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Native American History
The Cayuse, Umatilla, and Walla Walla tribes have a
long colorful history in serving as the agents of hospitality to the
visitors of this area. It may have been started by their ancestors
11,000 years ago who left evidence of their society at Fort Rock,
Oregon.
In more recent centuries, these tribes have been saying, Welcome to
our land since the
first fur traders and explorers entered what is now Southeast
Washington and Northeast Oregon.
During the early visitations of the first European guests to the
region, these tribal groups had a stable, religiously oriented life
which was sustained by a variety of economic pursuits. They had access
to the deer, bear, elk, antelope, berries, and roots; the flora and
fauna of the mountains as well as that of the more arid regions of the
Columbia basin.
The great runs of salmon in the Columbia and its tributaries furnished
a much appreciated food staple. So important was this fish that among
many tribes of the Pacific Northwest, the word for fish was simply
salmon. Many tribal beliefs and ceremonies centered around the
salmon. The catching of salmon provided an important food supply which
could be dried and stored, thus providing leisure time. In addition at
such sites as Celilo Falls, the salmon catch also put the tribal
people of the entire area in contact with one another, furnishing
opportunity to trade and share cultural development.
Treks to the
buffalo country of Montana afforded the tribes with the variety of
products derived from the buffalo, as well as trading and cultural
contacts with the Plains tribes.
Nature was not only the provider. The local tribes
learned that by cooperating with nature, efforts could yield new means
of gains. Local groups, after the introduction of the horse to the
area in the early 1700's, became widely known for their knowledge of
selective breeding of horses. Members of the Cayuse Tribe became so
famous as horse dealers and breeders that their tribal name has
entered the American language as a synonym for Indian pony. A
close neighbor of the Cayuse, the Nez Perce Tribe, developed a new
breed of horse, famous today as the Appaloosa.
Warfare was not a regular activity of these tribes. Relations between
tribes and with emigrants were generally peaceful. There were at times
misunderstandings that developed due to conflicts of culture. One of
these was closely associated with the concern of private ownership of
land. Historically, the Indian had no concept of private ownership of
land. Territorial limits were respected by a given tribe, but no one
man owned any particular piece of land. Land was provided by and owned
by nature, and was man's only to use.
When the first settlers began to homestead, usually
on choice water hole sites, it didn't pose any real threat as they
were entitled to use the land. But when the homesteader
built fences and said, "This is mine", misunderstandings did develop.
One misunderstanding, now known as the Whitman Massacre, developed in
the fall of 1847. Prior to the Massacre, fear had grown as more and
more settlers homesteaded on Cayuse territory. The Cayuse had no
resistance to the disease called measles, brought by the white
settlers and it quickly spread among the tribes. When, in a brief
period, half of the tribe had died from this new disease and the
medicines of the Whitman Mission seemed to help the white children,
but not the Indian children, the Cayuse began to believe that they
were being poisoned to make way for the whites. The Whitman Mission
was attacked and ceased to exist on November 19, 1847.
In May of 1855, over 5,000 Indian delegates from the Yakima, Nez
Perce, Walla Walla, and Cayuse Tribes met with government officials at
the old Yakima tribal council grounds, which is now the city of Walla
Walla, to hold one of the most picturesque treaty sessions recorded in
American Indian Affairs. From this council the Treaty of 1855 was
drawn which designated the future relationship of these tribes with
the Federal government and established the reservations now occupied
by these tribes. The Umatilla, Walla Walla, and Cayuse were guaranteed
a number of provisions as payment for the land they were to release
for white settlement. Among these was the guarantee of 245,699 acres
of land, some of which includes the present town-site of Pendleton, to
be reserved for Indian use.
Presently
there are 1,335 enrolled members of the Confederated Tribes of the
Umatilla, approximately half of which reside within the boundaries of
the Umatilla Reservation (which has been diminished through succession
and approved land sales to its present size of 174,121 acres). As
participating members of the Umatilla County community, their children
attend local parochial and public schools and the adults work in the
community offices, mills, schools, shops, and on its ranches and
farms.
The Happy Canyon pageant has become a part of the
heritage of the host tribes. For the past 84 years of its performance
they unpack their family heirlooms and set up their tepees, to appear
at Happy Canyon and to unfold a glimpse of the past - the children
following in the moccasined footsteps of their elders without
rehearsal or advanced direction.
Tribal groups throughout the nation have representatives encamped
during the week of Round-Up and Happy Canyon. Sizeable delegations
from the tribes of the Yakima, Colville, Spokane, Nez Perce, Coeur
d'Alene, Shoshone, Bannock, Warm Springs, Paiute, and Rock Creek
participate in the events of the week
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