Ponca Reclaim Land at Historic Crossing
Ponca Reclaim Land at Historic Crossing
On June 10th, a historic ceremony took place near Neligh, Nebraska. There, Art and Helen Tanderup signed a deed transferring ownership of a 1.6 acre plot of their farmland to the Ponca Nation.Both have strong connections to the land. Tanderups have farmed the Nebraska soil for generations. The family farm, however, overlaps part of the Ponca's Trail of Tears, a continuation of the path walked by several Native American peoples exiled from their ancestral land during the 1800s and forcibly relocated wherever the government felt was more convenient. A staggering number died along the way.For five years, the Tanderup family has partnered with the Ponca Nation to grow the Ponca sacred corn on the farm. According to Art Tanderup, “It is only fitting that out of the tragedy of the Ponca Trail of Tears that a small piece of this historic Trail be transferred to them. It is also fitting that the land where we will plant our fifth crop of Sacred Ponca Corn be theirs as well.”However, there's more context behind this gift of land than a tragedy that occurred almost 150 years ago. The Ponca and the Tanderups have found themselves allied against a more modern tragedy they hope to avert. Not only does the tract of gifted land, planted with sacred corn, lie along the Trail of Tears, it's also in the proposed path of the Keystone XL pipeline. This adds a certain complexity to the pipeline's path, as TransCanada not only has another landowner to deal with along the route, one with special legal status as a Native American tribe.
The flag of the Ponca Tribe of Nebraska, altered by adding a thin black border around the edge for definition. Original image by Xasartha, courtesy of Wikimedia Commons. CC BY-SA 3.0
Sources:
In Historic First, Nebraska Farmer Returns Land to Ponca Tribe Along "Trail of Tears"
In possible roadblock for Keystone XL, pipeline opponents gift land to Ponca
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About Dawn Allen
Dawn Allen is a freelance writer and editor who is passionate about sustainability, political economy, gardening, traditional craftwork, and simple living. She and her husband are currently renovating a rural homestead in southeastern Michigan.