Infobox language name Takelma nativename Unicode Taakelm n states United States region Oregon , Rogue Valley along the middle course of the Rogue River, OR Rogue River extinct 19th century ethnicity Takelma people familycolor American family Penutian or language isolate map Takelman langs.png mapcaption Takelma south , with the Kalapuyan languages to the north iso3 tkm notice IPA Takelma was the language spoken by the Takelma people . It was first extensively described by Edward Sapir in his graduate thesis, The Takelma Language of Southwestern Oregon . ref cite book last Sapir first Edward title The Takelma Language of Southwestern Oregon publisher Bureau of American Ethnology year 1922 series Handbook of American Indian Languages volume Bulletin 40 pages 1 296 chapter II ref The last fluent speaker of Takelma, with whom Sapir worked while writing about the language, was Frances Johnson Gw sgwash n . Dialects Latgawa dialect, spoken in southwestern Oregon along the upper Rogue River Oregon Rogue River Lowland dialect, spoken in southwestern Oregon in the Rogue Valley There was possibly a Cow Creek dialect spoken in southwestern Oregon along the South Umpqua River , Myrtle Creek, and Cow Creek Oregon Cow Creek . Genealogical relations Takelma is a language isolate . Takelma was once considered part of a Takelma Kalapuyan language family together with the Kalapuyan languages Morris Swadesh Swadesh 1965 . Citation needed date April 2011 However, a paper by Tarpent & Kendall 1998 Citation needed date April 2011 finds this relationship to be unfounded because of the extremely different morphological structures of Takelma and Kalapuyan. DeLancey follows this position. Citation needed date April 2011 However, Takelma is commonly proposed as part of the Penutian super family, as first ... title Takelma Texts journal University of Pennsylvania Anthropological Publications publisher University ... of North America br Takelmeg es Idioma takelma eu Takelma hizkuntza fr Takelma ru ... more details
The Takelma also Dagelma were a Native Americans in the United States Native American people that lived ... River Oregon Rogue River . The name Takelma means Those Along the River . History Much less is known about the lifeways of the Takelma Indians than about their neighbors in other parts of Oregon and northern .... The Takelma who survived were sent to reservations in 1856. Settlers and natives lived in the region together for less than four years. Because Takelma territory included the most agriculturally attractive ..., and they considered them a dangerous nuisance. They recorded little about the Takelma, beyond documenting their own perspective on inevitable conflicts. Native Americans living near the Takelma but on more ... intermediaries. Douthit argues that without such middle ground contact, the Takelma and other ... forcibly relocated the Takelma who survived the Rogue Indian Wars to the Coast Indian Reservation .... Indian agent s taught the surviving Takelma farming skills and discouraged them from speaking their own ... skills and the English language . On the reservations, the Takelma lived with Native Americans from ..., worked against the transmission of Takelman language and culture to Takelman descendants. The Takelma ... about their language and lifeways. Linguists Edward Sapir and John Peabody Harrington worked with Takelma descendants. In the late 1980s, Agnes Baker Pilgrim , granddaughter of Takelma chief George Harney, emerged as the most significant spokesperson for the Takelma. Culture Environment and adaptation ... exact than hunter gatherers . They collected plant foods and insects, fished and hunted. The Takelma cultivated only one crop, a native tobacco Nicotiana biglovii . The Takelma lived in small bands ... Takelma adapted to these seasons by spending spring, summer and early fall months collecting and storing ... by women provided the Takelma with an excellent, protein rich diet for much of the year, if the salmon ... factor in the Takelma diet was carbohydrates, since fish and game provided abundant fat and protein ... more details
Frances Johnson or Gw sgwash n died 1934 ref cite news title Pair breathe life into dead language author Paris Achen url http www.mailtribune.com apps pbcs.dll article?AID 20080111 NEWS 801110323 newspaper Mail Tribune date Jan 11, 2008 accessdate 22 April 2012 ref was the last fluent speaker of the Takelma language of Oregon , United States. In 1906, she worked with linguist Edward Sapir to document the language while living on the Siletz Reservation . ref name sapir1909takelma Cite book last Sapir first Edward page 5 year 1909 title Takelma texts publisher University of Pennsylvania series Anthropological Publications of the University Museum volume 2 number 1 location Philadelphia accessdate 2010 10 08 url http www.archive.org details cu31924027108962 ref References reflist Category Last known speakers of a language Category Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest ... more details
Unreferenced date October 2008 Latgawa were a Native Americans in the United States Native American people that lived in the Rogue Valley of interior southwest Oregon . In their own language Latgawa means those living in the uplands, though they were also known as the Walumskni by the neighboring Klamath people Klamath tribe. Together with the Takelma people Takelma tribe, the Latgawa spoke Takelma language Takelma . History The Latgawa were located in the upper Rogue River Oregon Rogue River valley eastward to the former Table Rock Indian Reservation and Bear Creek Rogue River Bear Creek and in the neighborhood of Jacksonville, Oregon . Together with other tribes along the Rogue River, they were grouped as the Rogue River tribe Rogue River Tribe , but after the Rogue River Wars in 1856 , bands of the Rogue River were split between the Confederated Tribes of Siletz and the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon , relocating to either the Siletz Indian Reservation north of the tribe s traditional lands or to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation . Some of the tribal members were never captured and were forced to wander. In the era of the Rogue Indian Wars, Rogue Valley Indians were killed or captured, while many of the Latgawa escaped and survived with the help of Tribes such as the Klamath people Klamath , Blackfoot , Nez Perce tribe Nez Perc and Suquamish , and from Chief Seattle and others. Wandering as far away as Colorado, up into Canada, and returning to their aboriginal lands in Southern Oregon and Northern California. Citation needed date October 2008 Today The Latgawa along with the other Takelman tribes, often collectively referred to as the Rogue Indians were forcibly removed to the Siletz and Grand Ronde reservations if they survived. There is a group currently not recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs as a tribe, known as The Latgawa Native American Indian Tribe. The Latgawa Native American Indian Tribe, they claim, was never captu ... more details
spoken in southwestern Oregon in the Umpqua River valley, along Elk Creek and Calapooia Creek. Takelma language Takelma possibly the Cow Creek dialect spoken in southwestern Oregon along the South ... Oregon along the upper Rogue River Oregon Rogue River Lowland Takelma dialect, spoken in southwestern ... more details
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. 17 . Washington, D. C. Smithsonian Institution . ISBN 0 16 048774 9. Mithun, Marianne. 1999 . The languages of Native North America . Cambridge Cambridge University Press . ISBN 0 521 23228 7 hbk ISBN 0 521 29875 X. Sturtevant, William C. Ed. . 1978 present . Handbook of North American Indians Vo ... more details
by the Takelma tribe, as well as many other Western Oregon Indian tribes, to welcome and Blessing bless ... of traditional ways because so many Takelma had died on the reservations, the ceremony was not continued ... Council of 13 Indigenous Grandmothers and the oldest living member of the Takelma Siletz nation ... Living people Category Sustainability advocates Category Takelma people Category Southern Oregon ... more details
Image Hoxie.gif 130px thumb right Hoxie Simmons, a Rogue River Indian, c. 1870. Unreferenced date October 2009 Rogue River is the name of a Native Americans in the United States Native American group originally located in southern Oregon in the United States . Rogue River was not a single tribe, but a conglomeration of many affiliated and related tribal groups. The total estimated population of these tribes in 1850 was about 9,500. The French Canadian employees of the Hudson s Bay Company called them all coquins , meaning Rogues , where the designation comes from. The principal tribes commonly grouped under the generic name of Rogue River Indians were the Latgawa , Takelma , Shasta tribe Shasta and different subtribes of the Coquille tribe Coquille , including the Shasta Costa , Tututni, and Euchre Creek. After the Rogue River Wars in 1856, bands of the Rogue River were split between the Confederated Tribes of Siletz and the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon , relocating to either the Siletz Indian Reservation north of the tribe s traditional lands or to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation . Some of the tribal members were never captured and were forced to wander. DEFAULTSORT Rogue River People Category Native American tribes in Oregon Category Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians NorthAm native stub Oregon stub fr Rogue River tribu ... more details
isolate isolates Siuslaw and Takelma Oregon Penutian Coosan languages Siuslaw tribe Siuslaw Takelma language Takelma Later Sapir and Leo Frachtenberg added the Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan ... Siuslaw Takelma Kalapuyan languages Kalapuyan   small Kalapuya small Alsean languages Alsean ..., and Utian are recent arrivals to California from the Great Basin or Oregon. California Penutian and Takelma ... Sahaptian Molala Klamath The Wintuan languages , Takelma language Takelma and Kalapuya language ... with the subject, often in an Oregonian branch, though Takelma and Kalapuya are no longer considered ..., Takelma, and Wintu do not show such obvious connections, and DeLancey has not investigated ... Lucie & Daythal Kendall. 1998 . On the relationship between Takelma and Kalapuyan another look ... more details
Infobox Ship Begin Infobox Ship Image Ship image Ship caption Infobox Ship Career Ship country nowrap United States Ship flag USN flag 1972 Ship name USS Takelma ATF 113 Ship namesake Ship ordered Ship builder Ship laid down 18 Sep 1943 Ship launched Ship commissioned 1944 Ship renamed Infobox Ship Career Hide header yes Ship decommissioned 1976 Ship fate transferred to Argentine Navy , 1993 Ship notes Infobox Ship Career Hide header yes Ship struck Ship reinstated Ship honours Ship notes Infobox Ship Career Ship country Argentina Ship flag shipboxflag Argentina naval Ship name ARA Suboficial Castillo A 6 Ship namesake Argentine Marines Marine Julio Castillo Ship acquired 30 Sep 1993 Ship commissioned 07 Jun 1994 Ship decommissioned Ship in service Ship out of service Ship struck Ship reinstated Ship honours Ship fate in service as of 2010 Ship status Ship notes Infobox Ship Characteristics Hide header Header caption Ship class Ship displacement 1731 tons full Ship length 62.5 m Ship beam 11.7 m Ship draft 5.2 m Ship propulsion 4 x Diesel electric engines, br single screw Ship speed convert 16 kn km h Ship range 6500 milles at convert 15 kn km h Ship complement 85 Ship sensors Ship EW Ship armament as Suboficial Castillo br 2 dual Bofors 40 mm gun 40 mm 60 Bofors gun, br 1 single Bofors 40 mm gun 40 mm 60 Bofors gun, br 2 Oerlikon 20 mm cannon Ship notes The ARA Suboficial Castillo A 6 is a Abnaki class tug patrol boat of the Argentine Navy . She previously served in the US Navy as USS Takelma ATF 113 from 1944 to 1976. Suboficial Castillo is used as support ship for both the Argentine Submarine Force and during the summer campaigns in Argentine Antarctica Antarctica in the Patrulla Ant rtica Naval Combinada English Joint Antarctic Naval Patrol with the Chilean Navy to guarantee safety to all touristic and scientific ships that are in transit within the Antarctic Peninsula . US Navy service Takelma was built by United Engineering Co, at Alameda, California , USA and ... more details
Image Umpqua Indian.jpg thumb Umpqua Indian , drawn by Alfred Thomas Agate Umpqua refers to any of several distinct groups of Native Americans in the United States Native Americans that live in present day south central Oregon in the United States . The Upper Umpqua tribe is represented as the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians . The tribe signed a treaty with the U.S. federal government on September 19, 1853. The Upper Umpqua was the first Oregon tribe to sign a federal treaty. The Cow Creek Band spoke the now extinct Takelma language . The Cow Creek Band has a reservation near the modern day city of Roseburg, Oregon . The Lower Umpqua tribe is represented in modern times as one of the three Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians located on the southwest Oregon Pacific Ocean Pacific coast in the United States . They spoke a language close to Siuslaw . Some bands of the Umpqua are part of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon . The Cow Creek Tribe now operates the Seven Feathers Casino Resort Seven Feathers Hotel & Casino Resort in Canyonville. External links http www.cowcreek.com Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Tribe of Indians homepage http www.ctclusi.org Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw homepage http www.npaihb.org profiles tribal profiles Oregon Coos&Siuslaw&Lower 20Umpqua.htm Coos, Lower Umpqua & Siuslaw Tribes profile Oregon Native History Oregon Brief History Oregon stub NorthAm native stub Category Native American tribes in Oregon Category Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians fr Umpquas peuple hr Umpqua ru ... more details
Native American tribes the Takelma s, the Latgawa s, and the Shasta tribe Shasta s. The scattered camps ... ID 23 title Where Living Waters Flow Place & People Native American Cultures The Takelma & Other Peoples ... stewart cite web url http soda.sou.edu awdata 021104a1.pdf title The Takelma and Their Athapascan Neighbors ... more details
, 1972 On 1 April 1972, fleet tug USS Takelma ATF 113 3 took the unmanned Nanigo in tow and stood out from Adak, bound for Bremerton, Washington. Takelma and her charge encountered heavy seas on 7 April ... more details
ha 1 . The Takelma tribe of Native Americans in the United States Native Americans inhabited the Table ... during a gold rush , the settlers forced the Takelma away from the Table Rocks and into Indian ... Rocks was home to the Takelma people. They gathered food such as acorn s and Hemizonia tarweed Hemizonia fitchii seeds, and caught salmon in the nearby Rogue River. The Takelma also used deer hide ... treaties were signed in an attempt to end the hostilities. ref name TakelmaTakelma? What happened to the Takelma?, Bureau of Land Management ref ref name watershed Illinois United States Forest Service ... the Takelma near Lower Table Rock, but the Takelma were prepared. One soldier died, and three others ... of Table Rock lasted 10  days, and 30  Takelma were imprisoned. ref name Book20 21 Reyes Reyes ... River, 1853, Oklahoma State University ref The Takelma population underwent their first forced ... Rock and nearby Evans Creek. ref name Takelma ref name Book22 Reyes Reyes 1994 , p. 22 ref ref ... moved to other reservations. ref name Takelma ref OSA Request to Open Indian Lands, 1857, Oregon State ... is poisonous and was used by the Takelma as an Anesthesia anesthetic . ref name Camas Fattig2 Mail ... oak trees, found on the lowest slopes of the Table Rocks. The Takelma tribe often set set fires in the oak ... table rock takelma.php title What happened to the Takelma? accessdate September 29, 2007 publisher Bureau of Land Management ref Takelma? cite web title Which tribes lived near the Table Rocks? url http ... The Takelma and Their Athapascan Neighbors last Gray first Dennis year 1987 publisher Southern Oregon ... more details
Siouan Catawba small br 42. Skittagetan   small Haida small br 43. Takilman   small Takelma ... languages Yokuts 3 Maiduan languages Maidu 4 Wintuan languages Wintun 2. Oregon Penutian 1 Takelma language Takelma 2 Coast Oregon Penutian a Coosan languages Coos b Siuslaw tribe Siuslaw c Yakonan ... Takelma language Takelma Kalapuyan Kalapuya Chinookan language Chinookan Tsimshianic Tsimshian Zuni ... Siuslaw Coast Penutian? Takelma Timucua Tonkawa Tunica Tunican? Wappo Yuki Wappo Washo Yana Yuchi Siouan ... Mexico considered probably by many Penutian Tsimshianic Chinookan Takelma Kalapuya not close to Takelma ... more details
RA1 PA763 Retrieved on June 11, 2009. ref History The Takelma called the peak either Tan ... on June 14, 2009. ref ref cite web url http soda.sou.edu awdata 021104a1.pdf title The Takelma ... more details
to Takelma Indians, then to white and Karuk Karok settlers, before becoming part of a designated ... the Rogue River War s of 1855&ndash 56 and the forced removal of most of the Takelma and other native ... more details
Image Dead Indian Soda Springs.jpg thumb right Iron rich water from the springs The Dead Indian Soda Springs are an assortment of small mineral springs that feed into Dead Indian Creek near Eagle Point, Oregon , United States . The springs are rich in sodium carbonate , iron , magnesium , and sodium hydroxide . The springs are located approximately 35 miles 56 kilometers east of Medford, Oregon Medford . History Image Dead Indian Soda Springs Steps.jpg thumb left Stone steps at the site The Dead Indian Soda Springs were discovered by European American European American pioneer settlers around 1871, when a man named John Tyrell stopped for a drink while chasing an elk. Within 20 years, the site became a popular camping site for Rogue Valley residents. Shortly after 1900, Charles Wiltkinson built a home and several rental cabins near the mouth of the creek, which are now part of Camp Latgawa . Men hired during the Great Depression to work in the woods for the Civilian Conservation Corps built a fountain and rockwork path around one of the springs in 1935 1936, but they were gradually washed away during floods in 1955, 1964, and 1997. All that remains today are the trace ruins scattered about the site and a few stone steps that lead from the trail down into the creek. It is not known whether the springs were used by the Takelma Indians for medicinal purposes, but in the 1920s, Lou Bean bottled some of the springs and sold the water to Brown s Tavern, in Medford. Dead Indian Soda Springs Shelter Infobox NRHP name Dead Indian Soda Springs Shelter nrhp type image Dead Indian Soda Springs Shelter Jackson County Oregon.jpg caption locmapin map caption lat degrees lat minutes lat seconds lat direction long degrees long minutes long seconds long direction location Eagle Point, Oregon vicinity built 1936 architect architecture National Park Service Rustic Rustic ref http heritagedata.prd.state.or.us historic index.cfm?do v.dsp siteSummary&resultDisplay 39488 Oregon Historic Si ... more details
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