Resources
- Accohannock Tribe
- Assateague Peoples Tribe
- Baltimore American Indian Center (BAIC)
- Cedarville Band of Piscataway Indians
- Choptico Band of Indians
- Nanticoke Indian Association
- Nause-Waiwash Band of Indians
- Piscataway Conoy Tribe
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Piscataway Indian Nation
- Chief Mark Tayac, P.O. Box 312, Port Tobacco, Maryland 20677
- Pocomoke Indian Nation
- Susquehannock Indians, Circle Legacy Center
- Youghiogheny River Band of Shawnee Indians
Guide to Ethnic Research in Maryland: Native American, Maryland State Archives
Download our Mayis highlights flyer
- Maryland Commission on Indian Affairs
- Guide to Indigenous Maryland (mobile app) by Dr. Elizabeth Rule, Project Curator, with the Maryland State Library Agency, and Prince George’s County Memorial Library System
- Maryland State Arts Council Land Acknowledgements
- Native Americans in Maryland: A Resource Guide, University of Maryland Libraries, College Park:
- Access Policies for Native American Archival Materials - Case Studies, Society of American Archivists
- The Illustrated Guide to East Baltimore’s Historic American Indian “Reservation” and mobile app by Dr. Ashley Minner
- Protocols for Native American Archival Materials
- "We Have A Story to Tell: Native People in the Chesapeake Region" National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian, guide for grades 9-12 teachers
Featured Resource
Land acknowledgements -- statements that recognize
Indigenous peoples dispossessed of their relationships
with land by settler colonists -- can help to increase the
visibility of Indigenous peoples and positively support
them. The Maryland State Arts Council has consulted with
Indigenous elders and leaders whose lands are now claimed
by Maryland to develop a public resource on land
acknowledgements, featuring statements, tribal histories
and maps, key concepts, and research materials.
Maryland State Arts Council Land Acknowledgements
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