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Apr. 12

Book Talk: The First Adirondackers: 12,000 Years of Indigenous Peoples in the Adirondack Uplands

    115 John Brown Road, Lake Placid, NY 12946
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Book cover of "The First Adirondackers: 12,000 Years of Indigenous Peoples in the Adirondacks"
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Book Talk: The First Adirondackers: 12,000 Years of Indigenous Peoples in the Adirondacks

John Brown Farm will host a book talk with the authors of The First Adirondackers: 12,000 Years of Indigenous Peoples in the Adirondack Uplands on Sunday, April 12, 2026, from 3-4:30pm. Authors Curt Stager and David Kanietakeron Fadden will discuss their work followed by a question-and-answer session and reception.

The First Adirondackers challenges the belief that the Adirondack uplands were uninhabited before the arrival of European settlers. Through local indigenous traditions natural science and archaeological finds, Stager and Fadden reveal and honor the long human presence in the Adirondacks, helping to redefine what it means to be an Adirondacker and contributing to a more complete understanding of America.

Curt Stager

Stager is a scientist and educator at Paul Smiths College.  He explores climate change, human interactions with the natural world, and environmental history, and has authored several books in those fields, including Deep Future: The Next 100,000 Years of Life on Earth.

David Kanietakeron Fadden

David Kanietakeron Fadden is a Kanienkehaka (Mohawk) artist who grew up in the Adirondack Mountains, in Onchiota, NY. He leads the Six Nations Iroquois Cultural Center in Onchiota, conceived and created by his grandparents, Ray Tehanetorens and Christine Skawennati FaddenDavid is an artist, an educator and master storyteller whose illustrations have appeared in several books, including Skywoman: Legends of the Iroquois and A Peacemaker for Warring Nations: The Founding of the Iroquois League (with Joseph Bruchac).

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