Narragansett Chief Sachem Calls for Scrutiny of Rhode Island Land Transfers

Anthony Dean Stanton, Chief Sachem of the Narragansett Indian Tribe, is speaking out against recent land transfers that he says are benefiting groups that are not legitimate American Indian tribes

Anthony Dean Stanton is Chief Sachem of the Narragansett Indian tribe.
Anthony Dean Stanton is Chief Sachem of the Narragansett Indian tribe.
Alex Nunes
Share
Anthony Dean Stanton is Chief Sachem of the Narragansett Indian tribe.
Anthony Dean Stanton is Chief Sachem of the Narragansett Indian tribe.
Alex Nunes
Narragansett Chief Sachem Calls for Scrutiny of Rhode Island Land Transfers
Copy

Late last year, Brown University transferred some 255 acres of land it owned in Bristol to a trust associated with the Pokanoket Tribe. That came after a separate land trust associated with another Indigenous group, the Pocasset Wampanoag Tribe of the Pokanoket Nation, acquired land in Tiverton with help from a state open space grant.

The Narragansett Indian Tribe is the state’s only federally recognized tribe, and Chief Sachem Anthony Dean Stanton says the Narragansett had to go through a rigorous review to get that recognition. He’s now calling for a process to be put into place to guide land transfers in the future.

An attorney for the Pokanoket Tribe says that the Pokanoket are historically connected to the land and that federal recognition is just a credential.

TPR’s morning host Luis Hernandez spoke about these issues with Narragansett Indian Tribe Chief Sachem Anthony Dean Stanton, as well as Pokanoket Tribe attorney and spokesperson Taino Palermo, in two interviews.

Read and listen to those interviews here.

This interview was conducted by The Public’s Radio. You can read the entire story here.

Once thought lost to history, the powerful handwritten declaration by New England Baptist clergy resurfaces—shedding new light on religious resistance to slavery and a pivotal moment in the church’s past
Imagine if you could be the greatest in the world at anything, but you’d have to sell your soul to do it. That’s the story of the show “¡Que Diablos! Fausto,” a bilingual production at Teatro en El Verano
Rhode Island had been poised to become a hub for offshore wind, but the new domestic policy bill debated overnight in the U.S. House could put that work in jeopardy
Twenty states, including RI, sued the Trump administration after federal health officials shared sensitive data about Medicaid recipients