Monthly Archive: January, 2023

1909, “The Chrysalis”: earliest known “Seattle Illahee” song?

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Harold Morton Kramer (1873-1930) published a novel, “The Chrysalis“, in 1909 (Boston: Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Co.).

Howay [Haswell, Boit, Hoskins] “Voyages of the Columbia” (Part 2B of 5)

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Continuing to examine John Box Hoskins’s 2nd NW coast journal, I ask you: Is there much communication here that can’t be explained as the use of a lot of gestures and a few… Continue reading

Jargon in the news: Down the Rabbit Hole

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A recommendation to you:

1862: Siletz chiefs’ speeches for back-translation into CW (Part 3 of 6)

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nayka wáwa drét háyú mási kʰapa David Gene Lewis, PhD.

Was “músum” a naughty word from the start?

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Franz Boas 1892 observed, with charming vagueness, that the word mamuk (‘do, make’) “has acquired an obscene meaning,”*…

“Ten Years of Missionary Work…Skokomish” (Part 1 of 3)

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There’s plenty of really substantial material in the 1886 memoir of Myron Eells, an acute on-the-spot observer of Puget Sound Native life, who sometimes writes of himself as “I” and sometimes in the… Continue reading

Pre-1870: Eyewitness? account of Chief Seattle’s funeral

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The magazine article is titled “Old Seattle, and His Tribe” (Overland Monthly IV(4):297-302, April 1870).

Boas 1892: Many discoveries in a short article (Part 2: ‘bone of fish’)

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Not just any old bone!

Howay [Haswell, Boit, Hoskins] “Voyages of the Columbia” (Part 2A of 5)

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Back to the grindstone. Here we start Part 2 of our investigation into the assembled journals from one ship’s early fur-trading visits to the Pacific Northwest coast.

Siwash(ed) Lane: a Chinook loan into English

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Darrin Brager, man yaka kwanisum haiyoo-nanich okok naika websait “website“, yaka patlach okok haiyas-makook ankati pipa kopa nesaika.