Circa 1852: A “Pioneer Experience” to back-translate
This happened on an Oregon Settler homestead claim near Cape Horn, below the Cascades of the Columbia River.
This happened on an Oregon Settler homestead claim near Cape Horn, below the Cascades of the Columbia River.
Thinking this over —
Like most of the jokes in Kamloops Wawa, this one’s pretty mild & family-friendly.
Quileute tribal members (image credit: Peninsula Daily News) Jack’s letter, 1881 as published by Dr. Barbara P. Harris in 1984 revisited by David Douglas Robertson PhD & the Snass Sessions class on August 14,… Continue reading
Now you can read along and listen to “SÁMEL“…
[Continuing from Part 1, yesterday.] Mociño goes on with his description of the local language; on page 53 he notes, …I observed that with some small variations they [verbs] could be turned into… Continue reading
I draw pretty clear conclusions from today’s source, but I’m putting out the call to Southern Wakashanists to answer the many questions that follow…
One source for information on the métis descendants of Fort Vancouver is the “Summary under the Criteria and Evidence for Proposed Finding: Cowlitz Tribe of Indians” (Bureau of Indian Affairs document, February 12,… Continue reading
We get quite the useful picture of how widespread the already-creolized Chinuk Wawa was in 1840-1841, when we absorb this great report:
(First in a mini-series.) The credited author disclaimed all responsibility…