1880s?: Ellensburg, WA area
A family recollection that I originally shared on the old CHINOOK listserv merits re-posting here…
A family recollection that I originally shared on the old CHINOOK listserv merits re-posting here…
One byproduct of the Fraser River gold rush of 1858 was that Oregon gained even greater prominence in the minds of Californians, who found its inhabitants oddballs.
Everybody knew that the Canadian Settler government had outlawed traditional Native potlatches.
I’ve been tracing the linguistic footprints of Canadian Métis people in our Pacific Northwest region.
An excerpt from still another published account of talking Chinook with BC Native people who were on exhibit (yup) at the 1893 Chicago World’s Fair.
George Gibbs uses quite a number of Chinuk Wawa phrases in his amazing ethnography from 1877…
Spoiler alert: there’s a real Grand Ronde connection here.
Hayu masi / maarsii to Dr. Keren Rice, my linguist colleague who kindly shared a copy of Craig Mishler’s 2008 article with me.
Additional precious information from George Gibbs’s 1877 ethnography of “Tribes of Western Washington and Northwestern Oregon“…
Not many people eat porcupines.