Answers for "So You Want to Honor Native Americans" quiz

 

Last updated 1/18/2014 at 6:49pm



1. The Pamunkey and Piscataway nations: both of which have thriving cultures and communities in the US capital region.

2. Ice hockey, a winter form of the Native game lacrosse invented by the Iroquois and basketball taken from the Mayans of Central America.

3. Villanova versus the Carlisle Indian School, September 26, 1906.

4. Hawley Pierce, Seneca Nation, Carlisle Indian School, 1902.

5. Jim Thorpe, Sac and Fox Nation, voted president on August 20, 1920.

6. Jim Thorpe; he played baseball for the New York Giants, Cincinatti Reds and Boston Braves. As a player-coach-field goal kicker and running back led the Canton Bulldogs to three national titles: 1916,1917 and 1919. In the championship game of that year he kicked a football 95 yards downfield.

7. Jim Thorpe. No athlete has ever come close to winning both the decathlon and pentathlon in the same Olympics but Thorpe did. He also was an exceptional lacrosse and basketball player with his own traveling team of Native All Stars in the 1920s. And he did hit the curveball.

8. Jim Plunkett, 1970 Heisman Trophy winner, Super Bowls XV and XVIII. Plunkett defeated the Washington Redskins by a score of 38-9.

9. Jim Plunkett, October 2, 1983 against the Washington Redskins.

10. Jim Brown, Syracuse Lacrosse All American 1956.

Bonus: Sam Bradford, Cherokee Nation, Heisman Trophy winner 2008.

Doug George-Kanentiio, Akwesasne Mohawk, is a former member of the Board of Trustees for the National Museum of the American Indian. The author of Iroquois on Fire among other books he resides in Oneida Castle, NY, with his wife the singer/composer Joanne Shenandoah.

 
 

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