Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Indigenous Community Calls For Boycott Of Pilgrim Museum: 'Every Step They Take Is Tone Deaf'

Indigenous Community Calls For Boycott Of Pilgrim Museum: 'Every Step They Take Is Tone Deaf'
BRYAN R. SMITH/AFP via Getty Images

Indigenous people in Massachusetts are asking folks to boycott Plimoth Patuxet Museums—a popular living museum purporting to show how life was for the Pilgrims—over the museum's failure to meet promises to create a "bi-cultural museum" showing how Indigenous ancestors lived too.

The museum changed its name from Plimoth Plantation to Plimoth Patuxet in 2020.


But it seems to have largely failed to invest in making the reality of the museum match the new shared name.

When the name change was announced, the museum claimed the new name represented a "new, more balanced" outlook and the importance of Indigenous perspectives in their educational mission.

Tribal members said the portion of the museum focused on traditional Indigenous ways of life, the Historic Patuxet Homesite, is staffed by workers who are not members of local tribes, is much too small and is in a state of disrepair.

Camille Madison, a member of the Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe on Noepe—an area colonized as Martha’s Vineyard—said:

"We’re saying don’t patronize them, don’t work over there. "
"We don’t want to engage with them until they can find a way to respect Indigenous knowledge and experience."

Paula Peters—a nearly 20 year former employee of the museum and member of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe—laid her thoughts out plainly.

"They’ve changed the name but haven’t changed the attitude."
"They’ve done nothing to ingratiate themselves with tribes."
"Every step they take is tone deaf."

Multiple problems have been identified with the museum, including apparent discrepancies between how the two sides are maintained.

During a recent visit, structural issues like holes in the roof of the wetu—the traditional Wampanoag building that serves as the focal point of the Wampanoag exhibit—were seen.

The museum interpreters were wearing street clothes instead of traditional Wampanoag clothing.

In contrast, the Plimoth side of the museum showed signs of recent repairs to the thatched roofs on buildings and museum staff were dressed in period-appropriate clothing.


Carol Pollard's late brother Anthony “Nanepashemet” Pollard helped to develop the Indigenous-centered programming at the museum and served as a leading Wampanoag historian.

She expressed her shock and disappointment at the state of the Patuxet side.

"I know my brother would be very disappointed."
"I guarantee you, people dressed in khakis and navy blue tops was not my brother’s vision."

Low pay, poor working conditions and management's tendency to ignore suggestions for improving and expanding the museum were cited as reasons many Indigenous former staffers chose to leave the museum—even though some had devoted significant portions of their lives to helping develop the museum and it's cultural programming.

In a statement released last month, the Wampanoag Consulting Group said:

"For more than a decade now, the museum has systematically dismantled the outdoor exhibit."
"Many steps taken to provide equal representation to Wampanoag programming have been removed, and the physical exhibit is in deplorable condition."
"The result has been the virtually complete alienation of the Wampanoag communities."

A spokesperson for the museum, Rob Kluin, claimed the museum actually expanded the Wampanoag exhibit.

He also said they had raised more than $2 million to expand Indigenous programs and claimed the museum has "several initiatives in place" to improve retention of staff from local Indigenous communities.

He also noted the museum's new Director of Algonquian Exhibits and Interpretation is Aquinnah Wampanoag and serves on his tribe's education committee.

Some people, including former supervisor of the Wampanoag exhibit Kitty Hendricks-Miller, have expressed concern about what ideas non-Indigenous children and families are taking away from the exhibit.

The Museum is a very common school field trip for students throughout New England, and may be many children's only exposure to the history of the Wampanoag Tribe.

Hendricks-Miller is Indian education coordinator for her tribe, and encourages teachers to reach out to local Indigenous communities directly for historically accurate and culturally sensitive programs to teach their students about Indigenous history instead of the museum.

More from Trending

Elon Musk Just Revealed His New Net Worth Goal After Hitting $800 Billion—And The Greed Is Off The Charts
Elon Musk Ripped After Setting Net Worth Goal To $10 Trillion

Elon Musk Just Revealed His New Net Worth Goal After Hitting $800 Billion—And The Greed Is Off The Charts

If you're wondering if there's an amount of money that would ever be "enough" for gazillionaire sociopath Elon Musk, the answer is apparently no.

He's already the world's richest man, with his net worth surpassing $800 billion in February after his company SpaceX acquired xAI earlier this year

Keep ReadingShow less
Donald Trump
Meidas Touch Network

Trump Just Tried To Impress Some Kids With His Putting Skills At A White House Physical Fitness Event—And It Went Hilariously Awry

MAGA Republican President Donald Trump signed a memo at the White House on Tuesday, reinstating the Presidential Fitness Test Award.

Seated at the C&O Desk—Trump removed the Resolute Desk in February of 2025 for some "light refinishing"—in the Oval Office, the POTUS was flanked by schoolchildren, professional athletes, and members of his cabinet during the event to mark National Youth Sports and Fitness Month.

Keep ReadingShow less
Chuck Schumer; Donald Trump
Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Chuck Schumer Claps Back Hard After White House Shades Him With Racist Cinco De Mayo Meme

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer responded after the White House marked Cinco de Mayo on Tuesday by sharing a racist AI-generated meme of him and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries celebrating the holiday.

In the image, the two men are depicted seated at a table near the border, wearing sombreros and raising margaritas in a toast, with a sign placed in front of them that reads: “I LOVE ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS.”

Keep ReadingShow less
Hannah Natanson
Tom Brenner/For The Washington Post via Getty Images

'Washington Post' Journalist Who Had Home Raided By Trump's FBI Just Won Pulitzer Prize—And Her Reaction In Viral Video Says It All

Washington Post journalist Hannah Natanson won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for her coverage of the Trump administration's disastrous DOGE initiative and her somber reaction to the news underscores how taxing the political environment has been for journalists just trying to do their jobs.

DOGE founder Elon Musk previously stated that his goal was to reduce federal spending by $2 trillion from the $6.75 trillion annual budget recorded in the 2024 fiscal year.

Keep ReadingShow less
Kid Cudi (left) removed M.I.A. (right) from his Rebel Ragers Tour following backlash over her onstage remarks.
Joseph Okpako/WireImage via Getty Images; Gilbert Carrasquillo/Getty Images

Rapper Kid Cudi Fires M.I.A. From His Tour After Her Rant About 'Illegals' Draws Instant Backlash

If M.I.A. was hoping for attention, she got it—just not the kind that comes with a tour slot. Following backlash over her rant about “illegals,” Kid Cudi made it clear he’s not co-signing the controversy, dropping her from his Rebel Ragers Tour with zero hesitation.

It all went down on May 2 at Dos Equis Pavilion in Dallas, where fans captured the British rapper in a monologue that quickly went viral online.

Keep ReadingShow less