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Encyclopedia results for Kalapuya

Kalapuya





Encyclopedia results for Kalapuya

  1. Kalapuya

    Kalapuya may refer to Kalapuya people Kalapuya language dab Short pages monitor This long comment was added to the page to prevent it from being listed on Special Shortpages. It and the accompanying monitoring template were generated via Template Long comment. Please do not remove the monitor template without removing the comment as well. fr Kalapuya ...   more details



  1. Kalapuya people

    Refimprove date January 2011 File Kalapuya man.gif thumb A sketch of Kalapuya man from the 1840s The Kalapuya ... Ronde Community of Oregon . The Kalapuya tribes traditional homelands are the area of present day ... at the Umpqua River at the south. Groups The Kalapuya comprised eight related groups speaking three different languages of the Oregon Penutian languages Oregon Penutian family Northern Kalapuya language Northern Kalapuyan , Central Kalapuya language Central Kalapuyan , and Yoncalla language Yoncalla also called Southern Kalapuya . Their territory comprised the Willamette Valley , as well as the valley ... Kalapuya Yamhill, who live along the Yamhill River Northern Kalapuya Pudding River Ahantchuyuk , who live along the Pudding River Central Kalapuya Luckiamute, who live along the Luckiamute River Central Kalapuya Santiam, who live along the lower Santiam River near present day Lebanon, Oregon Lebanon Central Kalapuya Mary s River Chepenefa , who live along the Mary s River near present day Corvallis, Oregon Corvallis Central Kalapuya Muddy Creek Chemapho , who live along Muddy Creek Marys River Muddy Creek Central Kalapuya Tsankupi, who live along the Calapooia River Central Kalapuya Mohawk people Oregon Mohawk , who live along the Mohawk River Oregon Mohawk River Central Kalapuya Chafan Long Tom Chelamela , who live along the Long Tom River Central Kalapuya Winefelly, who live along the Mohawk ... Kalapuya Yoncalla, who live along the Umpqua River . Yoncalla In his description of the Indians ... populations Calipoa 60 Tualatine 60 Yam Hill 90 Lucka mues 15. History The Kalapuya population was between ... were catastrophic to the Kalapuya people. Pre contact epidemics of unknown quantity and effect ... that as many as ninety percent of the Kalapuya population died during this period. ref ... of Washington Press year 1990 pages 27 32 isbn 0 295 97119 3 ref The Kalapuya were greatly weakened ... two main treaty cycles which concerned the Kalapuya, those in 1851 and those in 1854 1855. The 1851 ...   more details



  1. Northern Kalapuya language

    Infobox language name Tualatin Yamhill nativename Northern Kalapuya region Northwest Oregon extinct 1937 familycolor American fam1 Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan iso3 nrt dia1 Tualatin dia2 Yamhill Northern Kalapuyan is a Kalapuyan language indigenous to northwestern Oregon in the United States . It was spoken by Kalapuya people Kalapuya groups in the northern Willamette Valley southwest of present day Portland, Oregon Portland . Two distinct dialect s of the languages have been identified. The Tualatin dialect was spoken along the Tualatin River . The Yamhill dialect was spoken along the Yamhill River . The language is closely related to Central Kalapuya language Central Kalapuya , spoken by related groups in the central and southern Willamette Valley. Northern Kalapuya is now extinct. Oregon Native History DEFAULTSORT Northern Kalapuya Language Category Extinct languages of North America Category Native American history of Oregon Category Kalapuyan languages Category Languages of the United States Kalapuya, Northern Category Indigenous languages of Oregon Oregon stub NorthAm native stub Na lang stub fr Kalapuya du Nord ...   more details



  1. Central Kalapuya language

    Infobox language name Santiam nativename Central Kalapuya region Northwest Oregon extinct 1 speaker in 1962 familycolor American fam1 Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan iso3 kyl Central Kalapuyan was a Kalapuyan language indigenous to the central and southern Willamette Valley in Oregon in the United States . It was spoken by various bands of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya peoples who inhabited the valley up through the middle of the 19th century. The language is closely related to Northern Kalapuya language Northern Kalapuya , spoken in the Tualatin River Tualatin and Yamhill River Yamhill valleys. Dialects of Central Kalapuya that have been identified include Ahantchuyuk dialect, spoken in the northeastern Willamette Valley along the Pudding River Pudding and Molalla River Molalla rivers Santiam dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the lower Santiam River Luckiamute dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the Luckiamute River Chepenafa dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along Mary s River Chemapho dialect, spoken in central Willamette Valley along Muddy Creek Marys River Muddy Creek . Chelamela dialect, spoken in the southwestern Willamette Valley along the Long Tom River Tsankupi dialect, spoken in the southeastern Willamette Valley along the Calapooia River Winefelly Mohawk dialects, spoken in the southeastern Willamette Valley along the McKenzie River McKenzie , Mohawk River Oregon Mohawk , and Coast Fork Willamette River Coast Fork Willamette rivers External links http www.sfu.ca nwjl Articles V001 N02 Banks.html The Verbal Morphology of Santiam Kalapuya Northwest Journal of Linguistics Oregon Native History Category Native American history of Oregon Category Kalapuyan languages Category Languages of the United States Kalapuya, Central Category Extinct languages of North America Category Indigenous languages of Oregon Oregon stub na lang stub fr Kalapuya central ...   more details



  1. Treaty with the Kalapuya, etc.

    negotiated agreements with the Santiam people Santiam , Atfalati Tualatin , Kalapuya people Yamhill , and Luckiamute River Luckiamute bands of the Kalapuya. These bands of natives agreed to give up ... never ratified. ref name oep Cite web last Jette first Melinda title Kalapuya Treaty of 1855 work Oregon Encyclopedia Project url http www.oregonencyclopedia.org entry view kalapuya treaty accessdate .... This treaty, generally referred to as the Kalapuya Treaty after the over arching name of the natives ... the treaty was signed, only 400 Kalapuya natives remained, having been reduced by disease ... the government terminated its trusteeship with the reservation. However, because the Kalapuya Treaty had been ratified by Congress and was therefore legally enforceable, it was used by the Kalapuya, now ... kappler VOL2 treaties kal0665.htm Full text of Kalapuya Treaty Oregon Native ... and Native American treaties Category Kalapuya Category 1855 treaties Category 1855 in the United ...   more details



  1. Kalapuya High School

    Infobox school name Kalapuya High School image Kalapuya High School Eugene, Oregon .jpg imagesize streetaddress 1200 N Terry Street city Eugene, Oregon Eugene county Lane County, Oregon Lane County state Oregon zipcode 97402 country flagcountry USA coordinates coord 44.071155 123.190298 type edu source googlemaps region US OR display inline,title geocoded street address and centered on entrance type Public school government funded Public Alternative school alternative district Bethel School District Oregon Bethel School District principal Stefan Aumack grades 10 12 students 165 ref name ode directory cite web url http www.ode.state.or.us pubs directory school directory september 2008.pdf title Oregon School Directory 2008 09 publisher Oregon Department of Education pages 139 accessdate 2009 05 28 ref rival mascot mascot image team name colors color strip border color black border style dotted border 1 conference not in OSAA conference? size? newspaper opened homepage http www.bethel.k12.or.us html kalapuya.html http www.bethel.k12.or.us html kalapuya.html Kalapuya High School is a public alternative high school in Eugene, Oregon , United States . It was established in an innovative model to provide an alternative to students who were already not succeeding in the traditional high school environment, usually drawing from Willamette High School . Academics In 2008, 4 of the school s seniors received their high school diploma . Of 68 students, 3 graduated, 44 dropped out, and 21 are still in high school. ref cite news url http www.oregonlive.com education index.ssf 2009 06 high school dropout rates.html title State releases high school graduation rates date 2009 06 30 work The Oregonian ... 2009 07 01 ref History Kalapuya opened in the fall of 2003. It serves grades 10 12 and operates ... to learn to work together. The principal is Stefan Aumack. Kalapuya was opened at the same ... Oregon Bethel School District . Kalapuya provides students the opportunity to follow an individualized ...   more details



  1. Yoncalla language

    Infobox language name Yoncalla nativename Southern Kalapuya region Northwest Oregon extinct 1930s familycolor American fam1 Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan iso3 sxk Yoncalla also Southern Kalapuya or Yonkalla is a Kalapuyan language once spoken in southwest Oregon in the United States . ref http books.google.com books?id BYFsAAAAMAAJ&q 22Yoncalla Creek 22&dq 22Yoncalla Creek 22&ei KUpaSqDgHo7ilATuqtSUBw ref In the 19th century it was spoken by the Yoncalla band of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya people in the Umpqua River valley. It is closely related to Central Kalapuya language Central Kalapuya and Northern Kalapuya language Northern Kalapuya , spoken in the Willamette Valley to the north. The last known user of the language was Laura Blackery Albertson, who attested to being a partial speaker in 1937. ref http books.google.com books?id ALnf3s2m7PkC&lpg PA431&dq Yonkalla&pg PA431 v onepage&q Yonkalla&f false ref References Reflist Oregon Native History Category Native American history of Oregon Category Kalapuyan languages Category Languages of the United States Category Extinct languages of North America Category Indigenous languages of Oregon Oregon stub NorthAm native stub na lang stub fr Kalapuya du Sud ...   more details



  1. Treaty of Dayton

    The Treaty of Dayton may refer to Dayton Agreement , a peace agreement for Bosnia and Herzegovina made in Dayton, Ohio Treaty with the Kalapuya, etc. , a U.S. Native American treaty made in Dayton, Oregon disambiguation ...   more details



  1. Kalapuyan languages

    Infobox language family name Kalapuya region Northwest Oregon ethnicity Kalapuya people familycolor American fam1 Penutian ? map Kalapuyan langs.png mapcaption Kalapuyan also Kalapuya is a small extinct languages extinct language family that was spoken in the Willamette Valley of Western Oregon , United States . It consists of three languages. Family division Kalapuyan consists of 1. Northern Kalapuya language Northern Kalapuya sc aka Tualatin people Tualatin Kalapuya people Yamhill 2. Central Kalapuya language Central Kalapuya sc aka Santiam people Santiam 3. Yoncalla language Yoncalla sc aka Southern Kalapuya people Kalapuya Genetic relations Image Wilhamut.1.JPG thumb left One of the boulders engraved with Kalapuyan words along the paths of east Alton Baker Park in Eugene, Oregon this one is next to the Willamette River Whilamut meaning, Where the river ripples and runs fast Kalapuyan is usually connected with the various Penutian proposals. Kalapuyan is thought to be part of an Oregon Penutian sub group along with Takelma language Takelma , Siuslaw tribe Siuslaw , and Coosan languages Coosan . A special relationship with Takelma has been proposed, together forming a Takelman family however, recent research has offered counterevidence against this relationship. Scholars consider the Kalapuyan family to be separate, but with promising connections to the Penutian hypothesis. clr References No footnotes date April 2009 Campbell, Lyle. 1997 . American Indian languages The historical linguistics of Native America . New York Oxford University Press . ISBN 0 19 509427 1. Goddard, Ives Ed. . 1996 . Languages . Handbook of North American Indians W. C. Sturtevant, General Ed. Vol ... links http www.sfu.ca nwjl Articles V001 N02 Banks.html The Verbal Morphology of Santiam Kalapuya ... stub NorthAm native stub na lang stub br Yezho kalapouyek es Lenguas kalapuya fr Langues kalapuyanes hr Kalapooian pms Lenga kalapuya ru ...   more details



  1. Mohawk people (Oregon)

    distinguish Mohawk nation The Mohawk or Mohawk River people were a tribe or band of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya Native Americans in the United States Native Americans who originally lived in the Mohawk River Oregon Mohawk River area of Oregon in the United States. ref name Zenk cite book title Northwest Coast series Handbook of North American Indians volume 7 editor Wayne Suttles Suttles, Wayne last Zenk first Henry B. authorlink Henry B. Zenk year 1990 publisher Smithsonian Institution pages 548, 552 ref ref cite web url http www.oregon archaeology.com theory pyroculture title Pyroculture Kalapuya and the Land What Did the Willamette Valley Look like When the Indians Lived There? last Gilsen first Leland publisher Oregon Archaeology ref They spoke a dialect of the Central Kalapuya language . ref name First cite book title The First Oregonians publisher Oregon Council for the Humanities year 1991 edition first editors Carolyn M. Buan and Richard Lewis pages 95 ref Like the other bands of the Kalapuya, they signed the Treaty with the Kalapuya, etc. in 1855, also known as the Dayton, Oregon Dayton Treaty, which was negotiated by Oregon Superintendent of Indian Affairs Joel Palmer . ref cite book url http books.google.com books?id N10YAAAAIAAJ&pg RA1 PA665&lpg RA1 PA665&dq Mohawk Kalapuya Oregon&source bl&ots mm63B6E8pu&sig g9sPSA4nwM9CCfvb9sCs365p5gw&hl en&ei buatSfyQNoHasAP jeWtDg&sa X&oi book result&resnum 1&ct result title Indian Affairs Laws and Treaties. Vol. II Treaties editor Charles J. Kappler year 1904 publisher United States Government Printing Office location Washington ref In 1856, they were removed to the Grand Ronde Community Grand Ronde Indian Reservation . Descendents of the Mohawk band are now part of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon . References reflist Oregon Native History DEFAULTSORT Mohawk People Oregon Category Lane County, Oregon Category Kalapuya Category Article Feedback 5 Oregon stub NorthAm native stub ru ...   more details



  1. Yamhill

    Yamhill or Yam Hill is the name of a band of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya Native American tribe, living in Oregon , United States , and several places and geographic features named after them Yamhill County, Oregon is a county in Oregon Yamhill, Oregon is a city in the western Willamette Valley, located between McMinnville and Forest Grove The Yamhill River is a river in northwest Oregon, that flows into the Willamette River Yamhill Valley is a valley that contains the Yamhill River Yamhill District and Morrison Southwest 3rd Avenue , a MAX Light Rail station in Portland Other Yamhill is also a project code name given by Intel Corporation to the Intel 64 CPU architecture disambig it Yamhill ...   more details



  1. Santiam people

    Santiam people are an indigenous people of the Northwest Plateau , living in Oregon . ref name gene http www.accessgenealogy.com native tribes indiantribehistory8.htm Indian Tribe History. Access Genealogy. retrieved 1 Sept 2011 ref They are a Kalapuya people Kalapuya n tribe, whose traditional homelands were on the banks of the Santiam River , which feeds into the Willamette River . ref name gene Today, they are enrolled in the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community ref name gene and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians . Notes reflist DEFAULTSORT Santiam People Category Indigenous peoples of the Northwest Plateau Category Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community Category Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians ...   more details



  1. Atfalati

    negotiated a new treaty with the larger Kalapuya group that included the Atfalati tribe. ref name buan This Treaty with the Kalapuya, etc. treaty removed the Atfalati to the Grand Ronde Community ... See also Mohawk people Oregon , another band of the Kalapuya Ki a Kuts Falls References reflist External ... Category Washington County, Oregon Category Kalapuya Category Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians ...   more details



  1. Tualatin

    Tualatin may refer to Tualatin people , a part of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya Native American tribe in western Oregon in the United States Tualatin Academy , a building and former school in Forest Grove, Oregon Tuality Community Hospital , a hospital in Hillsboro, Oregon Tuality Healthcare , a healthcare organization in Washington County, Oregon Tualatin Mountains , a section of the Oregon Coast Range Tualatin, Oregon , a city in the Tualatin Valley Tualatin Plains , a lowland section of the Tualatin Valley Tualatin Plains Presbyterian Church , church also known as the Old Scotch Church near Hillsboro, Oregon Tualatin River , a tributary of the Willamette River in western Oregon Tualatin Station , a commuter rail station in Tualatin, Oregon Tualatin Valley , the region surrounding the Tualatin River Tualatin Valley Community Television TVCTV , a List of public access TV stations in the United States Nebraska Pennsylvania Oregon Public access television station located in Beaverton serving Washington County, Oregon Tualatin Valley Highway , a state highway in Oregon TV Highway The third version of the Pentium III processor disambig it Tualatin ...   more details



  1. Chemawa

    Chemawa may refer to one of these United States subjects The Chemawa band of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya tribe of Native Americans Chemawa Indian School , a Native American boarding school in Oregon Chemawa, Oregon , a former community now part of Salem, Oregon Chemawa Middle School, a school in the Riverside Unified School District in California, named for Chemawa Park, an entertainment venue named after Chemawa Indian School ref cite web url http books.google.com books?id AvDHqrbZZx4C&pg PA94&lpg PA94&dq 22Chemawa Middle School 22 22named 22&source web&ots 9Q35NyIB8D&sig XcDxv1ZWBNEJzZTgE8a7L YJ5hM&hl en&sa X&oi book result&resnum 8&ct result title Riverside in Vintage Postcards accessdate January 7, 2009 ref Chemawa Hill , in Skamania County, Washington SS Chemawa , a T2 tanker References reflist disambig ...   more details



  1. Oregon Penutian languages

    Infobox language family name Oregon Penutian altname hypothetical obsolete region Oregon familycolor American fam1 Penutian child2 Takelma language Takelma child1 Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan child3 Oregon Coast Penutian languages Oregon Coast sil 2878 16 Oregon Penutian is a hypothetical language family in the Penutian language phylum comprising languages spoken at one time by several groups of Native Americans in the United States Native Americans in present day western Oregon and western Washington U.S. state Washington in the United States . Various languages in the family are divided by dialects that are in most cases identical to the various identified tribal bands in the region. The languages were spoken largely along both banks of the lower and middle Columbia River , in the Willamette Valley , in the Oregon Cascade Range , along the Oregon Coast , and in the valleys of the Umpqua River Umpqua and Rogue River Oregon Rogue rivers. The area in which the languages were spoken includes the most populated areas of Oregon today. Languages in the Oregon Penutian family with their identified dialects and area of speech in the 19th century include Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan Northern Kalapuya language Northern Kalapuya Tualatin dialect, spoken in the northern Willamette Valley along the Tualatin River , Lake Wapato , and the lower Willamette River . Yamhill dialect, in the northwestern Willamette Valley along the Yamhill River Central Kalapuya language Central Kalapuya Ahantchuyuk dialect, spoken in the northeastern Willamette Valley along the Pudding River Pudding and Molalla River Molalla rivers Santiam dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the lower Santiam River Luckiamute dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along the Luckiamute River Chepenafa dialect, spoken in the central Willamette Valley along Mary s River Chemapho dialect, spoken in central Willamette Valley along Muddy Creek Marys River Muddy Creek . Chelamela dialect, spok ...   more details



  1. Alton Baker Park

    tocleft Image AltonBakerPond.JPG thumb right 270px View across the duck pond with scale model sun to the left, Willamette River, Peter DeFazio bridge, Ya Po Ah Terrace and Skinner Butte in background Alton Baker Park is located in Eugene, Oregon , United States , near Autzen Stadium . It was named for The Register Guard Register Guard founder Alton F. Baker, Sr. ref name Parks cite web url http www.eugene or.gov portal server.pt?open 512&objID 678&PageID 1567&cached true&mode 2&userID 2 title Alton Baker Park publisher City of Eugene accessdate 2008 03 17 ref It features duck pond s, bicycle trail s, and a dog park , and directly touches the Ferry Street Bridge across the Willamette River . Other amenities include the Hult Center for the Performing Arts Cuthbert Amphitheater for outdoor musical and drama performances. The park also features a model, in 1 1 billionth scale, of the sun and inner planets of our solar system . Though some planets Saturn, Pluto and Neptune had been stolen most likely via hammer and chisel , they were replaced in a revamped solar system layout. Fact date February 2007 Whilamut Natural Area Image Wilhamut.1.JPG thumb One of the boulders engraved with Kalapuyan words along the paths of east Alton Baker Park, this one is next to the Willamette River Whilamut Where the river ripples and runs fast The less developed, eastern part of Alton Baker Park is known as the Wilhamut Natural Area and links to Springfield, Oregon Springfield s Eastgate Woodlands via bicycle paths and open space. ref name Parks cite web url http www.eugene or.gov portal server.pt?open 512&objID 678&PageID 1567&cached true&mode 2&userID 2 title Whilamut Natural Area publisher City of Eugene accessdate 2008 03 17 ref Wilhamut is a Kalapuyan languages Kalapuya word that means where the river ripples and runs fast . ref name Parks A ceremony to rename the former East Alton Baker Park took place on September 7, 2002 and included a traditional Kalapuya people Kalapuya naming ce ...   more details



  1. Spencer Butte

    Image DowntownEugene 1 .JPG right thumb 250px View of Eugene from Skinner Butte , with Spencer Butte in the distance Spencer Butte is a prominent landmark in Lane County, Oregon Lane County , Oregon , United States , on the southern edge of Eugene, Oregon Eugene , with an elevation of 2055 feet 626 m . ref cite web url http www.topoquest.com map.php?lat 43.98361&lon 123.09667&datum nad83&zoom 4 title United States Geological Survey Creswell, Oregon OR Topo Map, via TopoQuest accessdate 2008 05 16 ref Spencer Butte is accessible from Spencer Butte Park and has several hiking trails to the summit. ref name sullivan cite book last Sullivan first William authorlink William L. Sullivan author title 100 Hikes in the Central Oregon Cascades edition 3rd edition year 2005 publisher Navillus Press location Eugene, Oregon isbn 0 9677830 6 2 pages 176&ndash 177 ref The tree cover on the butte is predominantly Douglas fir , however the butte is treeless at its summit. Citation needed date October 2008 The butte is the tallest point visible when looking south from downtown Eugene. Citation needed date October 2008 Name File Spencer Butte summit.jpg left thumb 250px View north across the summit The butte was called Champ a te or Cham o tee by the native Kalapuya people Kalapuya , meaning rattlesnake . ref name eugene cite web url http www.eugene or.gov portal server.pt?open 18&objID 144752&parentname CTPortalSyndicator&parentid 0&mode 2&in hi userid 2 title Spencer Butte Park History accessdate 2008 05 05 work City of Eugene ref One popular theory is that Spencer Butte was named for a young Englishman of the Hudson s Bay Company named Spencer, who was said to have been killed by the Kalapuya after climbing the hill alone. Another, less popular theory holds that the butte was named after United States Secretary of War Secretary of War John Canfield Spencer John C. Spencer in July 1845 by Elijah White . ref name sullivan ref name eugene Spencer was no longer Secretary of War by 1845 ...   more details



  1. Ya Po Ah Terrace

    Primary sources date May 2010 Infobox building name Ya Po Ah Terrace image YA PO AH Terrace Eugene, Oregon .jpg caption location 350 Pearl Street, Eugene, Oregon Eugene , Oregon , United States latd 44 latm 03 lats 22 latNS N longd 123 longm 05 longs 26 longEW W iso region coordinates display title completion date 1968 opening 1968 building type Apartments antenna spire roof convert 212 ft top floor floor count 18 elevator count cost floor area architect structural engineer main contractor developer owner management references Ya Po Ah Terrace nickname The High Place ref name stats cite web title Ya Po Ah Terrace statistics url http www.emporis.com application index.php?nav building&lng 3&id 129026 publisher Emporis ref , is the tallest building in Downtown Eugene, Oregon at convert 212 ft m . Citation needed date May 2010 need third party source saying it is the tallest It is a controversial high rise apartment building erected at the foot of the butte in 1968. ref Style & Vernacular A Guide to the Architecture of Lane County, Oregon. Western Imprints, The Press of the Oregon Historical Society 1983. ISBN 0 87595 085 X ref History Ya Po Ah means very high place in the language of the Kalapuya people Kalapuya Indians who inhabited the Willamette Valley prior to the arrival of the Euro American settlers. Ya Po Ah was the name used by the tribe for what is now called Skinner Butte , in honor of Eugene Franklin Skinner , the founder of Eugene City. He erected his first log cabin on the western slopes of the butte to avoid the frequent floods of the Willamette River to the north, per the advice of the Kalapuya. The building is an 18 story, 222 unit apartment building located on the southern slopes of Skinner Butte, overlooking Downtown Eugene. Often not known is that Ya Po Ah also houses a performance hall, library, salon and convenience stores. Constructed in 1968, public outcry over the building s size led to laws being passed soon after, limiting the height and floor ...   more details



  1. Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon

    Image Reserva Grande Ronde.PNG right thumb Tribal flag The Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon CTGR consists of twenty seven Native Americans in the United States Native American tribes with long historical ties to present day Western Oregon between the western boundary of the Oregon Coast and the eastern boundary of the Cascade Range , and the northern boundary of southwestern Washington U.S. state Washington , and the southern boundary of Northern California . Members of the confederation The tribes who were removed to Grand Ronde are Chasta or Shasta from present day Oregon and California bands of the Shasta tribe Shasta Nations Chasta Costa Southern Oregon Athapaskan speakers Kalapuya people Kalapuya Yamel Kalapuya people Yamhill , Mary s River, Winfelly Mohawk people Oregon Mohawk , Atfalati Tualatin , Yoncalla Kommema , Ahanyichuk, Santiam Molala people Molalla Santiam Band, and Molala Rogue River tribe Rogue River ref Rogue Rivers several tribes grouped together based on the Rogue River Wars of 1855 1857. These tribes are in the Illinois and Rogue River areas of southwest Oregon and northern California. They were split between the Grand Ronde Reservation Yamhill River Reserve and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz after the Rogue River Treaty of September 10, 1853. add other relevant treaties ref Historically an erroneous name conglomerating Takelma , Upper Umpqua tribe Umpqua and Athapaskan tribes Klickitat tribe Klickitat Chinook people Chinook Thomas Band Chinook, Williams Band Chinook, Johns Band Chinook, Clackamas Chinook Oregon City Tillamook tribe Tillamook Salmon River, Nehalem, Oregon Nehalem , Nestucka French Canadian Iroquoian Treaties affecting the CTGR Treaty with the Chasta, etc. , 1854 Treaty with the Kalapuya, etc. , 1855 Treaty with the Molala , 1855 Treaty with the Rogue River, 1853 Treaty with the Rogue River, 1854 Treaty with the Umpqua and Kalapuya , 1854 The reservation today The community has an 11,040 acre 45  ...   more details



  1. Chemeketa Park, California

    to own property in the development until the mid 1960s. Name derivation Chemeketa is a Kalapuya people Kalapuya Indian word with various meanings attributed to it, including resting place, meeting place, old home, or old camping ground. The Kalapuya lived in the area now known as the Willamette Valley ...   more details



  1. Calapooia River

    . The river converges with the Willamette near Albany, Oregon Albany . It was named for the Kalapuya people Kalapuya also spelled Calapooia , a tribe of Native Americans in the United States Native ...   more details



  1. West Salem, Salem, Oregon

    File West Salem Oregon commerical district.JPG thumb 300px Old commercial district on Edgewater Street West Salem is a neighborhood in Salem, Oregon Salem , Oregon , United States , located in the far northwest part of the city. West Salem is the only part of the city that is located in Polk County, Oregon Polk County . The neighborhood is separated from the rest of Salem by the Willamette River , which serves as West Salem s southeast border. In 1889 a plat for West Salem was filed, and the city municipal corporation incorporated in 1913. ref name OGN cite book last McArthur first Lewis A. authorlink coauthors Lewis L. McArthur title Oregon Geographic Names origyear 1928 edition Seventh Edition year 2003 publisher Oregon Historical Society Press location Portland, Oregon Portland , Oregon isbn 0 87595 277 1 trade paperback , ISBN 0 87595 278 X hardcover page 1022 ref In 1949, the city was officially merged with Salem. ref name OGN West Salem post office was established in 1938 and ran until 1952. ref name OGN The former Old West Salem City Hall West Salem City Hall now housing private offices was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990. ref name NRHP http www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com OR Polk state.html National Register of Historic Places ref West Salem is served by the Salem Keizer School District , which includes West Salem High School Oregon West Salem High School , Walker Middle School, and Straub Middle School, and Brush College, Myers, Harritt, Chapman Hill, and Kalapuya elementary schools. ref cite web title Schools url http www.salkeiz.k12.or.us content schools publisher Salem Keizer Public Schools accessdate 25 May 2011 ref Struab Middle School and Kalapuya Elementary School will open in the fall of 2011, and were funded by the Salem Keizer School District construction bond. ref cite web title Bond Updates url http www.salkeiz.k12.or.us content bond updates publisher Salem Keizer Public Schools accessdate 25 May 2011 ref The ...   more details



  1. Kiger Island

    Orphan date February 2009 Refimprove date December 2006 Kiger Island is a convert 2200 acre km2 sing on island in Oregon formed by a fork between the Willamette River and the Booneville Channel Oregon Booneville Channel . The island is located at coord 44.5126221 123.2342650 type landmark region US display inline,title ref GNIS 1120576 ref . Kiger Island is part of Benton County, Oregon Benton County , with the Linn County, Oregon Linn County line following the contour of the eastern river side of the island. The only road, SE Kiger Island Drive, is located off of Highway 99W 3rd Street, just south of the Corvallis, Oregon Corvallis city limit. History In pre settlement times, the island was a summertime home for the Chepenefra Mary s River Kalapuya people Kalapuya . Even today, artifacts and human remains are periodically discovered. Dick Kiger was the son of early Benton County Pioneers Reuben and Dolly Kiger. Mrs. Kiger was formerly Louise Fisher. Dick Kiger operated the Kiger family farm on Kiger Island south of Corvallis. Although summers were spent on Kiger Island, the family resided in Corvallis during the winter. Until 1964, when it was finally dismantled to make way for a more modern construction, the Kiger Island covered bridge was at convert 340 ft m the longest covered span in Oregon. A bridge in use since at least 1914 was updated in 1934 to State Highway Commission specifications, calling for the record setting length. However, the clearance did not even reach convert 16 ft m , limiting the size of agricultural machinery and vehicles which could traverse it. In August 1963, the bridge seen today was built alongside the aging structure. In that same year, the covering was removed from the old bridge and, in 1964, was dismantled entirely. The only evidence left of the historic span are small remnants of the pylons. Agriculture Agriculture has always been the majority occupation of island residents. In the first half of the 20th century, James Grant Elgin ...   more details



  1. Melville Jacobs

    Melville Jacobs July 3, 1902 July 31, 1971 was an American anthropologist known for his extensive fieldwork on cultures of the Pacific Northwest . He was born in New York City . After studying with Franz Boas he became a member of the faculty of the University of Washington in 1928 and remained until his death in 1971. Especially during the earlier part of his career, from 1928 until 1936, he collected large amounts of linguistic data and text from a wide range of languages including Sahaptin language Sahaptin , Molala people Language Molale , Kalapuyan languages Kalapuya , Clackamas tribe Language Clackamas , Tillamook language Tillamook , Alsean languages Alsea , Upper Umpqua language Upper Umpqua , Galice and Chinook Jargon . He left funds to establish the Jacobs Research Fund , which supports anthropological research in the Pacific Northwest. His papers, including extensive raw linguistic material that has provided the basis for subsequent research on now extinct languages, are held by the University of Washington in the Jacobs Archive. He was married to Elizabeth Jacobs , also an anthropologist. Works A Sketch of Northern Sahaptin Grammar 1931 Notes on the Structure of Chinook Jargon 1932 Northwest Sahaptin Texts, I 1934 Texts in Chinook Jargon 1936 Northwest Sahaptin Texts, II 1937 Coos Narrative and Ethnologic Texts 1939 Coos Myth Texts 1940 Historic Perspectives in Indian Languages of Oregon and Washington 1941 Kalapuya Texts 1945 Outline of Anthropology 1947 General Anthropology A Brief Survey of Physical, Cultural, and Social Anthropology 1952 Clackamas Chinook Texts 1959 The People are Coming Soon Analyses of Clackamas Chinook Myths and Tales 1960 Pattern in Cultural Anthropology 1964 The Anthropologist Looks at Myth 1966 References Winters, Christopher. International Dictionary of Anthropologists. New York Garland, 1991 Seaburg, William. Badger and Coyote Were Neighbors Melville Jacobs on Northwest Indian Myths and Tales , Oregon State University Press E ...   more details




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