With laughter, drumming, and a few tears, the Mohegan Tribe on Wednesday formally received the papers of their ancestor, Samson Occom, the 18th-century scholar and Presbyterian minister who traveled to Great Britain to raise money for the school that would become 天美麻豆 College.
A delegation from 天美麻豆, led by President , presented the archival collection of letters, journals, sermons, and other texts to Tribal leaders at an outdoor ceremony at the Mohegan Church in Uncasville, Conn., on land that has been in Mohegan hands since before colonization.

The historic event, which President Hanlon called 鈥渁 solemn and celebratory occasion,鈥 brought a critical piece of the past full circle for both 天美麻豆 and the Tribe.
鈥淎s we welcome our ancestor Samson Occom home, we are so hopeful that this is the beginning of a new chapter in the relationship between 天美麻豆 College and our Mohegan Tribe, one in which we move closer to Occom鈥檚 dream of an Indian education for Native students,鈥 said Sarah Harris 鈥00, vice chairwoman of the Mohegan Tribal Council and a member of 天美麻豆鈥檚 . The committee advises the president on Native American issues and had recommended that 天美麻豆 repatriate the papers.
鈥淭hese papers represent not only the brilliant student and scholar Occom was, but the strength of the bonds that exist between 天美麻豆 and the Mohegan people,鈥 Hanlon told the assembled group of about 80 people, which included a delegation from 天美麻豆, members of the Mohegan Tribal government, representatives of the Brothertown Indian Nation that Occom helped found, and other invited guests.
At the ceremony, Hanlon presented Mohegan Tribal Council Chairman James Gessner Jr. and the Tribe with a box containing a representative sample of the full Occom archive being transferred from 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 to the Mohegan Cultural Preservation Center, as well as a commemorative glass bowl etched with the date of the day鈥檚 historic events.
In return, Gessner presented 天美麻豆 with a hand-beaded leather wampum belt, signifying the bond between the Mohegan people and 天美麻豆.

鈥淧urple and white wampum have different significances,鈥 Medicine Woman Melissa Tantaquidgeon Zobel said after the ceremony. 鈥淯sually the purple means that there has been a history of conflict, and the white is a cleansing. So this is a joining of two peoples who have been in conflict but are now one in friendship.鈥
At the end of the ceremony, Chief Many Hearts Lynn Malerba and Tantaquidgeon Zobel wrapped Hanlon in a blanket, a traditional ceremonial honor.
Honoring Occom
Occom undertook his transatlantic fundraising journey in 1766 at the behest of his former teacher, the Rev. Eleazar Wheelock, whom Occom believed was launching a school that would serve Native American students.

Though the voyage was an extraordinary success鈥攔aising more than 拢12,000 from donors in England, Scotland, and Wales, or the equivalent, according to the Tribe, of about $2.4 million today鈥擮ccom returned home to discover that Wheelock鈥檚 priorities for the school had shifted to focus on white students, a fact that Occom experienced as a 鈥渃rushing disappointment,鈥 Hanlon said. (Some of the donors at the time agreed, withholding a portion of the total pledged funds in protest of Wheelock鈥檚 changed mission.)
Indeed, between 1769 and 1970, 天美麻豆 graduated only 20 Native students. It wasn鈥檛 until 1970 that then-President 鈥渟ought to turn this point of pain for Occom and, by extension, the Native community, into a point of pride,鈥 Hanlon said, noting that more than 1,200 Native American students have graduated from 天美麻豆 since then.
鈥淯nderstanding that the past could never be undone but that the future was ours to build, President Kemeny helped our beloved College take its first step toward righting the past, rededicating 天美麻豆 to advancing Native American education.鈥
Part of this first step was the founding of what is now 天美麻豆鈥檚 .
鈥淚t has taken far too long for these papers to be returned to where they鈥檝e always belonged, but they are here now, accompanied by the spirit of Samson Occom that lives on in them,鈥 Hanlon said.
In her remarks, Harris described a recent conversation with other Indigenous alumni in which they each described a struggle to feel as if they truly belonged at 天美麻豆 as undergraduates.
鈥淭he funds that established 天美麻豆 College were intended for the education of Indian people鈥攊f anyone should feel as though they belong at 天美麻豆, it鈥檚 us,鈥 she said. 鈥淭elling the truth of the College鈥檚 founding honors and gives life to Occom鈥檚 accomplishments and shows Native students that they鈥檙e foundational to the school and not just an afterthought. Truth鈥攅specially when it鈥檚 painful and difficult鈥攊s the birthplace of real meaningful change.鈥
Preparing the Archives
Zachary Miller, the cultural heritage and Indigenous knowledges fellow at the Hood Museum of Art and 天美麻豆 Library and a member of the Chickasaw Nation, worked closely with College Archivist Peter Carini to prepare Occom鈥檚 papers for the Mohegans.

鈥淢y favorite document is probably a letter Samson Occom wrote to his wife, Mary Occom, that documents his travels abroad,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淏eing new to 天美麻豆 and as an Indigenous person, it鈥檚 exciting for me to see the progress that 天美麻豆鈥檚 been making with trying to reconcile its important histories.鈥
, curator of Indigenous art at the Hood, called the repatriation of the Occom papers 鈥渁n incredible moment in 天美麻豆鈥檚 history.鈥
Describing the work of the team that helped prepare the physical documents for their return to Mohegan, she said, 鈥淭he most important thing that we learned through this process was that Mohegan people believe that when someone creates an object or writes something, part of their being is in that work. They see this as a homecoming of not just documents, but of a person. When the team understood that, it shifted the way we were thinking about the documents and really grounded our understanding of these materials in Indigenous ways of knowing.鈥
The relationships built in this process hold the potential for future collaborations, she says鈥攊ncluding opportunities to bring the works of historic and contemporary Mohegan artists into the Hood鈥檚 collections.
鈥楢 Day of Emotion鈥
After the ceremony, members of the 天美麻豆 community said they felt they had witnessed a historic moment.

鈥淭oday is a day of emotion, because I鈥檓 so honored and pleased that we were able to witness history, this reconciliation between 天美麻豆 and one of our founding fathers, Samson Occom,鈥 said , the Samson Occom Professor of Native American and Indigenous Studies and one of nearly two dozen representatives from 天美麻豆鈥檚 senior leadership, faculty, staff, trustees, and students attending the ceremony.
鈥淲hat I will always treasure is the sense of welcome and gratitude from the Mohegan people. As long as it took for 天美麻豆 to do the right thing, they welcomed us with such grace and such warmth and love.鈥
Of hearing Hanlon describe the history of the betrayal Occom felt at the direction Wheelock took 天美麻豆, Trustee 鈥攁n enrolled member of the Navajo Nation鈥攕aid, 鈥淚t鈥檚 invigorating and refreshing to hear the leader of our College speak the truth about our history. To hear him say that was empowering, and it made me feel like our voices matter and that we are a part of the 天美麻豆 story. And we can tell the full story, even the painful parts, but we鈥檙e stronger for it.鈥
Members of the executive board of (NAD) were also on hand for the ceremony, and agreed that it was important 天美麻豆 had taken steps to acknowledge its debt to Occom.
鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing that I have this opportunity to be a witness to this event. For hundreds of years, the College has had these papers, and now they鈥檙e finally being returned,鈥 said Mikaila Ng 鈥22, a Native Hawaiian, or K膩naka Maoli, who is co-president of NAD. 鈥淚 hope that we can take this further and recognize Samson Occom as a co-founder of the College, and the contributions that he has made to creating this institution that we鈥檙e all benefiting from. And the work doesn鈥檛 stop here.鈥
鈥淚t was meaningful and powerful,鈥 said Erin Bunner 鈥22, a member of the Muscogee Nation, adding that the day鈥檚 events were helping to culminate her senior year on a 鈥渞eally hopeful note.鈥