Creek lacrosse players in Oklahoma fight for the ball by Eugene Heflin, 1938. (NAA INV 01783800) SPC Se Creek BAE 3302 (V 2) 01783800, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. |
Two years after Mooney’s publication, John Napoleon Brinton (J.N.B.) Hewitt, a linguist and ethnologist who worked for the Bureau of American Ethnology (the records of which are the foundation for the NAA’s collection), published his description of the Iroquois version of lacrosse also in The American Anthropologist (vol. 5, 1892, p. 189-191). Born on the Tuscarora Indian Reservation in New York State, Hewitt offered some insight into how the Iroquois played the game and the significance they placed on the contests. The National Anthropological Archives (NAA) holds a letter from Hewitt that appears to be a draft of the article as well as an extract from a book by Hewitt that adds more information on lacrosse as it was played in Iroquois communities.
Seneca men playing lacrosse on the Allegheny Reservation in New York State. (NAA INV 00750301)SPC Ne Iroquois Gen/Unid BAE 4413 00750301, NationalAnthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. Original photo (graphics: 2291) is copyrighted by the American Philosophical Society. Permission to publish is required. |
Passamaquoddy lacrosse stick collected by Edward Palmer in Pleasant Point, Maine and donated in 1873. (E11425-0) Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. |
Photograph of the Wolftown lacrosse team of the Qualla Reservation in North Carolina by James Mooney. (NAA INV 06217800) BAE GN 01041 06217800, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. |
While players risked life and limb during a lacrosse game, they also could also win high praise for their performance. Hewitt explained that “it was a feat of great honor for a player to take the ball on his bat [stick], elude his pursuers and opponents, outplay the doorguard [goalie] and then carry the ball into the goal, and especially if he was able to walk into the goal.”
Those familiar with the modern game of lacrosse may be surprised to learn that Iroquois players could score by walking through the goal with the ball. The crease – a circle drawn around the goal which only the goalie may enter – prevents such play in the modern game. Other differences between the Iroquois game Hewitt described and the modern one include the size of the teams and timekeeping. The Iroquois did not the limit the size of the lacrosse teams so long as there were equal numbers on each team. There was also no time limit to the games. The first team to score an agreed upon number of points was deemed the winner.
Lacrosse stick probably used in woodlands surrounding the western Great Lakes and added to Department of Anthropology’s collection in 1867. (E2670-0) Department of Anthropology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. |
Adam Minakowski, Reference Archivist
National Anthropological Archives
Laplako men taking medicine in preparation for a lacrosse game by John Reed Swanton, 1913. Photo 165h, Photo Lot 76, National Anthropological Archives, Smithsonian Institution. |
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