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Narragansett

Published on Dec 02, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

Narragansett

Cami Ford
Photo by goaliej54

General Information

  • 300 Narragansett Indians live in Rhode Island today, 3,000 are alive total
  • Believed in a god, called Manitto
  • Many died off from diseases such as tuberculosis, plague, and smallpox

Housing

  • Narragansett Indians lived in houses called wigwams
  • Others lived in Iroquoian styled houses
  • Most houses were made out of wood, and cedar
Photo by verysubmm

Food

  • Meats that the Indians ate were turkey, deer, fish, and other small animals
  • When traveling around most would pick up nuts and fruit
  • Other times the Indians would eat cornbread, stew and soup
Photo by sebilden

Clothing

  • Women in the tribes wore knee length skirts, earrings, mocassins, and no shirt
  • Men in the tribe wore a breech cloth, leggings, earrings, mocassins, no shirt, and in winter they wore deer material
Photo by mharrsch

Daily Life

  • Most women farmed, took care of their children, told stories, did bead work, and cooked every day
  • Most men hunted, protected the tribes, told stories, and did art
  • Most Children helped around the house, did chores, and played games
Photo by cobalt123

Encountering With the White Men

  • In the year 1524 Giovanni de Verrazano met the tribe
  • Giovanni recorded that the Indians were civil and gentle
  • The Indian tribe had a book written about them by Roger Williams
Photo by daveynin

Location

  • Narragansett Indians lived in Rhode Island and in Connecticut
  • The Narragansett Indians were placed on a reservation in Rhode Island when the white men came
Photo by Rennett Stowe

Today

  • Today, the Indians live like any average American
  • They live in houses or apartments
  • They attend school
  • They dress like any other American
  • But, they still have the special culture of of being a Narragansett