Makah Vs. Quileute Indian Tribe & Quinault Indian Nation

I have searched for criminalization with the Quileutes and didn’t find really anything on criminalization with the Tribe, but i did come across The Makah case, Washington’s State’s Makah Tribe asked the Ninth Circuit to reduce the a court approved expansion of the Quileute and Quinault tribes’ fishing territory, arguing the boundaries have reduced the Makahs catch. All Three tribes live on the Olympic Peninsula in the Western part of the state. The case stems from a 1974 injunction by U.S District Judge George Hugo Bolt in U.S v. Washingtonwhich affirmed certain tribal fishing rights the state had been denying. The Makah Tribe filed a subproceeding in 2009 to determine the usual and accustomed fishing ground of the Quileutes and Quinaults, claiming the tribes were fishing beyond their boundaries.

The Supreme Court denied Makah Tribes’ petition for review in a case putting the Quileute Tribes’ and Quinault Indian Nation’s Treaty ocean fishing areas at stake, United States v. Washington subproceeding 09-01. The denial effectively upholds The Ninth Circuit’s and Western Washington District Court’s ruling that the western boundaries of Quileute’s and Quinaults treaty fishing grounds are 40 and 30 Miles offshore, respectively.

” The Quileute people have always known what these courts confirmed- we have been here since the time of the beginnings, and we have always been ocean fishing people,” Doug Woodruff, the Chairman of the Quileute Tribal Council.

It is sad when the tribes fight among each other for rights that have had before the Europeans came and commercialized everything. It is very important that we keep our children and everyone educated on the “Fishing Wars” and these types of cases. They wont go away and will continue again at another time. Native People have always fought for the Land, fish, water, and what is important to them and their culture.

Makah Indian Tribe v. Quileute Tribe Case 

Quileute People Today

first-beach

Quileute people today live modern day lives and don’t wear a headdress and live in a tee-pee, the Quileute actually lived in longhouses and not tepees. Most of these tribes still have longhouses today, but many use them strictly for community events and ceremonies (pot-latches) for the purpose of name giving, marriages, and memorials and actually live in houses much like mainstream American families.

Though Quileutes have i Pods, x Boxes, and Black Berries, they also have an ancient language and a worldview shared among community members that reaches back to a time when the “animals were people.” It’s hard for some people to imagine that both modern life and traditional teachings can co-exist. They can and do.

Many visitors to La Push are disappointed to find ordinary people living very familiar lives. Many “twihards” have so little knowledge of modern Indian people that they don’t know what to expect on an Indian reservation. The Quileute are welcoming and have listed their calendar of events on their website. Come out for drum circle and dance and talk with the real Quileute people. But don’t expect Jacob and Billy Black to be there attending a Tribal Council meeting at First Beach.

Quileute Days

Every year the Quileute Tribe hosts Quileute Days in the month of July and it is a weekend long festival of celebrating Quileute Cultural Heritage and a modern lifestyle. There is a traditional salmon bake, dancing, drumming, singing songs, softball tournaments, canoe races, art and crafts, food vendors, and much more. There also a parade on Saturday at noon, a street dance, and a firework show. I enjoy going to Quileute days every year with my family and friends.

 

 

 

Shaker Religion and Religious Freedom

Shaker Religion is very common with the Coastal Tribes of the Northwest, the Shaker Church was created near Olympia where John Slocum was said to have died and went to Heaven and came back. John told his followers he was sent back to tell all of his followers how to be good Christians. John Slocum got Ill again and his wife became a follower and she began to shake and he became better drastically and was better. The Indian Shaker Religion is still practiced and combines many traditional native beliefs and customs with Christian beliefs about God and the realities of Heaven and Hell. Quileutes believe in the Father the Son and the Holy Ghost the same as Christians, I think that most natives are believers but really didn’t read the bible. Even though Christianity was pushed on the Quileutes they were somewhat satisfied that they believed in the Christian ways of the Europeans.

Source:

http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/news_mckimmie.htm

Quileute Education

In the 1850’s according to Quileute Folklore, the large Steamships full of white settlers ran into a rock at James Island near La Push, WA where the Quileute Reservation is now located was the first contact with white settlers. The Quileutes took very good care of them when they wrecked in exchange for the strange items they had on board like flour, dried fruit, and gold coins. Quileute lore taken by Leo J. Frachtenberg in 1915 and 1916, “one white man came to Quileute land… all the Quileute knew the name of the good white man” (Andrade, 209). This man was Isaac I. Stevens, governor of Washington Territory, who was sent to make a treaty with the Quileutes in the mid 1850’s. Because the Quileute land was so remote, the natives were not forced to move, and in 1889 President Cleveland set up the reservation at La Push that still exists today. Not very many years went by and the Quileutes were forced out of their homes and could not live where they use to live and were deprived of all their land from the white people. Not only were the settlers taking their land they were taking away their language and their traditions of the tribe. Seven years prior to the creation of the reservation a school was set up in La Push by Mr. & Mrs. A.W Smith who brought Christianity to the natives, and started giving the tribal members biblical names such as William Penn and Robert E. Lee, which is proven in the Quileute Chieftain, and Quileute Independent. W.H Hudson was half Quileute and was the editor of the Quileute Chieftain and he promoted education of his people. The children were taken from their homes and had to look and act white, they moved in with white people and had to learn from them. Hudson wanted to see his people more educated and advanced and the only way to do it was to embrace the ways of the white man, and that included education and religion. The main aim for the Quileute Chieftain and The Quileute Independent was to prepare Native Americans for the future, to “open the eyes of the Indian population in the Great Western Country  so that they realize their opportunities are equal to that of a white man”(Chieftain 2 Feb. 1910, p2). Hudson called for education not only for the children but for people of all ages, he believed that books of vast knowledge would be in every home. So there was not enough room in the schools for everyone so Hudson came up with a solution and started having school in churches so then he encouraged Christianity as well.

Today the Quileute Tribal School is there and they are about to start building another new school in La Push. The Quileutes are very traditional & cultural people, they are very strong in their language as well. Quileute promote wellness and traditions today and have a heavy emphasis on teaching the youth the right way of life which is respect your elders, always help someone in need.

Source: http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/news_mckimmie.htm

Quileute Tribal School Link: https://quileutetribalschool.org/

 

Quileute Language

Language is disappearing at an alarming rate, The Quileute Tribe back in 2007 set up a 2 -year Quileute Language Revitalization Project with the goal of encouraging their people to use words in phrases and in everyday life. A basic vocabulary of greetings, questions, numbers, games, names of things, and one liners in Quileute were made available to tribal members and staff in informal class, email, and computer Cd’s. My Grandmother spoke fluent Quileute, I wish that i had listened more to her and learned her language, My grandmother was Quinault but spoke Quileute language, her Name was Charlotte P. Kalama a master basket weaver from Queets. Back when “Twilight” was popular a while ago, and some of the native boys in the film called her and she was teaching him the language on the phone. The Quileute language is a little hard on the tongue, but anybody can learn it. In the tutorial the voice of Lillian Pullen was my grandmothers step mother, she is the elder speaking on the website of some of the audio that is available. That was one of my main reasoning for choosing Quileute Tribe, so I could learn more about my family. The Quileutes are very strong in culture and language.

198506 984-42A PlusX Charlotte Kalama Basket Maker 300.jpg

They made their language available for the world, they made an alphabet sheet, a list of common words and phrases.

you can even Download and install the Quileute Font (True Type), which may be listed as Aiil Tikas or Quil Times after installation. The Quileute Font keyboard layout guide is a helpful chart showing which Quileute character maps to the standard English QWERTY keyboard.

Here is the link for the Quileute Tribe Language site:

https://quileutenation.org/language/

 

 

 

Control Policies

Quileute tribe had signed the Quinault River Treaty on January 25th, 1856, Chief How-Yak and two others trekked to Olympia to ink the treaty, relinquishing more than 800,000 acres of old-growth timberland flush with fish and wildlife. The treaty provided rights for the Quileutes to hunt, fish, and gather in their ancestral way on the relinquished lands, and the treaty promised healthcare, schooling, and vocational training.

On March 4, 1904, The commissioner of Indian Affairs declares the Quileutes eligible to receive their Allotments on their reservation as stipulated in the 1856 Quinault River Treaty. In 1928, 72 years later the US government finally granting the Quileutes with their allotments, they granted each of the 165 Quileutes an 80-acre tract on the Quinault Reservation. Which the Quileute never left La Push, because they were in such a remote area it was never an issue for them to stay.

Source: https://www.u-s-history.com/pages/h1565.html

QH

Image Source: http://www.burkemuseum.org/static/truth_vs_twilight/quileutes.html

 

Flag-of-Quileute-300x166

Image Source: https://www.tribalpedia.com/us-tribes/m-r/quileute-nation/

Culture Change

The Quileute Tribe is located on the Pacific Coast in La Push, WA encompassed by the Olympic National Park’s Rain-forests, the tribes 640 acre reservation lies at the mouth of the Quileute River.

QT

In 1855 the Quileutes came in contact with the U. S Government, the Quileutes and 3 others negotiated the Quinault River Treaty on January 25th, 1856, Chief How-yak and 2 others trekked to Olympia, WA to ink the treaty. When the Quileutes signed the treaty they relinquished 800,000 acres of old-growth timberland, flush with fish and wildlife in the Quillayute River Basin. In exchange for the Treaty provided rights for the Quileutes to hunt, fish and gather the same way their ancestors on their own land. The Quileutes were also promised healthcare, schooling, and vocational training, the document also assigned them to move to the Quinault Reservation. After being uprooted and relocated to one square mile reservation and forced to be civilized to the white-mans ways were very troublesome and changed the way they lived and what they were use to. There best chance of surviving like all the other nations that were completely devastated from relocation and being completely stripped of their rights on their own land was to embrace the ways of those who sought to assimilate them. Many Quileutes altered their traditional religious beliefs and accepted the white-mans education in pursuit of a better future.

An Act on March 4th, 1904 the Quileutes were eligible to receive land allotments on the reservation as stipulated in their 1856 treaty. In 1928 the U.S granted 165 Quileutes 80 acres each on the Quinault Reservation which is a whole different Tribe.

Early on In 1889 every house in La Push was burnt to the ground by land hungry settlers who had wrongfully claimed the land. Most of the Tribes Cultural belongings such as, Carved masks, basketry, and ceremonial regalia, hunting equipment was lost, except from museums or private collections. Later on  they made replicas and they are currently at someones home in Seattle. The Quileutes then moved to different areas on the coast. The Elders talked about the flood that happened long ago when it rained for 40 days and 40 nights, this story is not in text yet but they are currently reviewing it with the elders. So along time ago it rained for 40 days and 40 nights and they Quileutes had to leave their village due to the flooding and the people had to go to higher grounds and some of them scattered to different areas of the region.

In 1936 the Quileutes adopted their own Constitution and Bylaws which was a response to the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. This was an “Act to conserve and develop Indian lands & resources; to extend to Indians the right to form a business and other organizations; to establish a credit system for Indians; grant certain right of home rule to Indians; provide vocational education for Indians, and for other purposes.”

Currently the Quileute Tribe has its own government and businesses to sustain their people, they keep their culture alive by offering their language classes, healing drum circle on Wednesday nights, participate in the annual canoe journey. The offer a lot to their community and are very good people.

Q2

 

Source: http://depts.washington.edu/civilr/news_mckimmie.htm

Picture Source: http://www1.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/interactives/Quileute/index.html

 

 

A Quileute: A people of legends

Q’wati is both the creator and protector of the Quileute people.

Q’wati traveled all over the world teaching people how to be kind & caring, and how to be brave, how to live, while giving instructions for good futures. One day travelling on one of his journeys Q’wati came across beaver, who was busy sharpening his stone knife. Q’wati then asked beaver ” what are you doing”? Beaver then looked at Q’wati all serious and said “I am going to kill Q’wati”. Not knowing that he was talking to Q’wati, So quickly Q’wati grabbed the knife from beaver and stabbed him in tail with it, and told beaver that he would now have to live in the water and slap his tail with it.

Q’wati continued on his journey and when he reached Q’wayi’t’sox’a River he noticed there were no people anywhere in sight, so Q’wati began to rub his hands together and he rubbed until his dead skin fell into the river and he made people appear, he called these people the Queets.

Q’wati then traveled to the Quileute Land he again looked around and saw no people but he did notice two wolves, so Q’wati transformed them into people and dubbed them Quileute People, and said” for this reason you Quileute People shall be brave, for you came from wolves”.

Twilight-Saga-werewolves-twilight-series-37318403-867-429

So then came “Twilight”

 

Source:  http://www.quileutes.com/quileute/quileute-legends.html

Evelyne Kalama

My name is Evelyne Kalama, I am a Quinault Tribal Member and I live in the Pacific Northwest. I am doing some research on the Quileute people and life before European contact & effects of European Contact, also how the Quileutes work to re-create and revitalize their culture. I am excited to gather information on their role in political and environmental projects as well. So I hope you enjoy.

Quileute History

HISTORY

A-Ka-Lat or James Island
Thousands of winters before the arrival of the White Drifting-House people (ho-kwats), the Quileute Indians and the ghosts of their ancestors lived and hunted here. For as long as the ageless memory of legend recalls, the Quileutes flourished in the territory which originally stretched from their isle-strewn Pacific beaches along the rain forest rivers to the glaciers of Mt. Olympus. Today, Quileutes need only lift their eyes to see the burial place of chiefs atop James Island, or A-Ka-Lat — translated as “Top of the Rock”. This sense of cultural continuity is their birthright and heritage. Though much has changed, Quileute elders remember “back in the days” when the “old people” dared challenge kwalla, the mighty whale, and who recounted the exploits of wily raven or bayak, who placed the sun in the sky.

According to their ancient creation story, the Quileutes were changed from wolves by a wandering Transformer. By legend, their only kindred, the Chimakum Tribe, were washed away by flood and deposited near present-day Port Townsend (where they lived until Chief Seattle’s Suquamish Tribe wiped them out in the 1860s), leaving the Quileutes with no known relatives on earth. Quileutes were thus were surrounded by unrelated tribes, the Makah — Nuh-Chul-Nuth who migrated down from the west coast of Vancouver Island; S’Klallam to the northeast along the Strait of Juan de Fuca; and Quinault, south at Taholah, both descended from the Salishan. Relations with these groups allowed trade, intermarriage of nobility, and the ostentatious ceremony — the potlatch — an honoring giveaway celebration and redistribution of wealth. Occasionally, however, controversy over trespassing caused outbursts of warfare or slave raiding.

Traditional Quileute life was representative of the complex cultural pattern that was common to indigenous people of the Northwest Coast region. Oriented to the ocean, they fished and hunted sea mammals, and were reputedly recognized as the best sealers on the coast. Their red cedar canoes were engineering masterworks ranging in size from two-person sport models to 58-foot ocean going freight canoes capable of hauling three tons. The graceful bow and flowing shear-lines of the hull were reportedly copied in the hull design of the American clipper ship — which became the fastest in the world for its time. In the early 1900s, a canoe similar to those used by the Quileutes was outfitted with a mast and sailed around the world. Quileute whaling canoes traveled as far north as Southeast Alaska and as far south as California.

Although no early totems survive, elegantly carved house posts decorated their immense cedar “big houses” ( a 600-foot potlatch house has been documented on the Olympic Peninsula). The Quileutes bred special woolly-haired dogs and spun their hair into yarn for highly prized blankets. Rain proof skirts and capes, woven from the soft inner bark of the cedar, and conical rainhats provided protection from the 115 inches of rainfall that annually drenches Quileute country. The Quileutes also wove numerous types of baskets, some so fine and watertight that they served as kettles for boiling water or stew. Clothing, weaponry, paints and dyes, and tools and utensils were all made from natural materials found near at hand, or traded from neighboring tribes. Surface copper made it way south from British Columbia over these trade routes and iron was not unknown, possibly carried by the Japanese Current from Asia to Quileute beaches in derelict junks or other ships.

Quileute society generated from “house groups”, made up of all those who occupied during winter months one of the big houses at the mouths of the Quillayute or Hoh rivers, or Goodman Creek. Each house had a chief, those in line of chiefdom (nobility) and commoners. Thus kinship and blood relationships determined much of the early structure of tribal government. The house group may also have included a number of slaves, either captured or traded from neighboring tribes. During the summer months, these large units would fragment into families, some of whom moved upriver to hunting camps.

From cradle-board to burial canoe, Quileutes relied upon the help and inspiration of supernatural powers. Youths sought their own taxilit (personal guardian power) on solitary spirit quests. Rituals such as the first salmon ceremony guaranteed the good will of the salmon spirits –each family taking the first salmon caught in the spring divided up the flesh and returned the head and bones to the river — assuring that the great fish would continue to fill the rivers each year and allow themselves to be caught. A terrifying array of monsters, such as Duskiya, the kelp-haired child snatcher, were also abroad in the area.

Quileute life also included time for relaxation and play. Winter evenings were spent in dramatic recounting of mythic ancestor stories of the days when the animals were still people. Gambling tournaments like stick games (slahal) and contests of strength (lifting greased beach boulders) and skill were common. Potlatches honoring extraordinary whale hunting, naming or special achievements involved the pageantry of masked dances, drumming and songs that were private property and are still passed down by Quileutes as a family inheritance. These great feasts validated family status, continued all hours for days, and “back in the days” sometimes for weeks long.

The defining element of this culture, the Quileute language, is still spoken by elders at LaPush. The basics are also taught at the Quileute Tribal School. It is a complex tongue typified by clicked sounds, epiglottal stops and tongue twisting strings of consonants with words that would run off the page, for example: “kitlayakwokwilkwolasstaxasalas” which means “those are the people who think that I am the one who is going to Forks”. Quileute is not, as some outsiders believe, composed of Chinook jargon or devoid of all abstract ideas. It has the distinction of being one of only five languages in the world that have no nasal sounds (no m or n). Quileute is also one of the few languages not known to be related to any other tongue. Quileute elders have supervised the compilation of a dictionary and instructional texts that are taught in the school.

Although European traders had previously made contact with Quileutes as early as the 1700s, the first official contacts were made in 1855 when the Quileutes signed a treaty (Treaty of Quinault River) with staff members of Washington Territory governor, Isaac Stevens. A year later, a Quileute delegation traveled to Olympia to sign a treaty (Treaty of Olympia) with the United States. According to that treaty, the Quileutes were to give up their lands and move to a reservation at Taholah. However, so remote was Quileute territory that there was little pressure to settle their lands. Finally on February 22, 1889, the same year Washington joined the Union as a state (November 11, 1889), an Executive Order by President Benjamin Harrison set up a one-square mile reservation at LaPush with 252 inhabitants. Four years later, the 71 members of the Hoh River band of Quileutes were provided with a separate reservation. In the treaties the Quileutes reserved their hunting, fishing and gathering rights in their “usual and accustomed places” and were promised health, education and job training in exchange for over 800,000 acres of ancient virgin timber teeming with fish and wildlife in both the Quillayute River basin and in offshore waters.

La Push received its name from traders using Chinook jargon for river mouth (a corruption of the French “la bouche”). In 1882, European culture was brought to the village in the form of schoolteacher A.W. Smith and his school. He set about renaming Quileutes from the Bible (Esau, Sarah, Christian), and American history (William Penn, Henry Hudson, Andrew Jackson, etc.) as well as anglicizing Quileute names (Buckety Mason, California Hobucket). In 1889, all 26 houses at LaPush were burned to the ground by a settler who had wrongly claimed the land. The fire devastated the last carved masks, baskets, hunting equipment and sacred regalia from pre-contact days, except for what may have been relocated to museums or private collections.

The Constitution and By-Laws of the Quileute Tribe (1936) and their Corporate Charter issued by the Secretary of the Interior in 1937, recognized and established the sovereignty of the Quileute people as a self-governing political unit within the United States. The Tribal Council consists of five members, elected to staggered three-year terms and constitutes the governing body of the Tribe.

In 1974 under US v. Washington (Boldt Decision), the United States District Court affirmed the tribes’ treaty fishing rights “in common” with the citizens of Washington State. The decision designated 50 percent of the fishery to the tribes and provided for co-management of fishing and eventually shellfish resources. (This case was not closed; it has been left open for continuing sub-proceedings to further refine tribal fishing rights under the treaties.)

James Island or Akalat (Top of the Rock) figures prominently in the history of the Quileute people — from documented oral accounts, ethnography, ethnohistory and archeology. A natural fortress, the island was the location of a fortified village in 1788 when first described in Meares’ written accounts, and this defensive function was maintained into the second half of 1800s. Evidence of habitation in this area comparable to the Ozette site goes back 8000-9000 years, possibly longer. James Island is also known as a source of spirit power for the Quileute people and a place where high-status individuals were placed in canoes in the trees after death. In the second half of the 1800s, the island was used as a garden where potatoes and possibly other root crops were grown and stored in cellars. The viewpoint provided by the 160-foot high rock was ideally suited for sighting whales. It was a natural lookout to defend the village against occasionally hostile neighbors. In view of all of these and other uses as well, it is not surprising that the cultural resources of James Island are profoundly significant in Quileute culture and group identity.

James Island and the village of LaPush also were important sites in World War II as part of the 13th Naval District’s Coastal Lookout System. Both the LaPush Lifeboat Station and the LaPush Beach Patrol Station were located within the village adjacent to James Island. Because James Island obstructs a full view of the horizon from the village, a lookout tower next to the Lifeboat Station house was complemented by a second lookout structure on the island.

During 1997 archeological reconnaissance of the island, evidence of former structures was found, including foundations remnants; pieces of a cable car system with tracks, winch and cable car. These overlie archeological shell midden deposits, evidence of previous village habitation.

Today the US Coast Guard operates a foghorn warning system and a lighting system that provides guidance for boats entering the harbor during night-time inclement weather. A well-maintained steel stairway exists for maintenance and the more adventurous hikers.

During the summer of 1997, James Island or Akalat was the site and symbol of the International Gathering at LaPush where 23 tribes from Washington and British Columbia paddled to celebrate the revival of the ocean-going canoe traditions of Northwest Indian coastal tribes.

For many Washington residents, Indian and non-Indian alike, James Island stands as a preeminent reminder of the extraordinary breathtaking beauty of our Pacific beaches.

I actually just got this on the Quileute website

Source:  https://quileutenation.org/history/

Source:  https://www.google.com/search?                    q=Quileute&rlz=1C1GGRV_enUS753US753&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjgrJPb6evdAhWMzIMKH (photos)

Source:

http://www1.seattleartmuseum.org/exhibit/interactives/Quileute/index.html

 

 

branches