Culture Erased: Tomaquag Museum Preserves Indigenous History

‘The real goal was to take the land. If they couldn’t exterminate us through genocide and warfare, they were going to exterminate us through forced assimilation’

White colonizers forced Indigenous children to cut their hair as part of the "erase and replace" model.
White colonizers forced Indigenous children to cut their hair as part of the “erase and replace” model.
Rhode Island PBS
Share
White colonizers forced Indigenous children to cut their hair as part of the "erase and replace" model.
White colonizers forced Indigenous children to cut their hair as part of the “erase and replace” model.
Rhode Island PBS
Culture Erased: Tomaquag Museum Preserves Indigenous History
Copy

As the country celebrates Native American Heritage Month, President Joe Biden recently issued a historic apology to Indigenous people, including tribes in Rhode Island and Southeastern Massachusetts, for forcing Native American children into federal boarding schools. The children were often mistreated and abused in an attempt to erase their culture. Biden said, “After 150 years, the federal government stopped the program...I apologize as President of the United States of America, for what we did.” The president called it, “A sin on our souls.”

Loren Spears, Director of the Tomaquag Museum
Loren Spears, Director of the Tomaquag Museum
Rhode Island PBS

Loren Spears, Narragansett educator and director of the Tomaquag Museum in Exeter, says the boarding schools which began in the late 1800s, were an attempt to eradicate Native American identity. “The real goal was to take the land. If they couldn’t exterminate us through genocide and warfare, they were going to exterminate us through forced assimilation,” said Spears.

“I learned at first through my family, through our stories, through our oral histories, through the understanding that these structures were structures of, of slavery. One of my uncles, he was literally taken, he and his siblings, taken from his family and community and he has the not only the emotional but physical scars to show for it.” Spears went on to say it led to multi-generational trauma.

This “erase and replace” was first started in 1879 by Richard Pratt, a military officer. Among thousands of children that were held at the Carlisle Industrial School in Pennsylvania, its records indicate there were Narragansetts, Wampanoags and Pokanokets kept at the school against their will.

This “Hidden History” will have the place and space to be told at a new Tomaquag Museum to be built in Kingston replacing the current site in Exeter. Rhode Islanders recently voted to pass Cultural Arts and the Economy Grant program, which will provide two million dollars for the extensive headquarters and research center. Fundraising is ongoing. Spears says they hope to break ground on the new complex sometime next year. She adds it will better preserve the rich history and culture of the Narragansett tribe.

Republicans aim to rescind $9.4 billion in previously approved spending, targeting public broadcasting and foreign aid, as part of a broader push to align with Trump’s “America First” agenda and showcase fiscal discipline
From bathymetric maps of hidden bays to a Washington Bridge detour ornament that took the internet by storm, Coastal Carve Engravings is blending storytelling, humor, and community in every carved creation
Despite delays and investor hesitation, the nonprofit remains committed to financing its $160 million takeover of Roger Williams and Fatima hospitals — a deal state leaders say is critical to avoiding a health care crisis
Under a tentative agreement, state would pay nearly $2 million to resolve complaint brought by the parent of a 21-year-old student
Christopher Adamo, massage therapist and East Providence resident
House budget plan raises Rhode Island’s gas tax to 40 cents per gallon and boosts RIPTA’s share of transportation funds, plugging nearly half its $32.6 million deficit. Transit advocates warn service reductions still loom without broader revenue solutions