Tomah Joseph

American Passamaquoddy artist and governor of communities in Maine in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAmerican Passamaquoddy artist and governor of communities in Maine in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries
PlacesUnited States of America
wasArtist Visual artist Community leader
Work fieldArts Creativity Politics
Gender
Male
Birth1837
Death1914 (aged 77 years)
The details

Biography

Tomah Joseph (1837–1914), a.k.a. Joseph Tomah and Tomah Josephs, was a Passamaquoddy artist and governor of communities in Maine in the United States. He taught the future US president Franklin Delano Roosevelt how to canoe.

Early life

Tomah Joseph was born in 1837 in the Passamaquoddy Indian Township Reservation in eastern Maine. He married Hanna Lewey. The couple had a son Sabattis in 1871.

He worked as guide during the summers around Campobello Island in southwestern New Brunswick.

Political career

Joseph was elected governor of the Passamaquoddy Tribe around 1882.

Artwork

Joseph was an accomplished birchbark canoe-maker, who notably made a canoe for the young Franklin D. Roosevelt that is now in the collection of the Roosevelt Campobello International Park. Many of Joseph's works were birchbark manuscripts. His work is included in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Abbe Museum, and the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian Institution.

The Haffenreffer Museum of Anthropology at Brown University hosted an exhibition, History on Birchbark: The Art of Tomah Joseph, Passamaquoddy in 1993.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 01 Oct 2023. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.