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Delaware Days 2013 Coming Up!

Delaware Days will be held on September 27 and 28, 2013, at the Fred Falleaf Powwow Grounds near Copan. So mark your calendars. Volunteers will be needed. This will be a great time to get involved with some tribal activities and just get out and have a great time.

Help is always appreciated. In 2012 Bruce Martin was appointed head of the Delaware Days Committee; he can be reached at 918-337-6571 or by email at bmartin@delawaretribe.org.

Tentative Schedule

Please note: Events are subject to change.

A pot luck dinner will be held Friday night at 6:00, bring a covered dish.

Lenapeowsi will be organizing youth activities Saturday afternoon September 28th, around 1:00:

  • Archery
  • Storytelling
  • Shell Shaking Classes for young girls
  • Language Games
  • Other activities

Saturday night another pot luck dinner will be held. The Tribe’s Culture Preservation Committee will provide smoked brisket and pork.

Saturday before the Pot Luck the Culture Preservation Committee will honor Tribal Elder and Veteran of the Year.

Social dancing and stomp dancing will follow after the meals each evening. Everyone is invited to attend and participate.


The History of Delaware Days (by Jim Rementer, secretary of the Culture Preservation Committee)

Delaware Days actually began as Delaware Day, an annual event sponsored by the Culture Preservation Committee. The first one was held in 1993 on September 5 at the Fall-Leaf Dance Ground where the annual powwow is held. About 300 people attended that year. The Culture Preservation Committee formed a subcommittee to be in charge of Delaware Day (in 1993 the committee was headed by Mary Watters and Rosetta Coffey, with Annette Ketchum in charge of publicity).

It became an annual event after that and for the first two years it was held early in September, but that often conflicted with Labor Day. In 1995 Delaware Day was moved to September 30. The following year, 1996, had probably the largest attendance ever for Delaware Days. This was the first year that it became a two-day event and many people attended.

In 1996 the Culture Preservation Committee began to honor a tribal elder at Delaware Days, with the first honoree being Lucy Blalock. In 2000 the Committee also began to honor a veteran.

Since 1996 Delaware Days has been a two-day event, and the dates for the event have almost always been the last Friday and Saturday in September. Under the leadership of several dedicated volunteers, it has become better and better, and is now one of the Tribe’s most significant cultural events.

A younger Mike Pace thanks Fred Fall-Leaf for use of the Dance Grounds, around 1998. Duck Dance 1998.
Sara Boyd is honored as Veteran of the Year, 2012. Dee and Annette Ketchum are honored as Elders of the Year, 2012.

Call for Trust Board Candidates

Trust Board Chairman Chet Brooks hereby calls for the election for three Trust Board members.

The election will be held on Saturday November 2, 2013. There are three seats up for election.

Tribal members interested in running for a Trust Board seat must file an Application for Candidacy by September 14, 2013. Candidate forms may be obtained by clicking on the link below or may be obtained in printed form at the Delaware Tribal Offices, 170 NE Barbara, Bartlesville, OK 74006.

Please mail completed forms to:

Delaware Election Committee
P.O. Box 1198
Bartlesville, OK 74005.

Forms must be received at the Post Office by 4 p.m. September 14, 2013.

Campaign information will be printed in the October 2013 Delaware Indian News. Candidates are allowed one typewritten letter-size page, single spaced, size 12 Times New Roman font, in Word or RTF format. Send this information to the Delaware Indian News at din@delawaretribe.org or mail or deliver it to the Delaware Tribal Offices, 170 NE Barbara, Bartlesville, OK 74006.

Note that information sent to the Election Committee WILL NOT be forwarded to the DIN.

Paid advertising space is also available in the Delaware Indian News as regular advertiser’s rates. Rates are given in the link below.

» Candidate Application Form

» Delaware Indian News Advertising Rates

Please Come to the Ottawa Powwow

Ottawa Powwow Golden Anniversary Celebration
Aug. 30, 31 and Sept. 1, 2013
Adawe Park, 5 mi east and 1 mi south of Miami, OK

Where the Championship Dancers Come —– to Play

Head Singer: John David Ballard
Head Man Dancer: Jeff (Dude) Blalock
Head Lady Dancer: Mollie B. King
Arena Director: Walter Dye
Powwow Princess: Mary Beth (Bootsie Skye) Kihega
Master of Ceremonies: Steve Kinder

Friday Aug. 30
6 p.m. Gourd Dance
9 p.m. Stomp Dance & Social Dances
(Stomp Dance Activities Sponsored by Jack and Margaret Blalock Family;
Cash and major prize drawings for leaders and shell shakers, ages 16 and up)

Saturday Aug. 31
A.M. Turkey Dance, Noon Camp Feast
Afternoon games, 6 p.m. Gourd Dance
(Feast in honor of Gabe Nichols sponsored by Greg Case, Joe Martin, Mariah Tyner, Dixie Rich)
8 p.m. Inter-tribal War Dance followed by Stomp Dance

Sunday Sept. 1
9 a.m. Indian Junior Olympics (Q-12 years old)
6 p.m. Gourd Dance
8 p.m. Inter-tribal War Dance followed by Stomp Dance

No Contests, Just Plenty of Good Dancing and Singing

» View Flyer

Delaware War Mothers Seeking New Members

DELAWARE WAR MOTHERS CLUB
Representing and honoring our
military relatives.

If you are a female Native American wanting to represent a veteran OR a female Non-Native American wanting to represent a Native American veteran and would be interested in joining please come to our next meeting or contact Bess Marler, Vice President at 918-440-1955, Tonya Anna, President at 918-533-8035 or send an email to us at delawarewarmothers@yahoo.com.

Delaware War Mothers Club meets every third Monday of the month at 5:00 pm in the dining hall at the Community Center.

  • The eagle represents all military branches.
    Black, Red and White are Delaware Colors.
    Red, White and Blue are the Delaware War Mothers Colors.
    Red is the color of the blood of all people as we are all related.
    The circle signifies the circle of life as there is no beginning and there is no end.

» VIEW FLYER

Elders Committee Elects New Officers

  • On July 1, 2013, new officers were elected for the Elders Committee. Officers include (left to right): non-voting Secretary Mary Randall, vice chair Bonnie Jo Griffith, chair Mary Watters, treasurer Janifer Brown.

Children’s Book Festival

Ada, OK, June 10, 2013 — Turning Pages Children’s Book Festival, as part of its goal to inspire future generations of authors and illustrators, has announced short story and book cover design competitions for elementary and middle school students in Oklahoma.

Turning Pages Children’s Book Festival is October 11-12, 2013 at the Pontotoc County Agri-Plex Convention Center in Ada, OK. For information on attending or getting involved in the Turning Pages Children’s Book Festival, visit www.turningpagesfestival.com.

Chief Pechonick Meets Mohegan Tribe (CT) Chief Bruce Bozsum

  • Chief Pechonick accepts a gift of tobacco from Mohegan Tribe (CT) Chief Bruce Bozsum at the National Museum of the American Indian in New York.

Wyandotte County Museum Visit

  • Council members visit old stomp grounds in Wyandotte County, Kansas, guided by Doug Spangler of the Wyandotte County Museum.

Tribal Representatives Attend Opening of “Century Chest”

  • One of the items found in the 100-year “Century Chest” time capsule opened at the First Lutheran Church in Oklahoma City on April 21 was this beaded garter.

NCAI Local Planning Meetings

  • Chief Pechonick, Councilwoman Jenifer Pechonick, Anita Mathis, and Jana Roth at local planning committee meeting for National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), June 19, at Muscogee Creek River Spirit Casino in Tulsa. Tulsa will be hosting the NCAI 70th Annual Convention and Marketplace at the Tulsa Convention Center, October 13-18, 2013.