Donald F. Malonson was Chief of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head from 1951-2003. In 1951, his uncle Harrison Vanderhoop, also known as Chief No-Ho-No, nominated Donald as his successor. Malonson symbolically led his people for the next 52 years.
Biography
Early life
Born in Gay Head, Massachusetts to William and Minnie Malonson, his father was French Canadian. and his great-grandfather was a whaler named Thomas Manning. His grandfather, also named Thomas, received an award for rescuing twenty survivors of the SS City of Columbus wreck in 1884. He and his sister, Gladys Widdiss, were raised at the family homestead near Lobsterville Road, which had been built by their great-grandparents., Thomas Manning and Rosabelle Howwasswee.
In 1951, his uncle Harrison Vanderhoop, also known as Chief No-Ho-No, nominated Donald as his successor. Malonson symbolically led his people for the next 52 years. Donald remarked about his role:
"I'm not political," he said. "The role of the chief is to be a patriarch and attend to powwows and tribal gatherings. More and more these days, if a tribe has a chief at all he's a figurehead. They now have presidents and councils - I represent the tribe, but stay out of the politics. He continued, "We are a woodland people, but a fishing tribe. Amos Smalley, a Gay Head Wampanoag, was the only man to ever actually harpoon and kill a white whale, a 90-footer, somewhere off the Azores in 1902. And Tashtego, the second harpooner in Moby-Dick, was a Gay Head Indian.""
Federal recognition of Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head In 1972, the Gay Head Tribal Council Inc. formed to pursue federal acknowledgement of the Wampanoag Tribe of Gay Head. Chief Donald F. Malonson stated "it took the federal government more than $2 million to figure out who we were when we already knew who we were." After an arduous process, the tribe received federal recognition on April 10, 1987. Along with being granted tribal status, the Wampanoags were given back around 500 acres of tribal lands previously in the area called Gay Head. The Wampanoag tribe governs themselves with an elected Tribal Council, with traditional positions held by a chief and medicine man, who maintain their status for life. Donald served as chief from 1951 to his death in 2003.