The Columbus Dispatch

Sculptor honors roots with Lenape Diaspora Memorial

Newcomerst­own display to honor Delaware tribe of Native Americans

- Chris Crook

— Six figures, bathed in golden afternoon light rest on a table in sculptor Alan Cottrill’s Zanesville studio. They represent one of the most personal projects of the artist to date.

The figures, about 18 inches tall, are models for a larger project planned for downtown Newcomerst­own called the Lenape Diaspora Memorial. Cottrill is related to each of the figures represente­d, having traced his family tree back more than 300 years.

The figures tell the story of the Lenape, or Delaware tribe of Native Americans. Pushed out of their original home in the Mid-atlantic region, they continued to relocate as white settlers pushed them further west. Eventually, around 1759, they settled in Newcomerst­own, known as Gekelmukpe­chunk to the Lenape.

The six statues will stand seven feet tall and represent some of the most important figures in Lenape history. First is Chief Tamanend (1625-1701), who signed treaties with William Penn, founder of Pennsylvan­ia. Both believed the natives and the white settlers could coexist in peace.

Tamanend’s son, Chief Nutimus (1650-1756), signed the notorious Walking Purchase treaty, which pushed the tribe away from the Delaware River valley between modern day Pennsylvan­ia and New Jersey.

Nutimus’ son, Chief Netawatwee­s (1686-1776), moved the tribe to modern day Ohio, settling at both Newcomerst­own and Coshocton.

Bemino “John Killbuck Sr.” (1704-1779), Netawatwee­s’ son, aligned the tribe with the French during the French and Indian War, fighting mostly in eastern West Virginia.

Miatoka Nyeswanon (1740-1779) was Bemino’s daughter. She married John Schoolcraf­t and had several children, including Jacob Schoolcraf­t (1761-1850). Schoolcraf­t was captured by another tribe during a raid. He escaped four years later.

As part of his family’s oral history, Cottrill always heard Jacob Schoolcraf­t married an Indian princess. Miatoka was the daughter of Bemino, who was known as the King of the Delaware by white settlers despite the fact the Delaware had no royalty. Thus, Miatoka would have been a princess.

Miatoka married an American and the family settled near Buchanan in what is new West Virginia. She and 10 of her 14 children were killed in a series of Indian raids and Jacob was captured. “Fortunatel­y for me, he and his brother Simon escaped,” Cottrill said. Schoolcraf­t’s granddaugh­ter married Cottrill’s greatgrand­father, Henry.

Cottrill remembers finding arrowheads while wandering the fields and woods around Zanesville growing up, and reading every book he could find on Native Americans. “I felt a connection,” he

said. “I’d pick something up and think ‘somebody made this thousands of years ago.’”

Cottrill said the timing for the memorial is fitting. “At this point in time we have all these Confederat­e statues coming down, the oppressors, but here we are putting one up to the oppressed.”

The monument will be placed in a grassy lot near the Temperance Tavern Museum on West Canal Street in downtown Newcomerst­own. In addition to the figures, 20 bronze plaques will detail both the history of each figure and that of the Lenape people.

The Newcomerst­own Historical Society had been thinking of ways to honor the Lenape for many years, said Harley Dakin, the society’s vice president. “Netawatwee­s was the founder of our town, so this helps us pay homage to him.”

It will also clear up some MISCONCEPZ­ANESVILLE

tions about where the village got its name, he said, including stories once published in the front of the phonebook linking the town to Mary Harris, an early settler in the Coshocton area, and whom Whitewoman Street in Roscoe Village was named after. “We are going to dispel a lot of those inaccuraci­es,” he said.

Dakin said the project has started attracting donations, including one from as far away as Massachuse­tts. “We have gotten a lot of attention,” he said.

Fundraisin­g for the $584,000 project has begun under the auspices of The Newcomerst­own Historical Society. To donate, send a check to Park National Bank 220 East State St. Newcomerst­own OH 43832. Add account number 8454 in the check’s note line. ccrook@gannett.com 740-868-3708

Social media: @crookphoto

 ?? CHRIS CROOK/TIMES RECORDER ?? Sculptor Alan Cottrill talks about the models for the Lenape Diaspora Memorial in Newcomerst­own on display in his Zanesville studio.
CHRIS CROOK/TIMES RECORDER Sculptor Alan Cottrill talks about the models for the Lenape Diaspora Memorial in Newcomerst­own on display in his Zanesville studio.

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