Wednesday, June 8, 2022

Lloyd Masayumptewa

Verde News photo of MOCA Supt. Lloyd Masayumptewa Copyright 2022 by Vyto Starinskas

This article was written by Verde News Reporter Vyto Starinskas and appeared in the June 8 editions of "The Verde Independent" and "The Camp Verde Bugle." It is Copyright 2022 by Verde News and used here without permission.  We believe a wider circulation beyond the newspaper's paywall is important for cultural awareness in The Verde Valley and beyond.

MONTEZUMA CASTLE – The superintendent of the Montezuma Castle and Tuzigoot National Monuments and the Interior Secretary of the United States have two things in common.

They both started their jobs a year ago and both are Native Americans.

Superintendent Lloyd Masayumptewa is Hopi from the Third Mesa village of Orayvi (Old Oraibi) and is of the Water-Coyote clan.

He was raised by his grandparents on the mesa, where they didn’t have running water while growing up about 50 miles southeast of Tuba City. They would get pails of water to fill trash cans or oil containers after monsoons.

Masayumptewa said growing up on the mesa helped him relate to his new job at Montezuma Castle because he used to wake up to similar architecture every day.

“The various luxuries that we have these days, we didn’t have those days,” he said.

“I take great pride in having the opportunity to work in one of the Hopi People’s ancestral homes,” Masayumptewa said when hired. “I joined the National Park Service to help preserve the legacy of my people’s existence and migrations in the Southwest.”

He was named the superintendent of the Montezuma and Tuzigoot monuments in July 2021, but had been acting superintendent since March 2021.

“His leadership skills and passion to preserve and protect our nation’s public lands and cultural resources make him a great fit to serve both of these parks,” Regional Director Mike Reynolds said at the time. 

The same month, Interior Secretary Deb Haalan, of New Mexico’s Laguna Pueblo, was confirmed as the first Native American Interior Secretary.

Dorothy FireCloud was the previous superintendent at Montezuma and Tuzigoot, Masayumptewa said. She is a member of the Rosebud Sioux Tribe of South Dakota. But there are only a handful of Native American superintendents at national monuments, he pointed out.

Masayumptewa spoke to The Verde Independent about his first year as superintendent and how getting a master’s degree at Northern Arizona University changed his destiny.

He now lives in Rimrock and says one of his priorities is to build more on-site housing for his federal employees at the Montezuma and Tuzigoot monuments because of the worker-housing shortage in the Verde Valley.

Montezuma Castle was built and inhabited between 1100 and 1400 AD and it was a permanent settlement, he said. But eventually, they left. Drought may be the reason.

Archaeologists have termed the people “Sinagua,” the predecessors to the Hopi, because of the types of wares that were associated with the area, Masayumptewa said.

Historically, he said his heritage goes back to those days at Montezuma Castle, but it’s difficult to tell if his clan was ever at the location. He can track his direct lineage about three generations.

As an archaeologist, he wants to identify who lived at the ruin. Sometimes clans leave identifiers.

“The thing I also want to entertain and answer is: Where did they go,” he asked.

Some people say, “They just vanished,” he said. “And that’s not true.”

“I am part of these people that lived here,” Masayumptewa said. “There’s people at home that feel the same way that I do.”

As quickly as people vanished, modern visitors are now appearing to view the historic ruins and the architecture at the Camp Verde and Clarkdale monuments. There will be a need for a little more development because “visitation is huge,” he said.

“A lot of people visit this place, and we just can’t accommodate the number of people that come in,” he said. “Particularly during spring break.”

He wants to bring in interpretive talks that discuss the perspectives of all the people who used to live in the area.

Masayumptewa said he did his master’s thesis on ruins’ preservation and received his master’s degree from NAU in archeology.

His first job was at the Flagstaff Area National Monuments near Flagstaff. He served as the deputy superintendent for the Southern Four Corners Group of parks, which includes Navajo and Canyon de Chelly National Monuments and Hubbell Trading Post National Historic Site.

Masayumptewa said he wanted to thank the NAU professors who helped put him on the right educational and career path.

Cultural anthropology professor Michael Vásquez “took me under his wing a little bit,” he said, introducing him to another archeology NAU professor, Chris Downum, who was in the preservation field. He said it was very rewarding for him to work at Hopi sites.

“It was significant for me,” he said.

“That I could actually go out to these places was the most rewarding thing for me because it fulfilled those talks that were provided for me when I was growing up by my grandparents and other elders, and where clans came from.”

Wednesday, June 1, 2022

Friends of Camp Verde Library Communiqué

Hi Everyone! 

Welcome to the Friends of the Library June-July Newsletter!

So much has been happening at our library! First, I want to tell you about our bargain BOGO Book Nook sale. It starts Thursday, June 2 and goes through the end of June (or whenever we run out of books). Take a look at the titles on the Friends' shelf by the front door, in the Book Nook, and on the tables in the walkway on the second floor. You will find a selection of new donations not seen before. Find that summer read you've been looking for. And, since most books are priced at 50 cents, the BOGO sale is not to be missed!!

The “Little Laundromat Library”, sponsored by the Friends, is extremely popular!  The customers enjoy the variety of books that are on the shelves for adults, teens, and children! Some read a book while waiting for their laundry and others find an author they like and take it home to read later! The children especially love the choices that are there just for them. The stories they tell melt your heart! A special thanks to Charlie German for building these wonderful shelves for all to enjoy! Our motto is “Take one or leave one!” Come and see for yourselves! Maybe you will be there when a little child gets excited over a new book! 

Many of you that have been to the library lately may have noticed a beautiful wall of art. Each one was donated and we sold 24 pieces through April and May! It was so successful that we will be doing it again next year. If you have a piece of art you would like to donate, think about us next Spring! All the proceeds go to the Friends of the Library and used to purchase new programs, books, and items necessary for our library. Thank you for your support!

The Friends are so thrilled to have new shelves in our workroom to make our jobs easier! Kent Hellman took time out of his busy weekend and put them up for us. We are so thankful for them since we get so many donations and now have an actual place to put them. Thank you, Kent! We really do appreciate all that you do for us! 

We are still selling the Community Bashas cards for $10. Remember that your card will have $10 on it, so it will not cost you a single penny. Not only can you add money to your card repeatedly so you can shop for yourself, but you can also give these cards to someone as a gift for birthdays, anniversaries, Christmas, and other special occasions!  The first 4 months of this year, Bashas sent our library a check for $1200!  They pay us out of their pocket, not yours!  Every penny goes back into our library!  We are very thankful for what they do to support us!

If you have not stopped by Sweet Pea lately, you need to go and see what the library booth has for sale. There are not only books, but 45-vinyl records, lamps, dolls, knick-knacks and more.  Ambie always puts her all into everything she displays on every single shelf. Over the past 4 months, sales at Sweet Pea have added up to over $1000!  Every dollar helps us expand ideas for our library! So, stop on by!

Most everyone shops on Amazon. If you go to smile.amazon.com and designate Friends of the Library of Camp Verde, AZ as your charity, Amazon will send a small percentage of what you spend back to our Library. In the last Quarter, the library received over $50!  We are happy to receive this free money!

There is so much more that we could mention of the happenings at our very busy library!  Check out the Library website or Facebook page to find out more!

We have a big surprise for the next newsletter that you are going to LOVE!  Till then have a GREAT summer!  See you in August!

Your Friends of the Library