Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribal Meetinghouse

Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribal Meetinghouse Herring Pond Wampanoag Meetinghouse Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribal Headquarters

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE  Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe Awarded $196,230 in MVP Action Grant Funds from the Healey-Driscoll ...
10/01/2025

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe Awarded $196,230 in MVP Action Grant Funds from the Healey-Driscoll Administration to Build Climate Resilience and support the Tribe’s Rematriation efforts.

Plymouth, MA September 15, 2025 - Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe is thrilled to announce it has received a $196,230 climate resilience grant for the “Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe – Tidmarsh Farms Planning and Acquisition Project.” Awarded by the Healey-Driscoll Administration’s Municipal Vulnerability Preparedness (MVP) program, which is administered by the Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA), these competitive grants support communities in identifying climate hazards, developing strategies to improve resilience, and implementing priority actions to adapt to climate change. Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe is one of 54 projects to have received action grant funding in the latest round of applications.

“This MVP Action Grant empowers us to reclaim and reawaken Tidmarsh as a living testament to tribal stewardship and climate resilience,” said Melissa Harding Ferretti, Chairwoman of the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe. “By restoring our ancestral homelands, we honor the sacrifices of our ancestors and continue our work to uplift our elders, nurture our youth, and secure a sustainable future for generations to come.”

The project involves the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe, the Schulman family, the Town of Plymouth, and Mass Audubon to explore land acquisition and stewardship initiatives and builds on the tribe’s climate resilience planning process. The MVP funds will support planning to acquire the Schulman family property, which lies within the Traditional homelands of the Tribe. The project also aims to expand on the ecological success and community partnership of the Tidmarsh Wildlife Sanctuary, the largest freshwater restoration project in the Northeast, which abuts the property. “The MVP funds will help us build a strong foundation of trust and collaboration,” said Evan Schulman. “The collaboration between the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe, Mass Audubon and the Town of Plymouth will help us all reimage conservation stewardship of ancestorial lands in Massachusetts”

The Tidmarsh Homestead Planning and Acquisition Project will highlight the integration of a modern restoration of agricultural farmland and Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK). The partners believe that the TEK can help inform and execute stewardship on this large complex of restored wetlands and surrounding uplands.

“Any time a local group actively begins the process of conserving land and protecting it from development, we’re fully in support” said Amy Weidensaul, Mass Audubon’s Senior Director of Wildlife Sanctuaries. “And if the caretakers of that land are the ones whose ancestors first inhabited it, all the better.”

The project provides an opportunity for the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe to participate in environmental and climate change decision-making on their ancestral homelands as described in the Massachusetts Environmental Justice Policy’s statement of purpose.

For more information about the Herring Pond Wampanoag Tribe and the Tidmarsh Planning and Acquisition Project:
Contact: Melissa Ferretti, Chairwoman [email protected] or www.herringpondtribe.org Phone: 508.260.2358

We are members of the Wampanoag Nation. Our homelands range from the Plymouth (Plimoth Colony) areas to the upper parts of Cape Cod (Bourne, Sandwich and Plymouth / Barnstable County). We have been here for thousands of years. We have fished these waters, cultivated these lands and raised our childr...

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07/15/2025

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Did you know?
12/17/2022

Did you know?

This Channing and Howard Map which identifies our POST CONTACT lands and shows the locations of the 3 Meetinghouses built for the " Indians at Herring Pond" or Comasssakumkanit (spelled several different ways). The Pondville Meetinghouse of course still sits pretty today at 128 Herring Pond Road and was and was at the center of our Tribal existence then and as is still today.

FUN FACT: One of our first Meetinghouses was moved from Bournedale and relocated to Cataumet and is the Cataumet Methodist Parish TODAY

From a Sermon August 11, 2019, of the Cataumet Parish they wrote"
The history of this building began in 1765 as an Indian meeting house in Bournedale. Rev. Thomas Tupper was the minister and he was paid by the General Court. The Indians did not adopt his religion, however, and the church fell into disuse. In 1769 it was dismantled and moved to South Pocasset (Cataumet) and rebuilt in the cemetery grounds.

This Channing and Howard Map which identifies our POST CONTACT lands and shows the locations of the 3 Meetinghouses buil...
12/17/2022

This Channing and Howard Map which identifies our POST CONTACT lands and shows the locations of the 3 Meetinghouses built for the " Indians at Herring Pond" or Comasssakumkanit (spelled several different ways). The Pondville Meetinghouse of course still sits pretty today at 128 Herring Pond Road and was and was at the center of our Tribal existence then and as is still today.

FUN FACT: One of our first Meetinghouses was moved from Bournedale and relocated to Cataumet and is the Cataumet Methodist Parish TODAY

From a Sermon August 11, 2019, of the Cataumet Parish they wrote"
The history of this building began in 1765 as an Indian meeting house in Bournedale. Rev. Thomas Tupper was the minister and he was paid by the General Court. The Indians did not adopt his religion, however, and the church fell into disuse. In 1769 it was dismantled and moved to South Pocasset (Cataumet) and rebuilt in the cemetery grounds.

08/24/2022

People are still getting ill and dying from COVID-19 every week. Your health is precious. Protect yourself and others by taking 6 simple steps:
1️⃣ Get vaccinated
2️⃣ Keep a safe distance
3️⃣ Wear a mask
4️⃣ Cover sneezes/coughs
5️⃣ Open windows
6️⃣ Clean your hands

Wild pollinators such as bees, butterflies, and other insects play a critical role in maintaining the function and diver...
03/10/2022

Wild pollinators such as bees, butterflies, and other insects play a critical role in maintaining the function and diversity of ecosystems across Massachusetts and the world.

However, the ongoing destruction and degradation of native pollination systems paired with the continued loss of insect biodiversity pose a threat to human health and wellbeing, ecosystems, and the world's future.

Here in New England, 52 butterfly species are in decline. Around the world, total insect mass is decreasing by 2.5 percent annually.

Clear-cutting forests that are home to many native plant and insect species for industrial solar and strip mining will continue to accelerate the decline of pollinators and the vital ecosystems and life processes they support.

These areas must be conserved and protected, not destroyed!

More than 40 percent of insect species are declining and a third are endangered, with butterflies and moths among the worst hit, according to the 2019 peer-reviewed scientific paper published in the journal Biological Conservation.

SWI! What is it?  What can you do about it?
03/09/2022

SWI! What is it? What can you do about it?

Your Water, your Wallet, your World - our WebinarSaltwater IntrusionGets You Where You Live!Saturday, February 12, 2 PMZoom and Live at ‘The Center'158 Cente...

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02/19/2022

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Coverage around the world on Indigenous issues for the week ending Feb. 6, 2022

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02/19/2022

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Address

128 Herring Pond Road
Plymouth, MA
02360

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