Henry John Bear

Henry John Bear
Member of the
Maine House of Representatives
for the Houlton Band of Maliseet Indians
In office
January 2013 (2013-Jan) – January 2019 (2019-Jan)
Preceded byDavid Slagger
Succeeded byVacant
Personal details
Born1956
Lewiston, Maine
Political partyGreen Independent (since 2017)
Democratic (before 2017)
SpouseViolet
ChildrenFour
ResidenceHoulton, Maine
Alma materUniversity of Maine (L.L.M.)
University of New Brunswick (J.D.)

University of Maine (A.A.)
OccupationTreaty & Economic Rights Advocate

Henry John Bear is a Maliseet politician from Maine. In January 2013, he was sworn in as the first elected member of the Maine House of Representatives representing the Maliseet people. He replaced David Slagger, who was appointed to the Maine House.[1]

Bear grew up in Lewiston, Maine living in poverty. At 17, he joined the United States Coast Guard, where he met his wife, Violet Dotson. The two have four grown children and eight grandchildren. He and his family live in Houlton, Maine, where they operate a Maliseet respite care facility.[1]

He was the Democratic candidate for the 144th district in the 2016 election.[2] In November 2017, he became a member of the Maine Green Independent Party.[3] Bear ran unsuccessfully for Maine's 2nd congressional district in 2018.[4] The Maliseet people opted not to send a delegate to the Maine House of Representatives for the 2019-2020 session.[5] Following completion of his LLM Degree, conferred by the University of Maine School of Law in May 2020, Henry Bear was admitted to the Bar in Maine that fall, owing to delays in processing caused by the Covid-19 Pandemic. He has been engaged by a consortium of First Nations groups to sue the Catholic Church for conditions members experienced in residential schools in Canada.

  1. ^ a b Bayly, Julia (January 26, 2013). "Houlton Maliseet, first elected tribal representative to Maine House, looking forward to session". Bangor Daily News. Retrieved 29 March 2015.
  2. ^ Cousins, Christopher (2016-03-16). "LePage's legacy at stake in Maine's 2016 legislative races". Bangor Daily News.
  3. ^ "Second state representative enrolls Green Independent". 2017-11-21.
  4. ^ "Representative Henry Bear joins race for 2nd Congressional District seat". Machias Valley Observer. November 29, 2017. Retrieved November 29, 2017.
  5. ^ "Only 1 tribal representative bound for Maine State House". 8 December 2018.