Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band

Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band The only authorized page of the official state acknowledged Nipmuc Tribe as stated in the 1976 Dukakis Executive Order No. 126.

Stewards of the Hassanamesit Reservation.

Hassanamisco Planting Moon 🌱🌕Ceremony & Social 🗓️Saturday May, 16th🕓12 to 4PM📍80 Brigham Hill Road, Grafton Participate ...
05/12/2026

Hassanamisco Planting Moon 🌱🌕

Ceremony & Social
🗓️Saturday May, 16th
🕓12 to 4PM
📍80 Brigham Hill Road, Grafton

Participate in ceremony welcoming sequan & our planting season.

Help plant seedlings in the rez garden.
Potluck welcome!

🔹This is a Nipmuc only event 🔹

Call for artwork 🖼️ We invite community members to submit artwork inspired by your Revolutionary-era ancestors.The exhib...
05/06/2026

Call for artwork 🖼️

We invite community members to submit artwork inspired by your Revolutionary-era ancestors.

The exhibit starts June 24th, please have submissions sent by June 15th. For more information and to submit your artwork, contact us at [email protected]

The Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band offers our sincere congratulations to the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe on achieving state r...
05/01/2026

The Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band offers our sincere congratulations to the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe on achieving state recognition. Our Subchief, Troy Phillips, was honored to represent our Band at last night’s gathering and to stand with your community in this historic moment.

Our own recognition under Executive Order 126 during the Dukakis Administration affirmed what our people had carried through centuries of displacement and erasure. We know the persistence, unity, and intense work required to reach this point.

As the other state‑recognized tribe in the Massachusetts, we stand in solidarity with Herring Pond. Your recognition strengthens not only your community, but the broader landscape of Indigenous presence, continuity, and sovereignty in Massachusetts. Congratulations!

🌿Pequoig Comes Home!🌿We’d love to have you join us to celebrate the return of 181 acres with us + The Farm School!Tours,...
04/03/2026

🌿Pequoig Comes Home!🌿
We’d love to have you join us to celebrate the return of 181 acres with us + The Farm School!

Tours, forest trails, drumming, dancing, games for kids, Nipmuc foods, fishing at West Tully River, free transport from Worcester + gas card giveaways!

🗓️Sat. April 25, 11am-3pm
✉️Please RSVP: [email protected]
📍Location: 80 Athol Rd, Orange, MA

‼️ UPDATE ‼️ Registration is full for the Regalia class on 3/21. See you there! 😊🪶Stay tuned for future events - subscri...
03/09/2026

‼️ UPDATE ‼️ Registration is full for the Regalia class on 3/21. See you there! 😊🪶

Stay tuned for future events - subscribe to our newsletter for the latest announcements at

The Hassanamisco Nipmuc Band stands as a free, self-governing tribal entity with an unbroken cultural, historical, and political lineage. This independence is not symbolic, it is lived, practiced, and upheld through many generations of land stewardship, ancestral responsibility, and community leader...

🌿🗓️ Mark your calendars! 🌳🍵 Join us on Sunday, July 26th from 11am-4pm for Kuckquenum at Hassanamesit Reservation! 🪶  Ha...
03/03/2026

🌿🗓️ Mark your calendars! 🌳🍵 Join us on Sunday, July 26th from 11am-4pm for Kuckquenum at Hassanamesit Reservation! 🪶 Hamburgers, hotdogs, venison stew, succotash, and fresh fruit will be served. Bring a chair or grab a picnic table 🧺

🔹This is a Nipmuc event🔹

🔎 Scan the QR code for more info.

Nipmuck Unnontoowaonk Class! (Nipmuc Language!)📋 Register before March 25, 2026nipmuclanguage@gmail.com🗓️ First class:  ...
03/02/2026

Nipmuck Unnontoowaonk Class! (Nipmuc Language!)

📋 Register before March 25, 2026
[email protected]

🗓️ First class: March 29, 6:30pm-8pm

‼️Please Note New Location‼️The pipes froze and burst at the original location. The new location,  7 Jumbo’s Place, Nort...
02/13/2026

‼️Please Note New Location‼️

The pipes froze and burst at the original location. The new location, 7 Jumbo’s Place, North Grafton
At Cummings Vet School, is the same location where Kuckquenum and the Health Fair were held.

We look forward to seeing everyone! 🪶

🗓️ Join us for "The Past is Now: An Intertribal Panel on King Philip's War, Past and Present" on March 24, 2026, at 6:00...
02/04/2026

🗓️ Join us for "The Past is Now: An Intertribal Panel on King Philip's War, Past and Present" on March 24, 2026, at 6:00 pm at the Cambridge Public Library.

This event explores the impact of King Philip's War on Indigenous communities and its relevance today.

Panelists include: Britney Walley - Hassanamisco Nipmuc, Hartman Deetz - Mashpee Wampanoag, Brad Lopes - Aquinnah Wampanoag, and Elizabeth Solomon - Massachusett at Ponkapoag, moderator.

Registration is required for in-person and online. Learn more and register through the link below.

Is King Philip’s War really part of the past? Four Indigenous speakers tell us that it’s still deeply present. People who are not Indigenous often think of Metacom’s Resistance –...

Our way of hunting and harvesting has always been about sustenance, never sport. We take from the land as relatives, not...
02/03/2026

Our way of hunting and harvesting has always been about sustenance, never sport. We take from the land as relatives, not resources, with gratitude and restraint so that the animals, plants, and waters continue to thrive for the generations to come.

Today, sustaining a family also means meeting the realities of modern life. At times this includes responsibly selling a portion of what we harvest so we can pay rent, heat our homes, and care for our families. This is not a move away from subsistence; it is an evolution of it. The purpose remains the same: to provide what is needed to live, without waste or excess, and always in balance with the natural world.

Whether food is shared at our own tables or exchanged to meet essential needs, our harvesting is guided by kinship, reciprocity, and respect.

Learn more about these values here:

https://nipmuc.gov/kinship-reciprocity/

And more about our aboriginal hunting and fishing rights here:

https://nipmuc.gov/community/nipmuc-aboriginal-hunting-fishing-rights/

Kinship reciprocity is the Nipmuc way of understanding and practicing land stewardship. It reflects our living responsibilities to care for the land, water, and all other beings as relatives, not resources. Rooted in relationships of mutual respect and care, kinship reciprocity means tending to the....

Address

80 Brigham Hill Road
Grafton, MA
01519

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