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The Guide to Indigenous Lands Project
The Guide to Indigenous Lands Project
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The Guide to Indigenous Lands Project
The Guide to Indigenous Lands Project
Home
About
Leadership
Projects
Contact
Washington, DC
Maryland
Baltimore
Merchandise
0
0
Home
About
Leadership
Projects
Contact
Washington, DC
Maryland
Baltimore
Merchandise
Merchandise Indigenous DC Pin: Tribal Delegates at Congressional Cemetery $9
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Indigenous DC Pin: Tribal Delegates at Congressional Cemetery $9

$9.00

Indigenous DC Pin featuring the Tribal Delegates at the Congressional Cemetery map site

  • Free shipping!
  • 1.25" diameter
  • All sales final - no returns

The Congressional Cemetery, founded in 1807, is the resting site of 36 Native American delegates, dignitaries, and advocates, and their families, who passed on while working on behalf of their people in the nation's capital. These individuals came to Washington as representatives of twelve tribal nations.

Pictured from left to right: Push-Ma-Ta-Ha (Choctaw chief and diplomat), Taza (Arapahho chief), A Moose/Little Bee (Chippewa head chief)

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Indigenous DC Pin featuring the Tribal Delegates at the Congressional Cemetery map site

  • Free shipping!
  • 1.25" diameter
  • All sales final - no returns

The Congressional Cemetery, founded in 1807, is the resting site of 36 Native American delegates, dignitaries, and advocates, and their families, who passed on while working on behalf of their people in the nation's capital. These individuals came to Washington as representatives of twelve tribal nations.

Pictured from left to right: Push-Ma-Ta-Ha (Choctaw chief and diplomat), Taza (Arapahho chief), A Moose/Little Bee (Chippewa head chief)

Indigenous DC Pin featuring the Tribal Delegates at the Congressional Cemetery map site

  • Free shipping!
  • 1.25" diameter
  • All sales final - no returns

The Congressional Cemetery, founded in 1807, is the resting site of 36 Native American delegates, dignitaries, and advocates, and their families, who passed on while working on behalf of their people in the nation's capital. These individuals came to Washington as representatives of twelve tribal nations.

Pictured from left to right: Push-Ma-Ta-Ha (Choctaw chief and diplomat), Taza (Arapahho chief), A Moose/Little Bee (Chippewa head chief)