Activity Timeline

Highlighting work, meetings, programs, and events coordinated by the CU&ID Committee.

2020
  • March 30High Country News publishes its “Land-Grab Universities” report.  In response to the article, a Cornell administration spokesperson is quoted as stating “Thank you for reaching out to us on this issue. Unfortunately, I have no information to share on this issue at this time.” The AIISP faculty found this response to be deeply unsatisfying, and we began to think about how to address the land-grab issue ourselves.
  • June 30: First meeting of AIISP’s Cornell University and Indigenous Dispossession Committee (CU&ID). 
  • August 28: Committee meets with Cornell President Martha Pollack, Provost Mike Kotlikoff, and other administration officials to discuss Indigenous affairs at Cornell and the High Country News report.
  • September 14: Eric Cheyfitz presents a public lecture as part of the AIIS 1100 course.
  • September 16: Kurt Jordan presents in a panel in Prof. Jon McKenzie’s ENGL 4705 class.
  • September 22: The CU&ID site (originally hosted as the CU&ID Blog on the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program website) is launched, and notifications are sent to a broad swath of Cornell University and College leadership.
  • October 8: Committee members meet with Cornell Vice Provost Avery August.
  • October 12: Kurt Jordan, Jon Parmenter, and Shaawano Chad Uran present in a public panel on Indigenous Peoples’ Day.
  • October 14: Eric Cheyfitz, Kurt Jordan, and Jolene Rickard present to the Cornell Faculty Senate.
  • October 28: Committee members meet with Associate Vice President Angela Winfield to discuss Indigenous hiring at Cornell.
  • November 4: Kurt Jordan presents in AIISP’s Student Leadership Development series.
  • November 5: Chuck Geisler, Kurt Jordan, and Jon Parmenter present a public lecture to the Cornell Association of Professors Emeritus (CAPE).
  • November 12 and December 29: Kurt Jordan meets with traditional Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫ’ leaders.
  • November 20: Kurt Jordan, Wayva Lyons and Ula Piasta-Mansfield meet with Vice Provost for Enrollment Jonathan Burdick to discuss ways to recruit and support Indigenous students.
  • November 25: Committee members meet with Cornell Vice Provost Avery August to discuss possible diplomatic outreach from Cornell to affected Indigenous Nations, and the need for a position tasked with Indigenous Affairs in either the President’s or Provost’s office.
  • December 10th: Paul Fleming sits down with Cornell associate professor of history, Jon Parmenter, to learn more about his new research. Jon’s blog post, “Flipped Scrip, Flipping the Script, the Morrill Act of 1862, Cornell University and the Legacy of 19th Century Indigenous Dispossession,” adds to the emerging conversations on America’s land-grant universities to tell the early story of Cornell University. The Humanities Pod: ‘Indigenous Dispossession and the Founding of Cornell: Part 1 with Jon Parmenter
  • December 15: Kurt Jordan, Wayva Lyons, and Ula Piasta-Mansfield present in an Industrial and Labor Relations (ILR) class.
  • December 18: Kurt Jordan meets with members of the Mellon Migration Initiative to discuss the land-grab issue.

2021
  • January 13: Kurt Jordan presents at the Rogers Health Policy Colloquium, Weill Cornell Medicine.
  • January 19: Kurt Jordan presents to the Deans, Department Chairs, and Program Directors of Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences (CALS).
  • January 21st: In this follow up episode on Indigenous dispossession and land-grant universities, Paul Fleming and Jon Parmenter sit down with Professor Michael Witgen, professor of History and American Culture and twice former director of Native American Studies at the University of Michigan. In this segment, Michael provides insight into how non-removal treaties incrementally restricted traditional lands and life-ways for Anishinaabe while benefiting white settlers throughout the 19th century. Beyond his academic work, Michael also shares personal insights on generations of Native resilience in the Great Lakes from his position as a direct lineal descendant of a key Ojibwe signatory to the 1842 treaty that soon became one of the financial engines for establishing Cornell University. In light of this, he discusses how land-grant universities might begin to address this history. The Humanities Pod: Indigenous Dispossession and the Founding of Cornell: Part 2 with Michael Witgen.
  • January 22: Kurt Jordan provides suggestions for a possible University Statement on Indigenous Affairs to Vice Provosts Avery August and Katherine McComas and the President’s Counsel and Chief of Staff Kelly Cunningham.
  • January 28: CU&ID Committee members and other AIISP faculty meet with members of the undergraduate organization Native American and Indigenous Studies at Cornell (NAISAC) to discuss the administration’s response to Student Assembly petitions they had sponsored.
  • February 4: Committee members meet with a variety of administration officials to discuss proposals for educational programs for Indigenous students put together by Vice Provosts Jonathan Burdick and Paul Krause.
  • February 16: Kurt Jordan presents a public lecture as part of the AIIS 2100 course.
  • February 17: Committee members meet with the Cornell Presidential Advisors on Diversity and Equity (PADE) to discuss the language used by the administration to describe its history, providing AIISP input on University Statements, and the relationship between PADE and AIISP (as a locus of expertise in Indigenous Affairs).
  • February 17: CU&ID Committee submits model text for Cornell’s recognition of its entanglement with genocide and land text to the PADE.  We have not received a response and the University has not employed any of our suggested language to date.
  • February 24: CU&ID Committee submits a draft letter to the administration proposing joint diplomatic outreach to Indigenous Nations and communities affected by Cornell’s landholding activities. The administration rejected our proposal to jointly reach out to affected nations.
  • February 25: CU&ID Committee requests the administration’s help in determining the locations of all property and mineral rights in the United States currently held by the university.  This request was denied on March 22.
  • March 4: Committee members meet with a variety of administration officials to discuss their proposed educational initiatives.
  • March 10: Kurt Jordan presents in the Cornell Agritech Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Seminar series, jointly sponsored by the School of Integrated Plant Science (SIPS).
  • March 15: Kurt Jordan presents to the Cornell Campus Planning Commission.
  • March 24: Kurt Jordan presents to the City and Regional Planning Department.
  • March 31: Vice Provost Avery August shares a draft of a proposed outreach letter from the administration to federally-recognized Indigenous Nations in the United States with Kurt Jordan, proposing that AIISP co-sign the letters.
  • April 5: The CU&ID Committee rejects the request to co-sign the administration’s outreach letter, providing a detailed critical response to the text and programming ideas for Indigenous Nations contained in the letter.
  • April 9: Kurt Jordan presents to the Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Department.
  • April 16High Country News study authors Tristan Ahtone and Robert Lee speak at a Cornell symposium organized by the College of Art, Architecture, and Planning (AAP).
  • April 27: Kurt Jordan presents to the Executive Directors of Cornell Cooperative Extension (CCE).
  • May 6: Committee Members participate in a cross-university land-grab activism meeting involving faculty from the University of Arizona, the University of Wisconsin, Ohio State University, and units within the University of California system. Regular meetings have occurred since then.
  • May 7: Kurt Jordan met with Vice Provost Avery August.
  • June 3: Eric Cheyfitz met with representatives from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) to discuss the possibility of forming a national association of universities involved in the Morrill land grab.
  • June 14: The CU&ID Committee and the rest of the AIISP faculty submit a fifteen-point plan to strengthen Indigenous Affairs at Cornell to President Pollack, Provost Kotlikoff, and other members of the central administration.
  • June 15: Kurt Jordan met with Joy Howell, Assistant Dean for Diversity and Student Life at Weill Cornell Medicine.
  • August 6: AIISP begins to mail diplomatic outreach letters to those Nations affected by Cornell’s past and current landholdings.
  • September 10: Meredith Alberta Palmer (Six Nations Tuscarora) gives a public lecture as a part of AIIS 6010.
  • September 15: Kurt Jordan and Troy Richardson met with Steve Gavazzi, a leader in Ohio State’s Truth and Reconciliation Project.
  • September 28:  AIISP received a letter from Vice Provosts Avery August and Katherine McComas addressing our June 14, 2021 fifteen-point plan for Indigenous Affairs at Cornell.  The program and CU&ID committee are in the process of preparing a response.
  • October 4: Troy Richardson and Kurt Jordan met with Joanne Troutman, Director of Social Impact Programs for eCornell.
  • October 11: Kurt Jordan met with Vice Provost Avery August.
  • October 13: Kurt Jordan engaged in a question-and-answer session with Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology faculty and graduate students.
  • October 27: The CU&ID committee met with Indigenous Californian scholars Prof. Willy Bauer and Brittani Oorona to discuss Indigenous communities and recognition in the state.
  • November 17: CU&ID committee members Meredith Palmer and Kurt Jordan and project research assistant Dusti Bridges attend a meeting with University of Wisconsin faculty who are developing education modules on the university’s land-grab history.
  • November 18: Kurt Jordan presents to the Department of Natural Resources and Environment’s Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion group.
  • December 1: Kurt Jordan and Ula Piasta-Mansfield met with Jonathan Burdick, Vice Provost for Enrollment, to discuss recruiting and admissions issues related to Indigenous Students.
  • December 8: Kurt Jordan met with Vice Provost Avery August to discuss the administration’s proposed University-level web page on Indigenous affairs.
  • December 15: Vice Provost Katherine McComas provides the draft text and layout for the proposed University-level web page on Indigenous affairs to AIISP.

2022
  • January 7: AIISP submitted comments on the administration’s proposed University-level web page on Indigenous affairs.
  • January 10: Kurt Jordan met with the School of Integrated Plant Science’s new Allies for Indigenous Reconciliation Working Group.
  • January 12: Kurt Jordan met with Vice Provost Katherine McComas to discuss the administration’s proposed University-level web page on Indigenous affairs.
  • January 16: Kurt Jordan provides a second round of AIISP suggestions to the administration on their draft of a University-level webpage on Indigenous affairs at Cornell.
  • February 4: In light of the text from a late-stage draft of the administration’s website on Indigenous affairs at Cornell, voting members of the AIISP faculty endorsed an addendum to the land acknowledgment on the AIISP website. The addendum explicitly notes that Indigenous lands conveyed to Cornell were acquired by force and fraud in the course of a national genocide, and notes the Cornell administration’s lack of substantive action toward redress in the wake of the High Country News “Land-Grab Universities” article.
  • March 18: the Cornell administration releases its Commitment to Indigenous Communities and Nations in North America website, incorporating some but definitely not all of the feedback supplied by AIISP and the CU&ID Committee.  In particular, the administration website recites a sanitized version of Cornell’s historical entanglement with Indigenous dispossession, and does not make any new commitments to Indigenous students or communities.
  • March 24:  Eric Cheyfitz met with members of the University of Minnesota’s Towards Recognition and University-Tribal Healing (TRUTH) Project.
  • July 20: Jon Parmenter chaired the virtual roundtable discussion “Indigenous Dispossession Under the Morrill Act of 1862: Cornell University as a Case Study” as part of the Cornell University Migrations Initiative Summer Institute.  Panelists included Dr. Jean Dennison (Osage Nation) of the University of Washington, Dr. Kate Beane (Flandreau Santee Sioux Dakota and Muscogee Creek) of the Minnesota Museum of American Art, and Dr. Michael Witgen (Red Cliff Band of Lake Superior Ojibwe) of Columbia University.
  • August 31: The CU&ID Committee was reconstituted, welcoming new members Michael Charles, Maia Dedrick, Eman Ghanayem, Fred Gleach, and Leslie Logan. We thank departing members Eric Cheyfitz, Jeff Palmer, and Jolene Rickard for over two years of dedicated service to the committee.
  • September 8: The CU&ID Committee presented a teach-in on the land-grab universities issue to Cornell student, staff, and faculty.
  • September 13: Tristan Ahtone and Bobby Lee, authors of the original High Country News “Land-Grab Universities” study, present the 2022 Kops Freedom of the Press Lecture at Cornell.  They present new information that illustrates how Cornell continues to receive income from an endowment originally generated by Morrill Act funds, and make the case that Cornell has received assets totaling approximately $665 million (expressed in 2022 dollars) from the lands it was awarded through the Morrill Act.
  • September 30: Jon Parmenter met with a staff member from MIT to discuss state payouts from land scrip accounts and collaborations between MIT and Cornell.
  • October 7: The CU&ID Committee formally requests student representatives to the committee from the Indigenous Graduate Student Association (IGSA) and Native American and Indigenous Students at Cornell (NAISAC). Dusti Bridges (graduate) and Aleesia Dillon (undergraduate) were selected by the student organizations to join the committee.
  • October 10: Kurt Jordan presented at the Center for Research on Programmable Plant Systems (CROPPS) annual meeting. This is an organization of researchers from Cornell, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, and the University of Arizona.
  • October 13: Meredith Palmer, Jon Parmenter, and Kurt Jordan take part in a “Faculty Community Conversation: Understanding Indigenous Lands and History in the U.S. and Upstate New York” panel discussion, sponsored by the Cornell Office of Faculty Development and Diversity.
  • October 21: Jon Parmenter presents on “The Untold Story of Cornell University’s Mineral Rights in Wisconsin” at Cornell’s Society for the Humanities conference on the theme of “Repair.”
  • November 3: Jon Parmenter spoke at the Cornell Law School in an event organized by Cornell’s Native American Law Students Association.
  • November 15: Jon Parmenter presented to staff from the Office of Diversity and Inclusion in Cornell’s SC Johnson Graduate School of Management.
  • December 15: The C

2023
  • February 7: Kurt Jordan met with Vice Provosts Avery August and Katherine McComas.
  • February 16: Jon Parmenter spoke in Prof. Laura Tach’s Introduction to Public Policy class (PAM2301).
  • April 14: Jon Parmenter, Michael Charles (Dine/Navajo), Dusti Bridges, and Marina Johnson-Zafiris spoke at the Cornell Law School at the Native American Law Student Association (NALSA) Tribal Summit.
  • April 27: Jon Parmenter presents “How Did Cornell Dispossess? The Impact of Timber and Land Sales on the Lives and Livelihoods of Indigenous Peoples Bordering the University’s Morrill Act Lands, 1868-1900” at the Cornell Society for the Humanities Conference on “Repair.”
  • May 2: Kurt Jordan was interviewed by Rachel Hatziapangos of the Washington Post.  Jordan was quoted in the July 9 Post article “Native Americans call for Reparations from ‘Land-Grab’ Universities” (paywall).
  • May 17: Katherine McComas, Vice Provost for Engagement and Land Grant Affairs denied (via email) Jon Parmenter’s written request for up-to-date financial information on the Cornell Endowment Fund (the legacy fund from Cornell University’s Western Land account, into which all revenues from the Morrill Act were placed). Information on the fund (its principal and the annual interest payout) were reported publicly in University financial reports through FY 2005.
  • June 23: The committee finished the process of diplomatic outreach to impacted Indigenous Nations and communities. A total of 251 Nations and communities were contacted. We thank Karishma Bottari, Dusti Bridges, Kurt Jordan, Leslie Logan (Seneca), Ben Maracle (Mohawk), Ula Piasta-Mansfield, Troy Richardson (Saponi, Tuscarora), and Annabel Young for their help with the diplomatic outreach effort
  • July 1: We thank departing CU&ID committee members Maia Dedrick, Eman Ghanayem, Fred Gleach, and Meredith Palmer for their help with the committee’s efforts.
  • July 17: Leslie Logan and Kurt Jordan were interviewed by journalists from WAMU/NPR Washington.
  • July 27: Jon Parmenter delivered a public lecture, “Cornell University’s Land Agency Office in Eau Claire, Wisconsin: Outpost of an Educational Financial Empire, 1877-1904,” at the Chippewa Valley Museum in Eau Claire, Wisconsin.
  • October 1: Leslie Logan is named co-chair of the Cornell University & Indigenous Dispossesion Committee.
  • October 2: Marina Johnson-Zafiris gave a CU&ID walking tour on the Cornell Ithaca campus for Postcolonial Science, a course taught by Cornell Professor Stacey Langwick.
  • October 5: Kurt Jordan is interviewed by Patricia Smith of New York Times Upfront about the land-grab universities issue.
  • October 7-8: Leslie Logan sends the CU&ID Press Release on the release of the List of Impacted Nations to 206 media contacts.
  • October 9: The CU&ID Project releases the list of 251 Indigenous Nations and Communities impacted by Cornell’s past and present land manipulations.
  • October 11: Leslie Logan and Michael Charles were interviewed by Jenna Kunze of Native News Online and are quoted in the October 11th article “Cornell University Should Work with Tribes to Mend the History of Its Massive Land Grab.”
  • October 27: Jon Parmenter participated in a panel discussion, “Reckoning with the Settler University” at the “Under the Campus, the Land” Symposium hosted by the University of Michigan’s Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning, Ann Arbor.
  • October 30: We thank departing CU&ID committee member Ula Piasa-Mansfield for her work with the CU&ID Committee since it’s founding in 2020.
  • November 16: Kurt Jordan presented in the College of Veterinary Medicine’s “Many Voices, One College” talk series.
  • December 15: CU&ID Committee thanks departing member Ben Maracle (Mohawk) for over two years of dedicated service to the committee. Ben was integral to the operation and maintenance of the original CU&ID Blog.

2024
  • January 11: Leslie Logan, Kurt Jordan, Michael Charles, Marina Johnson-Zafiris, and Dusti Bridges met with Misty Blue and Audrianna Goodwin of the Minnesota TRUTH Project.
  •  February 8: Jon Parmenter spoke on “Cornell University’s Origins in Indian Country”  in Prof. Laura Tach’s Introduction to Public Policy class (PAM2301).
  • February 21: CU&ID welcomes Peter Thais as the new undergraduate student representative to the committee.
  • March 25th: University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Professor Emeritus Rick St. Germaine (Lac Courte Oreilles Anishinaabeg) presented a lecture on ‘Cornell University and the Blue Hills (WI) Pipestone Quarry: A Perspective from Anishinaabewaki‘.
  • March 25 – Rick St. Germaine visited AIISP/AMST/HIST 2660 -Everything You Know About Indians is Wrong
  • March 26 – Rick St. Germaine visited AIISP/AMST/HIST 4674 – Dispossession, Truth, and Reconciliation 
  • March 26: Professor St. Germaine met with AIISP undergraduate and graduate students and members of the CU&ID Committee.
  • April 10: Professor Jon Parmenter delivers a lecture for the 2024 Rabinor Lecture Series entitled: “Cornell University’s Origin in Indian Country”.
  • May 2nd: Dr. Jean O’Brien (White Earth Ojibwe), Regents Professor of History, University of Minnesota, delivered a lecture for the 2024 Rabinor Lecture Series entitled: “Reckoning with Settler Colonialism at the University of Minnesota: The TRUTH Project” and also made a class visit to AIIS/HIST 4674.
  • June 7: Leslie Logan, Marina Johnson-Zafiris, and Peter Thais presented on Cornell’s relation to Indigenous dispossession at the Native American Indian Education Association of New York (NAIEA/NY) Spring Gathering held at Ganondagan State Historic Site, Victor, NY.
  • August 1: The CU&ID Committee was reconstituted, welcoming new member Zoë Van Nostrand. Co-chairs Kurt Jordan and Leslie Logan stepped down from their respective leadership positions. Jon Parmenter accepted chair leadership of the CU&ID Committee.
  • August 8: Peter Thais presented on his research within the Charles Lab on “Indigenous Food Sovereignty and Land Grant Universities: A Forgotten Debt” at the Cornell Engineering Office of Inclusive Excellence Summer Research Symposium as a McNair Scholar.
  • August 15: Dr. Michael Charles presents webinar “Indigenous Food Sovereignty and Land Grant Institutions: A Forgotten Debt” as part of the Discover Archaeology Webinar Series hosted by Crow Canyon Archaeological Center.