:10:55-07:00
In the 1950s and 1960s our elders protested Kinzua Dam through publications, legal action, and symbolic protests.
On August 12, 1961 a small group of Quakers, the self-proclaimed Treaty of 1794 Committee and some of our Seneca people gathered in Kinzua, Pennsylvania for a silent vigil in protest of the dam.
By this time it was becoming increasingly clearer that the dam was going to continue to be constructed. A few days earlier, on August 9th, 1961, Seneca Nation President Basil Williams had received U.S. President John F. Kennedy's reply to his appeal for the President to step in and stop the dam's construction.