Feast of the Hunters' Moon

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File:Feasthuntersmoon2006.jpg
Fifers at the 2006 Feast

Feast of the Hunters’ Moon is a weekend festival and historical reenactment held on a weekend in October since 1968, at the present-day site of Fort Ouiatenon, a replica 18th century French military and trading post near West Lafayette, Indiana. Traditionally, the Hunters' Moon is the full moon in October, following September's Harvest Moon.

Site and history

File:Fort Ouiatenon blockhouse front.jpg
Blockhouse replica at Fort Ouiatenon

The Feast is held on the grounds of the Historic Fort Ouiatenon Park, on the Wabash River.<ref name = JCLocation>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The blockhouse is a replica of the original Fort Ouiatenon, which was the first fortified European settlement in what is now called Indiana.<ref name=blockhouse>"Blockhouse Museum" Tippecanoe County Historical Association</ref> The fort served as a French trading post and was located approximately one mile downriver from the replica.<ref name=ouiatenon>"The Ouiatenon Preserve" Tippecanoe County Historical Association</ref>

Many Indigenous groups routinely visited Fort Ouiatenon, including the Wea, Kickapoo, Mascouten, Neshnabe (Potawatomi), Piankashaw, Sauk, Fox, Seneca, Miyaamiaa Nations (Miami), Lenape (Delaware), and Shawnee (Sewanee).<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Waayaahtanonki, also known as Ouiatenon, once stood across the river from the fort.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Thousands of people lived in the area surrounding the settlement, which was occupied seasonally.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Waayaahtanonki was primarily occupied by the waayaahtanwa, or Wea.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Modern Indigenous groups related to the waayaahtanwa include the Miami of Indiana and the Peoria Tribe of Indians of Oklahoma.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Although modern interpretations of interactions between Indigenous groups and European Americans are portrayed as peaceful, constant interpersonal conflicts and violence took place at Waayaahtanonki .<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Festival and historical reenactment

During the festival, participants reenact the annual fall gathering of the French and Native Americans which took place at Fort Ouiatenon in the mid-18th century.<ref name ="ChicagoSunTimes1">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name = JournalCcourier20110923> Template:Cite news</ref> Participants dress in the garb of the 18th century French soldiers, settlers, and Native Americans who lived in this region.<ref name=Gisler /><ref name ="Borsky">Template:Cite news</ref> Food vendors sell traditional period foods such as rabbit stew, voyageur stew, and venison sausage.<ref name = JournalCcourier20110923/><ref name =Borsky/> The program also includes music, marching, dancing and reenacted military maneuvers.<ref name = JournalCcourier20110923/>

Musical performances

As part of the event, various musical acts perform, including Native American drummers, historical folk music performers, French folksingers and period fife and drum corps.<ref name=Gisler />

Living history presentations

The event includes historical reenactments featuring period characters from the 1700s to educate visitors about the lives and culture of the period.<ref name = OutdoorIndiana>Template:Cite journal</ref> Each year, Indigenous participants construct a temporary Wea village at the festival.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> The festival requires Indigenous first-person interpreters to wear "...Eastern Woodlands Indian dress of the period."<ref>Template:Citation</ref> This requirement perpetuates the idea that Indigenous cultures remain unchanged and does not allow Indigenous first-person interpreters to interpret the history of their communities from a modern perspective.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> One historical interpreter presented a Delaware Indian who first served as a scout for the French and whose people lived along the Wabash River in the 1700s and co-existed peacefully with the French at the outpost.<ref name = ThisIsOurLand>Template:Cite news</ref> Others play traders and gunsmiths, such as "Pierre Rolletof" of French Scots-Irish descent who traveled along the Wabash River trading a range of items, including guns, and also gunsmithed as he traveled.<ref name = ItsAChallengingLife>Template:Cite news</ref> Other reenactors have demonstrated various period trades and crafts, including a chairmaker who built Windsor chairs to order, spending 40–45 hours per chair.<ref name = Simplicity>Template:Cite news</ref>

Size and production

In 2004, the annual event drew over 8,000 participants and over 60,000 spectators.<ref name=Gisler>Template:Cite book</ref> The Tippecanoe County Historical Association, cooperating with the Tippecanoe County Parks Department, presents the event on a weekend in late September or early October.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> The annual event ran for its 44th year in 2011. 2017 marked its 50th anniversary and the 300th anniversary of the fort.<ref name = opener>Template:Cite news</ref> The event was cancelled during the Pandemic of 2020 but resumed in 2021.<ref name = ows>http://feastofthehuntersmoon.org/ Official web site Retrieved 11/5/20</ref>

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