Oregon Zoo Conservation: Native American History The Condor and native American History. the California condor was a helper to thenative people of the The Chehalis and chinook indians have a story about the http://www.zooregon.org/Condors/NativeAmericanHistory.htm
Extractions: The Thunderbird is used in one form or another by most northwest tribes. It was believed, that it brought storms, rain, lighting, and thunder to the people. While each tribe interpreted it a little differently, it was used in art and decorations as a way to protect individuals and tribes from evil spirits. The Wasco tribe along the Columbia River has always revered condors, believing them capable of protecting humans against natural disasters such as storms. They used to raise chicks in the villages to adulthood, and used their feathers in ceremony. They also have designs representing them on their basketry.
Extractions: advanced Scroll down for the article Totem pole American Indians - Northwest and Southwest Indians Northwest Indians lived along the Pacific Ocean , from southern Alaska to Washington State. These Indians are well known for their totem poles . After getting tools for carving from white traders, the totem poles became an important part of each tribe. A totem pole in front of an Indian's home would show the generations and social rank of that family. Some Northwest tribes are the Chinook , Tillamook, Coast Salish and the Tlingit. For shelter the Northwest Indians used what was available in their forests red cedar trees . They built Big-Houses, which were from 20 to 60 feet wide and anywhere from 50 to 150 feet long. They didn't have nails to hold the logs together Northwest Indian village so they used wooden pegs. To keep the rain out, they overlapped wooden planks. There were no windows but a hole in the roof let in air. Coastal tribes lived off the ocean. No sushi for them but plenty of
Articles On The Topic Native Americans, Bureau Of Indian Affairs Affairs recognizes the existence of the chinook Tribe. is critical of the Bureau ofIndian Affairs new which is intended to reimburse native americans for 112 http://www.hcn.org/archivesbysubject.jsp?category=Native Americans&subject=Burea
Indian Legend - Native American Sites Of Interest Pueblo) indians; Chumash indians; Comanche indians; chinook Indian; indians; Cheyenneindians; American Indian Tribe; Albert Bold Tongue s native American Links Page; http://www.indianlegend.com/links.htm
Native Americans Of The Willamette Valley, A Bibliography chinook one of the traditional tribes still struggling to be a federally AmericanIndians of the Pacific Northwest Digital Collection. native American Genealogy. http://www.usgennet.org/alhnorus/ahorclak/indiobiblio.html
Extractions: Native Americans of the Willamette Valley, a Bibliography of Books and Links Ames, Kenneth M. and Herbert G.D. Maschner, Archaeology of the Northwest Coast: Dec. 15, 1995 (Draft for Anth 364, Portland State University), published in spiral bind by Clean Copy, Portland, OR. Available Spring 1999 by Ames and Maschner, Peoples of the Northwest Coast: Their Archeology and Pre-History, Thames Hudson, publisher. Becham, Stephen Dow, The Indians of Western Oregon: This Land Was Theirs, 1977, Arago Books, Coos Bay, OR. Berreman, Joel V., "Tribal Distribution in Oregon," Memoirs of the American Anthropological Association: 1969, Menasha, WI, printed by Kraus Reprint Co., NY. Buan, Carolyn M., and Richard Lewis, editors, The First Oregonians, 1991, Oregon Council for the Humanities, Portland, OR. Ruby, Robert H. and John A. Brown, Indians of the Pacific Northwest: 1981, University of Oklahoma Press, Norman. And, also by Ruby and Brown, A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest, 1986, University of Oklahoma Press, London and Norman. Sanders, Judith A., Mary K. Weber, and David R. Brauner, Willamette Mission Archeological Project (Phase III Assessment): 1983, (also Anthropology Northwest: Number 1), for the State Historic Preservation Office, by the Department of Anthropology, Oregon State University, Corvalis, pp. 42-48.
Native Americans, French Canadians And Intermarriage reservations survived to preserve native American values and Clackamas Warm SpringsIndian Reservation, Confederated chinook one of the traditional tribes http://www.usgennet.org/alhnorus/ahorclak/indiancensus.html
Extractions: Native Americans, French Canadians, and Intermarriage Early records present a special challenge for people researching Native American or mixed-race ancestors. Prior to 1870, excepting head-counts on reservations, censuses enumerated only whites, and usually only adult males at that. Until 1900 the US Census failed to accurately reflect the names and numbers of Oregon's Native American population. Censuses taken to record "on" and "off" reservation Indians also omitted many tribal members; until quite late in the 19th Century, many people easily traveled between reservations and more familiar homelands. The following sources are especially useful for the names of Metis (part-Indian/ part-white, usually French Canadian) people as well as for Native Oregonians associated with the missions or the fur trade: Hudson's Bay Company Archives Mountain Men and the Fur Trade Jesuit Oregon Province Archives Catholic Church Records Harriet Munick began publishing the Catholic Church Records from the Archdiocese of Portland in Oregon in 1972. She completed seven volumes, indexing some 14 parishes. This website offers a cumulative index to all seven books under the categories of baptisms, marriages and deaths. The database includes over 22,000 names and is searchable. Catholic Church Records of the Pacific Northwest Munick's Vancouver volumes, a record of baptisms, marriages, and burials during travel to Ft. Vancouver (1838), at Vancouver (1838-1844), at St. James Church (1842-1856) and at Stellamaris Mission (1848-1860) are indexed for biographies by Connie Lenzen . The Church records were kept by priests Francois Norbert Blanchet and Modeste Demers who traveled from Canada to Oregon with the Hudson's Bay Company and began their missionary work with a service at Ft. Vancouver.
Native American Languages chinook Jargon; Community effort brings Potawatomi to a new generation of LinguisticClassification of American indians; native American Language Courses; http://www.fortunecity.com/victorian/ferndale/61/languages.htm
Extractions: web hosting domain names email addresses Cheyenne Chickasaw Chinook Jargon Choctaw Comanche Language and Cultural Preservation Cree Crow language books for sale Dakota ... Delaware (Lenape) Eskimo (also see under Inuit) Maliseet-Passamaquoddy Maricopa ... Natick Navajo Ojibwe O'odham Projects (Papago) Omaha-Ponca Oneida Indian Nation Language Project Papago (see under O'odham) Pima Potawatomi Salish Natick Seminole ... Shoshone Siouan (see Dakota, Lakhota, Omaha-Ponca, Hocak)
Native Americans Navigator Information about Nez Perce, chinook, Flathead Tribes This Week in AmericanIndian History has an fact about or concerning native americans for every http://www.chenowith.k12.or.us/tech/subject/social/natam.html
Extractions: Native Americans The First Americans a site designed by middle school teachers with facts, pictures, and links about the cultures of the North American Indian tribes. American Indians of the Pacific Northwest this Library of Congress exhibit focuses on Native Americans from two cultural areas of the Pacific Northwest, the Northwest Coast and Plateau. View their large collection of photos and text descriptions and step into another culture. First Nations' Histories concise histories of native tribes from the U.S. and Canada. This is a work in progress. Map - "Location of the Indian Nations..." prior to European Settlement, Index of Native American Resources on the Net - extensive categorized links to information on the web. Native American Shelters read about and see pictures of the different structures Native Americans used for shelter. from Carnegie Mellon University American Indian Studies From the California State University, Long Beach Liberal Arts Department. Has links to sites about the culture and history of people indigenous to North and South America. Some excellent art sites are listed.
Powell's Books - Navajo Indians (Native Americans) By Caryn Yacowitz Navajo indians (native americans) by Caryn Yacowitz. Age Level 0709. Availableat Burnside. Free Shipping! This title ships for free on qualified orders! http://www.powells.com/cgi-bin/biblio?inkey=1-1403441723-0
Native American Indian Tribes Indian and Alaska native Population 1999 Chemakum, Chetco, Chilluckkittequaw, chinook,Clackamas, Clatskani Karuk, Kawaiisu, Maidu, Mission indians, Miwok, Mono http://www.500nations.com/500_Tribes.asp
Extractions: Arizona ... Contact Us Information for all North American Native American Indian tribes, nations, First Nations, bands, rancheria, pueblo, including Federally Recognized, State Recognized, and Petitions for Recognition. U.S. Tribes (For tribal contact information, see state pages on left-side menu.) Federally Recognized Tribes - 48 States Abenaki, Algonkin, Beothuk, Delaware, Erie, Fox, Huron, Illinois, Iroquois, Kickapoo, Mahican, Mascouten, Massachuset, Mattabesic, Menominee, Metoac, Miami, Micmac, Mohegan, Montagnais, Narragansett, Nauset, Neutrals, Niantic, Nipissing, Nipmuc, Ojibwe, Ottawa, Pennacook, Pequot, Pocumtuck, Potawatomi, Sauk, Shawnee, Susquehannock, Tionontati, Wampanoag, Wappinger, Wenro, Winnebago.
Native American Treaties And Information Iroquois indians A Documentary History of the Diplomacy of the Six Nations and Microfilm4203 (Ask at the desk for reels of film); native americans and the New http://www-libraries.colorado.edu/ps/gov/us/native.htm
Extractions: GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS United States Government Information U.S. Resources State Resources Foreign Resources International Resources ... What's New Native American Treaties and Information Resources in Our Collection Electronic Versions of Treaties Native American Information and Links Treaties Other Materials American Indian (Office) Multimedia encyclopedia "From pre-European contact to the early 20th centurythe history, culture, words and images, legends and leaders of the United States, Canada and Northern Mexico." American Indians: A Select Catalog of National Archives Microfilm Publications (Annotated copy with notes on microfilm collections held in Government Publications.)
Picture History - Native American Indians native American indians. Items, 293 items on 25 pages. A Burial Site on the LittleBighorn River in Montana. A chinook Lodge. A Christian Indian. After Wounded Knee. http://www.picturehistory.com/find/c/232/mcms.html
Picture History - Native American Indians People Professions native American indians. Items, 293 items on 25 pages. ABurial Site on the Little Bighorn River in Montana. A chinook Lodge. http://www.picturehistory.com/find/c/232/p/10/mcms.html
Native American Mythology American Legends of the Pacific Northwest This site contains full text legendsand myths of the native people of Washington and Oregon. chinook indians - A http://www.cvsd.org/opportunity/Library/Pathfinder/nativeamerican_myth_pathfinde
Extractions: N ATIVE A MERICAN M YTHOLOGY A Pathfinder for 3rd Grade N ative Americans, the first people in America, were here long before Columbus and the other early European explorers. These native people, also known as Indians of North America, told stories to pass their history from generation to generation. Some of their stories were based on actual historical events and are called legends. Other stories were used to explain the origins of natural events. These stories are called myths or mythology. I f you would like to learn more about Native American mythology , follow the links on this pathfinder. It will help you find information in your school library media center, on the Internet, and in the community about the mythology of Native Americans. Books
Native Americans Legends Index collection, alphabetical and by theme. native american lore. the Stars Bear and hisIndian wife, the the (Wabenaki) Chief Mountain (Siksika) chinook wind (Yakima http://home.online.no/~arnfin/native/lore/index0.htm
Today In American Indian History Territory. 1990 The native American Grave Protection Act takes place.November 18. 1765 CREEKs. 1805 Clark meets chinook indians. 1813 http://www.aipc.osmre.gov/Notes from Native America/5_2001.htm
Extractions: "Today In American Indian History" Here are some events taken from Phil Konstantin's website- "This Week In American Indian History" ( http://members.tripod.com/~PHILKON/ November 16th 1805: The CHOCTAW sign a treaty today. 1866: BRULEs come into Ft.Laramie. 1874: President Grant, by Executive Order today, expands the Colorado River Indian Reserve. 1907: Oklahoma becomes a state. 1907: Today, actions are taken regarding the Gila Cliff-dwellings National Monument in New Mexico Territory. 1990: The Native American Grave Protection Act takes place. November 18 1765: According to some reports, a meeting regarding boundary lines is held today by representatives of Great Britain and the CREEKs. 1805: Clark meets CHINOOK Indians. 1813: Members of the HILLABI Clan of the MUSKOGEE CREEKs have offered to surrender to General Andrew Jackson with Scots trader Robert Grierson acting as intermediary. Jackson will agree to the surrender. However, forces under Generals Hugh White and John Cocke are unaware of the agreement. They will attack Hillabee village which believes the fighting is over. Five dozen HILLABIs will be killed, and 250 will be captured. This action will reverse the HILLABIs' decision to surrender. They will become one of the most fierce fighting units in the CREEK War. 1858: Thomas Henley, Indian Superintendent in San Francisco, receives a notice from J.W.Denver, of the Commissioner's Office of Indian Affairs, dated today. The notice says the Secretary of the Interior has decided to set aside the entire Nome Cult Valley (Round Valley, California) as an Indian Reservation.
Extractions: HIGH VIRUS ALERT - 'Mydoom' Worm Save $5 on McAfee Personal Firewall Plus American Indian Bible Ministries, Inc. Cherokee Bible Project First Nation Missionary Outreach Indian Burial Assistance Project ... Mennonite Central Committee Aboriginal Neighbors Program Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate Diocese of Churchill Hudson-Bay Native American Communications Office , United Methodist Communications
Native Families Census, Resources; chinook Tribe; Creek Nation - An Introduction A Studyof the Creek indians. Getting Started - native American Genealogy; Gateway To http://www.telusplanet.net/public/mtoll/native.htm
Extractions: by SchoolNet Digital Collections program, Industry Canada The North West Rebellion North West Rebellion - Canadian Military Heritage Project The North West Rebellion - From Wikipedia The Queen's Own Rifles of Canada Chief Red Crow Chief Red Crow Red Crow - Warrior Chief by Hugh A. Dempsey Mi'k ai'stowa (Red Crow)
Extractions: Active Roster Pitchers B/T Ht Wt DOB 63 Rafael Betancourt R/R 27 Jack Cressend R/R 50 Jason Davis R/R 49 Chad Durbin R/R 36 Jose Jimenez R/R 34 Cliff Lee L/L 54 David Riske R/R 52 C.C. Sabathia L/L 61 Jason Stanford L/L 55 Scott Stewart R/L 30 Brian Tallet L/L 37 Jake Westbrook R/R 39 Matt White R/L 26 Bob Wickman R/R Catchers B/T Ht Wt DOB 44 Josh Bard S/R 15 Tim Laker R/R 41 Victor Martinez S/R Infielders B/T Ht Wt DOB 20 Ronnie Belliard R/R 1 Casey Blake R/R 23 Ben Broussard L/L 8 John McDonald R/R 13 Omar Vizquel S/R Outfielders B/T Ht Wt DOB 24 Milton Bradley S/R 10 Coco Crisp S/R 6 Alex Escobar R/R 9 Jody Gerut L/L 11 Matt Lawton L/R 38 Ryan Ludwick R/L Designated Hitters B/T Ht Wt DOB 48 Travis Hafner L/R Cleveland Indians betting Cleveland Indians gambling Cleveland Indians wagering Cleveland Indians odds ... tuscarora indians
ACF Administration For Native Americans: Financial Report FY2002 Administration For native americans Summary of Expenditures FY 2002. IA FederallyRecognized Tribes, WA, chinook Indian Tribe/chinook Nation, 90NA7535, $100,000. http://www.acf.dhhs.gov/programs/ana/publications/FY2002/S508_fy2002_summary.htm
Extractions: @import url(../styles/acfmodern.css); @import url(/styles/acfmodern.css); Questions? Privacy Site Index Contact Us ... ACF News Search: ANA Home Publications Division of Planning and Support November 2002 Category Financial Assistance Grants Number Of Awards Award Amount Federally Recognized IA Tribes IB Alaska IC Served through Consortia ID Tribal Colleges and Universities Non-Federally Recognized IIA Tribes IIB Urban Organizations IIC Rural Organizations Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander IIIA Native Hawaiian IIIB Pacific Islanders Special Projects IV Special Projects Total Grants Award amounts for other awards Category Number of Awards Award Amount Interagency Transfers to Other Agencies Training and Technical Assistance ACF Taps Unobligated Balance Figures for FY2002 Appropriation/Recission Category Amount Revised FY2002 Appropriation Recission Original FY 2002 Appropriation Legend for Letter Codes in Grant numbers Code Explanation NA Social and Economic Development (SEDS) NL Language Preservation XN Congressional NK Alaska Specific Social and Economic Development NR Environmental Earmarks Summary of Expenditures FY 2002 Discretionary Grant List Class State Grantee Name Grant Number FY2002 Funds Awarded IA Federally Recognized Tribes AL Poarch Band of Creek Indians Total for ALABAMA (1 Grant) IA Federally Recognized Tribes AZ White Mountain Apache Tribe IA Federally Recognized Tribes