STOCKBRIDGE — The Stockbridge-Munsee Community Band of Mohican Indians, representing the town’s original native American settlers, has completed its acquisition of sacred land totaling 372 acres at the northern base of Monument Mountain.
The $2.5 million transaction, recorded at the Middle Berkshire Registry of Deeds earlier this month, restores the forest and farmland to the tribal ancestors forced out of their western New England and upstate New York homelands by European colonial settlers more than 200 years ago.
The Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohicans is reclaiming 351 acres of sacred homeland in Stockbridge
The purchase was funded through a $2.26 million state grant.
The property encompassing Fenn Farm and Sky Farm in the Cherry Hill Road section of Stockbridge was deeded to the tribe now based in Bowler, Wis., by trustees of the Swann family, the former owners of the acreage.
Fenn Farm and adjacent Sky Farm, a 372-acre parcel on the northern slope of Monument Mountain, has been acquired by the Stockbridge-Munsee Band of Mohican Indians for $2.5 million, mostly covered by a state grant.
BEN GARVER — THE BERKSHIRE EAGLE
The undeveloped land went on the market in 2022 for $3 million following the death of artist and author Clover Swann. Her home was sold separately to Charlotte L. Gaspard, trustee of the Swann Real Estate Trust, for $307,500.
Tribal leaders were not available for comment this week, since any statements must be approved by the Tribal Council. Tribal President Shannon Hosley has said that the land will be maintained as is.
In the early 1600s, more than 25,000 Mohicans lived in the Upper Hudson Valley of New York and the Housatonic Valley of western New England.
“It’s sacred to us, and…