Movie Presentation - Burying the Hatchet: The Tom Quick Story

For more than 200 years, the Borough of Milford, a small county seat in northeast Pennsylvania, venerated Tom Quick, Jr., who was in 1733 the first white child born in the region. Quick was famous for having murdered Delaware (Lenni Lenape) Indians in the upper Delaware River Valley, after having witnessed his father’s death at the hands of the Lenape.   In the decades following his death in 1796, Tom Quick became part of local lore, lionized in books, articles, songs and on stage. The 40-year murderous rampage of "Tom Quick the Indian Slayer" was so deeply steeped into the cultural landscape of the region that for generations young children played "Tom Quick and the Indians" rather than "Cowboys and Indians."

In 1889, as part the U.S. Constitution centennial commemoration, an eight-foot zinc obelisk monument was erected in Milford in his honor. It was not without controversy at the time of the monument’s dedication;  one newspaper questioned “why the good people of Milford were honoring a serial killer.”  Over time, the monument increasingly became a point of deep conflict and re-evaluation, especially in recent years.

The documentary Burying the Hatchet: The Tom Quick Story puts this history in context, and tells the fascinating story of how Milford sought to redress this ugly chapter in its history. It began with Milford’s Mayor Sean Strub, who reached out to the leadership of the Lenni Lenape tribes who had been dislocated from their Milford homeland in the late 18th century, inviting them to discuss how this history could be responsibly addressed.

The ensuing collaboration led to a literal "burying of the hatchet" ceremony at the site where the monument once stood, as a symbol of reconciliation between the Quick family and tribal descendants. The town also worked with Lenape historians to create an exhibit at the local historical society. And finally, local land owners began the process of a land giveback to the Delaware tribes, enabling them to reestablish a vital presence in Lenapehoking, their original land. 

Burying the Hatchet: The Tom Quick Story is a hopeful film about how one largely white community and disenfranchised tribal leaders worked together to reconcile the past and forge a shared path forward based on trust, friendship and an inspiring and healing vision of the future.

Join Sean and the MEL Community for a screening of this film and a discussion on Tuesday January 13 starting at 7:00 PM.

ABOUT SEAN STRUB

Sean Strub is a writer and activist with a background in political organizing, public health, HIV/AIDS, LGBTQ+ and human rights advocacy. He was mayor of Milford, PA from 2016 to 2024 and, with his partner, a Mérida seasonal resident.

Strub himself is the subject of a documentary, My Friend the Mayor: Small Town Democracy in the Age of Trump. He has authored a memoir, Body Counts: A Memoir of Politics, Sex, AIDS and Activism and co-authored two books on corporate social responsibility. He has also produced two other documentaries: Nature’s Keepers and HIV is Not a Crime. He co-founded and served as Executive Director of the Sero Project (2012-2022), a U.S.-based network of people living with HIV combating stigma, discrimination and criminalization and was the founder and executive editor of POZ Magazine (1994-2004).

He served on the boards of the Milford Enhancement Committee (1999 to 2024) and the Greater Pike Community Foundation (2012-2023). Over more than 25 years, he helped lead an effort to launch local film, music, literary, art and opera festivals and from 2000 to 2021, owned the Hotel Fauchere/Relais & Chateaux, a restored historic boutique hotel and culinary destination. He served on former PA Governor Ed Rendell’s Travel and Tourism Partnership (2003-2011) and on former PA Governor Tom Wolf’s Commission on LGBTQ Affairs (2015-2023).

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