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Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs
(Tenino, Wasco, Northern Paiute)
Three women photographed on the Warm Springs reservation in 1902.
Regions with significant populations
 United States ( Oregon)

The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs is a recognized Native American tribe made of three tribes who put together a confederation. They live on and govern the Warm Springs Indian Reservation in the U.S. state of Oregon.

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Transcription

Tribes

The confederation consists of three tribes of the Pacific Northwest:

Wasco

Language

The Wasco language, known as Kiksht, has been passed down through generations of Warm Spring Tribe members. There is a concerted effort underway to try to preserve the ancestral language of the Wasco people, through educational programs and language repositories.[1] The United States Governmental policy of assimilation (1790–1920) nearly erased this language.[2][3] The young tribe members that attended governmental educational facilities were only permitted to speak English, and were forbidden to speak in their native tongue.

The loss of tribal elder Gladys Thompson in 2012 – who was the last fully fluent speaker of Kiksht – has caused the language to become nearly extinct.[4] Language preservation efforts include the Central Oregon Community College 100‑level course in the Kiksht Native Language.[5] The instructor for this course, Ms. Valerie Switzler, was the 2016 recipient of the Linguistic Society of America's Excellence in Community Linguistics Award.[6] The Endangered Languages Archive at SOAS University of London has preserved recordings of conversational Kiksht.[7]

Warm Springs

Bands

These bands are split into different places but are the part of the same tribe. The bands of the Warm Springs tribe consists of Tenino, the Lower Deschutes, also called Wyam, the John-Day or Dock-Spus, and finally the Upper Deschutes or Tygh.[8]

Language

The Warm Springs band spoke a language called Sahaptin. Today there are only about 50 people who speak it fluently and none of them are under fifty years old.[citation needed]

Paiute

Paiute history

The Northern Paiutes had dominated South Eastern Oregon, Southern Idaho, Northern and Southern Nevada, and Northern California, with parts of Montana, and Utah.

Language

The Northern Paiutes' language is an Uto-Aztecan language called Numu, which had around 1600 speakers in 1999.[9] It is closely related to the Mono language.[10]

History

Cultural origins

Before becoming the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs the three tribes; Wasco, Warm Springs, and Paiute, lived along the Columbia River and Cascade Mountains. They all spoke different languages and had their own customs. The Warm Springs and Wasco tribes traded and conversed frequently, whereas the Paiute's language was so foreign to the other tribes that it prevented frequent contact.

Arrival of settlers from the U.S.

In 1800, immigrants from the east first started to arrive, by 1852 around 12,000 settlers crossed the tribes' territories each year. The Warm springs and Wasco signed a treaty with Joel Palmer in 1855 after dealing with their traditional ways of life being disrupted by the settlers for many years. By signing the treaty the Wasco and Warm Springs tribes relinquished 10 million acres of land to the United States and kept 640,000 acres for their own use.

The first people from the Paiute tribe to arrive on reservation were the 38 Paiutes that were forced to move onto the Warm Springs Reservation from the Yakama Reservation in 1879. Soon more arrived and they eventually became a permanent part of the Warm Springs Reservation.[11]

Establishment of a confederation at Warm Springs

The Confederated Tribes adopted a constitution in 1938, after the construction of Bonneville Dam flooded the major fishing site at Cascades Rapids. Upon receiving a $4 million settlement in compensation for the 1957 flooding of Celilo Falls by the construction of The Dalles Dam, the Tribes used part of the sum to build the Kah-Nee-Ta resort, which opened in 1964.[12]

Political action

In 2001, members of the Confederated Tribes persuaded the Oregon Legislative Assembly to pass a bill mandating that the word squaw be changed in numerous place names.[13]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Switzler sees language as key to tribal culture". Portland Tribune. Portland, OR.
  2. ^ Wasco, Paiute, and Warm Spring Indian boys in uniform at government boarding school, Oregon. Burke Library Archives. G.E.E. Lindquist Native American Photographs (photograph). New York, NY: Columbia University. c. 1925. box 58, folder 752, negative 1370.
  3. ^ Hoxie, Frederick (1984). A Final Promise: The campaign to assimilate the Indians, 1880–1920. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
  4. ^ Clark, Aaron (May 23, 2008). "Tribes strive to save native tongues". The Christian Science Monitor. Boston, MA.
  5. ^ "Kiksht Native Language". Foreign language courses. Bend, OR: Central Oregon Community College. 2017. Archived from the original on January 28, 2021. Retrieved February 27, 2022.
  6. ^ "Oregon tribal director honored with Excellence in Community Linguistics Award" (Press release). Linguistic Society of America. December 8, 2015.
  7. ^ "Conversational Kiksht". Endangered Languages Archive. London, UK: School of Oriental and African Studies, SOAS University.
  8. ^ "The Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation of Oregon". critfc.org. Member tribes overview. Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission. Retrieved December 6, 2016.
  9. ^ "Report on Northern Paiute". Ethnologue. Retrieved March 29, 2007.
  10. ^ Babel, Molly; Garrett, Andrew; House, Michael J.; Toosarvandani, Maziar (2013). "Descent and diffusion in language diversification: A study of western Numic dialectology". International Journal of American Linguistics. 79: 445–489.
  11. ^ "History". Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs.
  12. ^ "The Oregon Story". Oregon Public Broadcasting. 2001. Archived from the original on March 18, 2008. Retrieved March 19, 2008.
  13. ^ Sanders, Eli (December 11, 2004). "Renaming 'squaw' sites proves touchy in Oregon". The New York Times.

External links

This page was last edited on 20 December 2023, at 16:05
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