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Oregon Indian Tribes

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The history of the Oregon Indians was similar to that of the Indians of Washington. The coast tribes seem to have been affected little or not at all by the settlements of the Spaniards in California, and those of the interior were influenced only in slightly greater measure by them through the introduction of the horse. Nor were these tribes reached so extensively by the employees of the great fur companies. Contact with such advance agents of civilization was principally along the valley of the Columbia River, and Astoria will always be remembered as bearing witness to the transient attempts of the American  Fur Company to establish a permanent trading organization in this region under the American flag. As in the case of Washington, Oregon and its tribes were first brought to the acquaintance of our Eastern States in an intimate way by the expedition of Lewis and Clark in 1805-6.

Here also settlement was delayed until the fixation of the International Boundary line and the rush westward following upon the discovery of gold in California. From the middle of the nineteenth century onward, however, the native tribes were rapidly dispossessed, placed upon reservations, and reduced in numbers. At a later period the decrease became less marked, but it has continued nevertheless, partly as an actual extinction of the aboriginal population and partly as an absorption in the dominant race. Most of the Chinookan tribes were finally placed upon Warm Springs and Grande Ronde Reservations and on Yakima Reservation in Washington; all of the Athapascan tribes upon the Siletz Reservation, except the Umpqua, who went to Grande Ronde; the Kusan and Yakonan tribes upon the Siletz Reservation; the Salishan peoples of Oregon upon the Grande Ronde and Siletz Reserves; most of the Kalapooian peoples upon the Grande Ronde, though a few on the Siletz; most of the Molala upon the Grande Ronde; the Klamath upon Klamath Reserve; the Modoc mostly on Klamath Reserve but a few upon the Quapaw Reservation in Oklahoma; the Shahaptian tribes of Oregon upon the Umatilla Reservation; and the Northern Paiutes upon the Klamath Reservation.

Ahantchuyuk

Own name, significance unknown.

Also called:
    French Prairie Indians, by early settlers.
    Pudding River Indians, by various authors, and adopted by Berreman (1937).

Connections. The Ahantchuyuk belonged to the Kalapooian linguistic stock.

Location. On and about Pudding River, which empties into the Willamette from the east about 10 miles south of Oregon City.

Population. (See Calapooya.) Not given separately.

Alsea

A corruption of Älsé, their own name, meaning unknown. See Alsea Location

Atfalati

Meaning unknown. Often shortened to Fallatahs. Sometimes spelled Tuálati, or Tualatin (Berreman, 1937). See Atfalati Location

Bannock

The Bannock came over into the eastern borders of the state between Powder and Owyhee Rivers in more recent times. (See Idaho.)

Calapooya

Meaning unknown. See Calapooya Location

Cayuse

Significance unknown.
   Haí`luntchi, Molalla name.
   Wailĕtpu, own name.

Connections. The Cayuse were placed by Powell (1891) in the Waiilatpuan linguistic stock along with the Molala, but this is now recognized as a branch of the Shapwailutan family.

Location. About the heads of Walla Walla, Umatilla, and Grande Ronde Rivers and extending from the Blue Mountains to Deschutes River, Washington and Oregon.

History. Anciently the Cayuse are said to have had their headquarters on the Upper Grande Ronde but to have extended west later to the region of Deschutes River, where they may have met the Molala. They entered the historical arena with the expedition of Lewis and Clark and were afterward well known to explorers, hunters, and settlers. In 1838 a mission was established among them by the noted Marcus Whitman at the site of the present town of Whitman, but in 1847 smallpox carried off a large number of the tribe, and the Indians, believing the missionaries to be the cause, murdered Whitman and a number of other Whites and destroyed the mission. By 1851 they were much reduced in numbers and had become partially merged in the Nez Perce. In 1853 they joined in the treaty by which Umatilla Reservation was formed and made their homes upon it from that time forward. Their language is now nearly extinct.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates 500 Cayuse in 1780. In 1904, 404 were officially reported; the census of 1910 gave 298, while the United States Indian Office in 1923 returned 337. The census of 1930 reported 199 Cayuse and Molala, and the United States Indian Office of Cayuse alone in 1937, 370.

Connection in which they have become noted. The Cayuse were reputed one of the most warlike tribes of Washington and Oregon. Horses were early bred among them and an Indian pony came to be known to the white settlers as a "cayuse." There is a place called Cayuse in Umatilla County, Oregon.

Chastacosta

From Shista-kwŭsta, their own name, significance unknown. See Chastacosta Location

Chelamela

Significance unknown.

Also called:
   Long Tom Creek Indians.

Connections. The Chelamela belonged to the Calapooya dialectic division of the Kalapooian linguistic stock.

Location. On Long Tom Creek, a western tributary of the Willamette River.

Population. (See Calapooya.)

Chepenafa

Significance unknown.

Also called:
   Api'nefu, or Pineifu, by the other Kalapuya.
   Marys River Indians, the official and popular name.

Connections. The Chepenafa belonged to the Calapooya dialectic division of the Kalapooian linguistic stock, and were sometimes regarded as a subdivision of the Luckamiut.

Location. At the forks of St. Marys Creek, near Corvallis.

Population. (See Calapooya.) The census of 1910 returned 24.

Chetco

Own name, meaning "close to the mouth of the stream." See Chetco Location

Clackamas

From their own name, Guithla'kimas, significance unknown.

Also spelled Tltkimish, and called:
   A'kimmash, by the Atfalati Kalapuya.
   Gita'q!emas, by the Clatsop.
   Nsekau's or Ns tiwat, by the Nestucca.
   Tu'hu tane, by the Umpqua.

 Connections. The Clackamas belonged to the Chinookan linguistic stock and to a dialectical division to which they have given their name.

Location. On Clackamas River, claiming the country on the east side of Willamette River from a few miles above its mouth nearly to Oregon City and east as far as the Cascade Mountains. (See also Washington.)

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates that the Clackamas numbered 2,500 in 1780. In 1806 Lewis and Clark set down their probable number as 1,800. In 1851 there were 88; the 1910 census returned 40; and United States Office of Indian Affairs in 1937, 81. The census of 1930 reported a total of 561 Indians in the Chinookan stock.

Connection in which they have become noted. The name Clackamas is perpetuated by a river, a county, and a town in Oregon.

Clatskanie

Significance unknown.

Also spelled A`látskné-i, Clackstar, Klatskanai, Tlatskanai, etc.

Connection. The Clatskanie belonged to the Athapascan linguistic stock.

Location. According to Gibbs (1877) the Clatskanie at one time owned the prairies bordering Chehalis River, Washington, at the mouth of Skookumchuck River, but on the failure of game, crossed the Columbia and occupied the mountains about Clatskanie River, their best-known historic seat. For a long time they exacted toll of all who passed going up or down the Columbia.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates 1,600 Clatskanie in 1780. In 1851 they were reduced to three men and five women. The census of 1910 returned three. (See Chastacosta.)

Connection in which they have become noted. Like the Kwahlioqua, the Clatskanie are noted for their isolation from other branches of the Athapascan stock. Their name is preserved by Clatskanie Creek and Clatskanie town in Columbia County, Oregon.

Clatsop

From a native word meaning "dried salmon." See Clatsop Location

Clowwewalla

Significance unknown. Phonetically GiLā'wēwalamt.

Also called:
   Fall Indians,
   Tumwater Indians, popular names.
   Willamette Indians,
   Willamette Falls Indians, popular names.

Connections. The Clowwewalla belonged to the Clackamas division of the Chinookan linguistic stock.

Location. At the falls of Willamette River.

Subdivisions. The Clowwewalla may have included the Cushooks, Chahcowahs, and Nemalquinner of Lewis and Clark.

Population. The Clowwewalla, or a part of them, were called Cushook by Lewis and Clark, who estimated that they numbered 650 in 1805-6. On this basis Mooney (1928) estimated there might have been 900 in 1780. They were greatly reduced by the epidemic of 1829 and in 1851 numbered 13. They are now apparently extinct.

Dakubetede

Own name, significance unknown.

Also called:
   Applegate River Indians, from their habitat.
   Nǐ'ckitc hītclûm, Alsea name, meaning "people far up the stream."
   Ts'û-qûs-li'-gwûût-me' tunne, Naltûnnetûnne name.

Connections. The Dakubetede belonged to the Athapascan linguistic stock, using a dialect identical with that of the Taltushtuntude.

Location. On Applegate River.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates the Dakubetede, the Nahankhotane (part of the Umpqua), the Taltushtuntude, and the Umpqua to have numbered 3,200 in 1780. They are nowhere separately enumerated. (See Chastacosta.)

Hanis

Own name, significance unknown.

Connections. The Hanis formed one dialectic group of the Kusan linguistic family, the other being Miluk. It is probable that this stock was connected with the Yakonan.

Location. On Coos River and Bay.

Villages. Anasitoh, on the south side of Coos Bay. Melukitz, on the north side of Coos Bay.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates that the Hanis and the Miluk together numbered 2,000 in 1780. In 1805 Lewis and Clark estimated 1,500 Hanis. The census of 1910 returned 93 for the entire stock and that of 1930, 107, while, again for the stock, the United States Office of Indian Affairs reported 55 in 1937.

Klamath

A word of uncertain origin but probably used first by Columbia River or other outside tribes. Their own name is máklaks, meaning "people," "community." See Klamath Location

Kuitsh

Significance unknown. See Kuitsh Location

Latgawa

Signifying "those living in the uplands."

Also called:
   Walumskni, by the Klamath.

Connections. With the Takelma proper, the Latgawa constituted the Takilman linguistic family which, in turn, was probably affiliated with the Shastan stock.

Location. On Upper Rogue River eastward about Table Rock and Bear Creek and in the neighborhood of the present town of Jacksonville.

Village. Sapir (1915) records one village belonging to this tribe known by the tribal name and also called Latgauk.

Population. See Takelma.

Lohim

Significance unknown. (See Paiute, Northern.)

Connections. Reported as a band of Shoshoneans which entered Oregon at a late period.

Location. On Willow Creek, a southern affluent of the Columbia.

Population. In 1870 the number of Lohim was reported as 114, but the name has not appeared in recent official reports. They have generally been regarded as renegades belonging to the Umatilla Reservation, and Ray's (1938) informants denied the presence of Shoshoneans here, asserting that the name was applied to Yakima.

Luckiamute

Lakmiut. Significance unknown. See Luckiamute Location

Miluk

Significance unknown; also called Lower Coquille.

Connections. The Miluk spoke the southern of the two dialects of the Kusan linguistic family, and were related more remotely to the Yakonan stock.

Location. At the mouth of Coquille River.

Villages.
   Miluk or Mulluk, on the north side of the Coquille River at the site of the present
town of Randolph.
   Nasumi, on the south side of Coquille River on the coast of Oregon, near the site
of the present Bandon.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimated 2,000 in 1780 for the Miluk and Hanis together. In 1910 they numbered 93. (See Hanis.) In 1937 the population of the "Kus" Indians was given as 55.

Mishikhwutmetunne

Significance unknown; also called Lower Coquille. See Mishikhwutmetunne Location

Modoc

From Móatokni, meaning "southerners." See Modoc Location

Molala

Derived from the name of a creek in the Willamette Valley from which one of their bands drove the original inhabitants. See Molala Location

Multnomah

Significance unknown. See Multnomah Location

Naltunnetunne

A small Athapascan tribe between the Tututni and Chetco, apparently, included by later writers under the former.

Nez Percé

They extended into northeastern Oregon. (See Idaho.)

Paiute, Northern

These people occupied the southeastern part of Oregon and formerly extended far enough north to include the valley of Powder River and the upper course of John Day River of which they were dispossessed by Shahaptians. (See Nevada.)

Santiam

Significance unknown.

Also called:
   Aha'lpam, by the Atfalati Kalapuya.

Connections. The Santiam belonged to the Calapooya dialectic division of the Kalapooian linguistic stock.

Population. (See Calapooya.) In 1906 there were 23 Santiam on Grande Ronde Reservation. The census of 1910 returned 9.

Connection in which they have become noted. The name Santiam is perpetuated in Santiam River, a branch of the Willamette.

Shasta

The Shasta extended at least into the territory watered by Jenny Creek from their main seats in California.

Siletz

The Shasta extended at least into the territory watered by Jenny Creek from their main seats in California.

Siletz. Significance unknown.

Also called:
    Tsä Shnádsh amím, Luckiamute Kalapuya name.

 Connections. The Siletz belonged to the Salishan linguistic stock.

 Location. On Siletz River.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates the population of all of the Salishan tribes of Oregon as 1,500 in 1780. They are not now separately recorded, but in the census of 1930, 72 Salishan Indians were returned from Oregon besides the Tillamook.

 Connections in which they have become noted. The Siletz are of note as having been the southernmost of the Salishan linguistic family. Siletz River and a post village, both in Lincoln County, Oreg., preserve the name.

Siuslaw

Significance unknown. See Siuslaw Location

Skilloot

The Skilloot occupied part of Oregon opposite the mouth of Cowlitz River. (See Washington.)

Snake

See Northern Paiute under Nevada.

Takelma

Own name, meaning "those dwelling along the river." See Takelma Location

Taltushtuntude

Own name, meaning unknown.

Also called:
   Galice Creek Indians, from their habitat.
   Kû-līs'-kitc_hītc'lûm, Alsea name.

Connections. The Taltushtuntude belonged to the Athapascan linguistic stock, and spoke the same dialect as the Dakubetede but culturally had become assimilated with the Takelma.

Location. On Galice Creek.

Population. In 1856, 18 Taltushtuntude were reported living on the Siletz Reservation. Under the name "Galice Creek" 42 Indians were reported in 1937.

Tenino

Significance unknown. See Tenino Location

Tillamook

A Chinook term meaning "people of Nekelim (or Nehalem).  See Tillamook Location

Tututni

Meaning unknown. See Tututni Location

Tyigh

Significance unknown.

Also spelled Attayes, Iyich, Ta-ih, Thy, Tyh, etc.
   Teéχtkni, or Télknikni, Klamath name.
   Tsĕ Amínĕma, Luckiamute Kalapuya name.

Connections. The Tyigh belonged to the Tenino branch of the Shahaptian division of the Shapwailutan linguistic stock.

Location. The country about Tygh and White Rivers.

Subdivisions and Villages. No names are recorded.

History. The history of the Tyigh was identical with that of the Tenino.

Population. With the other Oregon tribes of the Tenino group, the Tyigh numbered 1,400 in 1780 according to Mooney's (1928) estimate. In 1854 they were said to number 500 and in 1859, 450; but both of these figures must be overestimates. They are not now enumerated separately from the Warm Spring Indians, placed at 550 by the census of 1910.

 Connection in which they have become noted. Tygh Creek and a place called Tygh Valley in Wasco County, Oregon, bears the name of the Tyigh.

Umatilla

Significance unknown.

Connections. The Umatilla belonged to the Shahaptian division of the Shapwailutan linguistic stock.

Location. On Umatilla River and the banks of Columbia River adjacent to the mouth of the Umatilla.

Population. Mooney (1928) estimates this tribe and the Walla Walla together at 1,500 in 1780. The census of 1910 returned 272, the United States Indian Office Report for 1923, 145, and the Indian Office Report for 1937, 124.

 Connections in which they have become noted. An Indian reservation has received the name Umatilla, and it has also been applied to a river, a county, and a post village, all in Oregon; also to a place in Lake County, Fla.

Umpqua

Significance unknown. See Umpqua Location

Wallawalla

The Wallawalla extended somewhat into northeastern Oregon. (See Washington.)

Walpapi

Significance unknown. Commonly called Snakes. A part of the Northern Paiute. (See under Nevada.)

Wasco

From a native word wacq!ó, "cup or small bowl of horn," the reference being to a cup-shaped rock a short distance from the main village of the tribe; from this the tribal name Gałasq'ó, "those that have the cup," is derived and variations of it frequently appear in the literature. See Wasco Location

Watlala

Significance of word is unknown. See Watlala Location

Yahuskin

One of the two chief peoples in Oregon belonging to the Northern Paiute division of the Shoshonean and therefore Uto-Aztecan linguistic stock. (See Nevada.)

Yamel

Significance unknown, often spelled Yam Hill.

Also called:
   Ychă-yamel-amirn, by the Atfalati Kalapuya.

Connections. The Yamel belonged, along with the Atfalati, to the northern dialectic division of the Kalapooian linguistic stock.

Location. Yamhill River.

 Subdivisions. Gatschet (1877) records these as follows:
   Andshankualth, on a western tributary of the Willamette.
   Andshimmampak, on Yamhill River.
   Chamifu, in the forks of Yamhill River.
   Chamiwi, on Yamhill River.
   Champikle, on Dallas (La Creole) Creek.
   Chinchal, on Dallas Creek.

Population. (See Calapooya.) The census of 1910 returned 5 Yamel.

Connection in which they have become noted. The name of the Yamel, in the form Yamhill, is perpetuated by an affluent of the Willamette and by the county through which it flows.

Yaquina

Significance unknown. See Yaquina Location

Yoncalla

From Ayankeld, or Tch'Ayanke'ld, "those living at Ayankeld," own name.

Connections. The Yoncalla were the southernmost tribe of the Kalapooian linguistic stock, forming one of the three dialectic divisions.

Location. On Elk and Calapooya Creeks, tributaries of Umpqua River.

Subdivisions. According to Gatschet (1887), there were two bands, called Chayankeld and Tsantokayu by the Luckiamute, but it seems likely that the former name (Tell' Ayanke'ld) is merely the native tribal name.

Population. (See Calapooya.) The census of 1910 returned 11 Yoncalla.

Connection in which they have become noted. Yoncalla, a post village of Douglas County, Oregon, preserves the name.

Additional Oregon Indian Resources

Notes About the Book:

Source: The Indian Tribes of North America, by John R. Swanton, 1953, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin 145, US Government Printing Office, Washington DC.

Online Publication: The manuscript was scanned and then ocr'd. Minimal editing has been done, and readers can and should expect some errors in the textual output.

 

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