1 / 29

Washington State Native Americans

Washington State Native Americans. Chapter 4: Washington: A State of Contrasts. Coastal Indians. Lived west of the cascades Many located in areas near the water: The Pacific coastline Puget Sound Strait of Juan de Fuca The San Juan Islands Shores of lakes and rivers

corina
Download Presentation

Washington State Native Americans

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Washington State Native Americans Chapter 4: Washington: A State of Contrasts

  2. Coastal Indians • Lived west of the cascades • Many located in areas near the water: • The Pacific coastline • Puget Sound • Strait of Juan de Fuca • The San Juan Islands • Shores of lakes and rivers • Villages were isolated • Usually the only contact with others was for trade and war

  3. Coastal: Tribal Organization • Some coastal tribes include: • Makah, Quinault, Hoh, Chinook, Clallam, Chehalis, Puyallup, Lummi, Suquamish, Nisqually, Nooksack, Salish, Muckleshoot. • Tribes were usually less than 100 people • Tribes were made up of several families in a small area. • Leader: Chief • Spiritual leader/Medicine man: Shaman • Each Shaman was responsible for the secrecy of tribal customs and use of herbs to heal the ill. • The Shaman performed healing ceremonies. • He was sometimes held responsible for the deaths of tribal members, so other members of the tribe might take revenge on him.

  4. Coastal: Tribal Organization • Class system: based on birth and/or wealth • The wealthiest member of the tribe usually became the chief • The nobility of the tribe was either very wealthy or family members of the chief. • Most tribe members were commoners. • Lowest class: slaves • Usually women and children captured during war • slaves were a status symbol • More slaves=more wealth

  5. Coastal: Tribal Organization • Men were hunters, fishers, and warriors. • Women raise the children and gathered berries, nuts, and roots. • Women also cooked meals and made utensils, ornaments, and clothing.

  6. Coastal: Communication • None of the coastal tribes had a written language • Each tribe had its own spoken language, making it very hard to communicate with others. • History, legends, and ideas were passes from generation to generation. • They also used sign language, smoke signals, pictorial drawings, totem poles, designs, chants, dances, and songs to pass history on to others.

  7. Coastal: Clothing • They used available materials to make clothes • Summer: wore little clothing • Men wore breechcloths and went barefoot • Females wore skirts and dresses made from dog hair, grass, cattails, animal skins, and cedar bark. • Winter: needed more clothing to protect from rain and cold weather • They wore capes, ponchos, robes, blankets, and other clothes made mostly from cedar bark. • They wore cone shaped hats in the rain. • Colorful ceremonial clothes, blankets, and masks were also created to celebrate potlatches, burials, and marriages.

  8. Coastal: Diet • Hunting • Gathering • Fishing- Salmon was their most important food. • Whaling • Dried and smoked foods for later use. • Used open fires and hot rocks to cook food

  9. Coastal: Shelter • Longhouses: • A permanent structure made from cedar logs or planks • 40 to 100 ft long • 20 to 40 ft wide • A shed like roof, windows, a few doors, a narrow opening in the roof to let out smoke • Several related families would often live in the same house.

  10. Coastal: Transportation • Before Europeans arrived in 1542, Indians either walked or canoed. • Even after the Europeans brought horses, the Native Americans rarely used them.

  11. Coastal: Barter • Costal Indians would negotiate and barter for goods and services. • They hunted, fished, and gathered what they needed.

  12. Coastal: Tools • They used horns, shells, rocks, hair, wood and grasses.

  13. Coastal: Recreation • Competitive contests • Canoe races, foot races, tug of war, wrestling, spear toss, horsemanship, gambling

  14. Coastal: Ceremonies • Each tribe had different ceremonies for puberty, marriage, and burial. • At puberty, a youth was sent into the wilderness to meet with the spirits. • The Spirit Dance • At about 15, boys would fast for a month to transition to adulthood. • The ability to deal with these tasks would often help determine the social standing of the man.

  15. Coastal: Marriage • Women would seek to marry someone with grater wealth or social standing than her family. • Marriage ceremonies varied: • Some couples just asked for permission to live together. • Other tribes had elaborate ceremonies (potlatch)

  16. Coastal: The Potlatch • A unique ceremony practiced by coastal Indians • Means "to give" • The host gives gifts to his guests • Guests accept gifts with the understanding that someday the favor would be returned • The object was to show generosity and show off the wealth of the host • The potlatch also involved singing, dancing, feasting, and boasting • Often lasted for several days • The status of the host could be changed based on the success of his potlatch. • Potlatches were outlawed by the US government in 1884. • The ban was lifted in 1954.

  17. Plateau Indians • Lived east of the cascades • Due to the harsh climate there was very little food, the Plateau Indians were nomadic • Tribes competed for survival • Some of the important tribes were the Yakama, Nez Perce, Spokane, Palouse, Walla Walla, Cayuse, Colville, Wenatchi, and Klickitat.

  18. Plateau: Tribal Organization • There were fewer tribes than the coastal Indians • Each tribe had from several hundred to a few thousand members. • The plateau tribal organization included chiefs, a tribal council, and a council of elders. • People who were most respected and honored became tribal leaders. • Respect was earned through: • Displays of courage and bravery • Showing wisdom and good decision making skills.

  19. Plateau: Tribal Organization • The chief was to keep peace among the tribal members and provide security from attack. • Acted as judge • Received guests • Sought adequate food and water • Military leader in times of war • Some tribes had several leaders, each with separate responsibilities

  20. Plateau: Tribal Organization • The plateau Indians had a social group system • They sought the necessities of life together • Food, shelter, water, security • They did not value material goods or slaves • Did value horses • Life was a community effort; every member had responsibilities.

  21. Plateau: Tribal Organization • The male was dominant in the family. • He hunted, fished, conducted business, and served as warrior. The male was dominant in the family. • The women took care of the household by caring for children, gathering and preparing food, and making clothing.

  22. Plateau: Communication • Each tribe had its own spoken language and no written language • As many as 100 languages or dialects in Washington • How did they communicate? • Sign language • Chinook Jargon • A mix of English, French, Chinook words • Used to communicate with white settlers and traders

  23. Plateau: Clothing • The plateau people wore clothing made from animal skins, fur pelts, dog hair, and grass. • Their clothing was simple • Summers: light clothing • Men wore breechcloths, moccasins, and leather leggings to protect their legs from thorny plants. • Females wore decorative dresses and moccasins.

  24. Plateau: Clothing • Winter: heavy clothing made from made from animal skins and fur pelts. • For ceremonies, celebrations, and times of war, they wore brightly colored feather headdresses, clothing, and blankets. • They also wore jewelry made from bones, claws, feathers, scalps, colorful stones, shells, and beads • Wore hair ornaments as well

  25. Plateau: Diet • Food and water were scarce • Tribes had to compete over fishing spots and hunting areas • Hunted deer, bear, elk, buffalo, birds, rabbits, Mountain goat, sheep, beaver, and other meat sources • Buffalo hunting parties often had to cross the Rockies, which was very dangerous. • When wild animals were scarce, they ate dogs, horses, and insects • They also gathered items such as berries, nuts, seeds, roots, etc…

  26. Plateau: Diet • They made a food called Pemmican from animal fat, berries, camas root, and fish. • They baked the mixture, boiled it, or ate it raw • Salmon was an important food source • Important fishing sites included Willamette falls, Kettle Falls, and Celilo Falls • Salmon were easy to catch in these areas because they were struggling to move upstream

  27. Plateau: Shelter • Tepees • Woven mats or animal skins were placed over poles to create a cone shaped shelter • Heated with fires • Movable shelter for nomadic lifestyle • In the winter, they lived in caves or pit houses to escape the snow and wind. • Pit houses were dug in to the ground (often in hillsides) • They were then covered by a frame of mats or skins

  28. Plateau: Transportation • Before the arrival of the horse, plateau Indians walked or ran • The arrival of the horse, allowed them to accomplish tasks such as hunting, much more quickly. • Hoses became a prized possession • Nez Perce created the appaloosa bread • They would try to increase the number of horses by breaking wild ones, stealing, breading, and trading • Horses became a measure of wealth • Travois- similar to a trailer made from sticks and mats • Used to tote possessions or ill people or small children

  29. Plateau: Barter • Main source of payment for goods • Horses were the main bartering item • Traded for furs and guns • Also bartered using their famous for leather work and beading • Barter allowed plateau Indians to gain more necessities to help them survive their harsh environment.

More Related