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which we found to be an excellent fish. We have seen those
Indians above and are of a nation who reside above and on the opposite side who call themselves (Calt-har-ma). They are badly clad & ill made, small and speak a language much resembling the last nation. One of those men had on a sailor's
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and made signs that he got those clothes from the white people who lived below the point &c. Those people left us and crossed the river (which is about 5 miles wide at this place) through the highest waves I ever saw a small vessels ride. Those
Indians are certainly the best canoe navigators I
149:
On August 9, 1851, the
Kathlamet ceded lands to the United States in exchange for money, clothing, and other items. They retained two small islands in the Columbia River. On August 24, 1912, the Kathlamet were awarded $ 7,000 for the loss of their lands.
128:, the wind very high from the S.W., with most tremendous waves breaking with great violence against the shores. Rain falling in torrents, we are all wet as usual and our situation is truly a disagreeable one. We purchased of the Indians 13
146:". "About 1810 the Cathlamets moved across the Columbia and joined the Wahkiakums in a village at the present site of Cathlamet." About 50-60 Cathlamet remained in 1849.
508:
513:
265:
478:
Cathlamet on the
Columbia : recollections of the Indian people and short stories of early pioneer days in the valley of the lower Columbia River
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Cathlamet on the
Columbia : recollections of the Indian people and short stories of early pioneer days in the valley of the lower Columbia River
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is named after the former head of the
Kathlamet people, who told stories about her memories of Lewis and Clark as a young girl.
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48:
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93:. On the north side, they lived "from the mouth of Grays Bay to a little east of Oak Point." Their villages were:
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Ika'naiak, on the north side of the
Columbia River at the mouth of Coal Creek Slough just east of Oak Point.
442:
Bulletin of the Bureau of
American Ethnology No. 26. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1901.
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Ilo'humin, on the north side of
Columbia River opposite Puget Island and near the mouth of Alockman Creek.
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153:"The last speakers of Kathlamet died in the 1930s," and the tribe is no longer distinct from the
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379:"Kathlamet Language and the Kathlamat Indian Tribe (Cathlamet, Katlamet, Wahkiakum)"
142:"In early January 1806 Cathlamet Chief Shahharwarcap, together with 11 men, visited
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on the south side of the
Columbia River", and lived between Tongue Point and
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Ta'nas ilu', on Tanas Ilahee Island on the south side of the Columbia River.
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HistoryLink.org- the Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History
82:
433:
351:
Ruby, Robert H.; Brown, John A.; Collins, Cary C. (February 27, 2013).
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107:, on the south side of Columbia River about 4 miles below Puget Island.
457:"Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition Online January 10, 1806"
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32:
This article is about the ethnic group. For their language, see
239:
Bureau of American Ethnology Bulletin, Smithsonian Institution
235:"Washington: Extract from The Indian Tribes of North America"
125:
67:. They were also called "Guasámas, or Guithlamethl, by the
327:"Coastal Tribes - Jefferson National Expansion Memorial"
266:"Lewis & Clark—Tribes—Cathlamet Indians (Kathlamet)"
113:
Wa'kaiyakam, across Alockman Creek opposite Ilo'humin.
354:
A Guide to the Indian Tribes of the Pacific Northwest
406:"Architects Without Borders takes on Main Street"
81:reported "that about 300 Cathlamet occupied nine
59:state. The Kathlamet people originally spoke the
495:
350:
509:Native American history of Washington (state)
514:Native American tribes in Washington (state)
452:PhD dissertation. Indiana University, 1955.
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124:About 12 o'clock 5 Indians came down in a
51:people with a historic homeland along the
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481:. Portland, Oregon: Binfords & Mort
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404:Weinstein, Nathalie (April 28, 2010).
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27:Chinookan people on the Columbia River
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300:Elliott, Linda (February 3, 2009).
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450:The Language of Kathlamet Chinook.
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25:
535:
519:Terminated Native American tribes
357:. University of Oklahoma Press.
302:"Cathlamet -- Thumbnail History"
461:University of Nebraska, Lincoln
209:. Portland: Binfords & Mort
63:, a dialect or language of the
475:Strong, Thomas Nelson (1906).
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203:Strong, Thomas Nelson (1906).
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55:in what is today southwestern
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1:
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71:", and "Kwillu'chini, by the
7:
167:
10:
540:
31:
410:Daily Journal of Commerce
233:Swanton, John R. (1953).
122:November 11th Monday 1805
65:Chinookan language family
160:Queen Sally's Spring in
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91:Clatsop County, Oregon
36:. For other uses, see
331:National Park Service
174:Cathlamet, Washington
162:Cathlamet, Washington
120:
95:
383:native-languages.org
270:National Geographic
61:Kathlamet language
34:Kathlamet language
18:Cathlamet (people)
524:Willamette Valley
364:978-0-8061-8950-5
276:on April 23, 2003
179:Chinookan peoples
16:(Redirected from
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504:Chinookan tribes
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439:Kathlamet Texts.
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47:are a tribe of
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483:. Retrieved
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334:. Retrieved
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278:. Retrieved
274:the original
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243:. Retrieved
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211:. Retrieved
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184:Neerchokikoo
159:
152:
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144:Fort Clatsop
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121:
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87:Puget Island
83:plank houses
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44:
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133:jacket and
105:Kathla'amat
498:Categories
466:August 15,
434:Franz Boas
415:August 15,
389:August 15,
336:August 15,
311:August 15,
280:August 15,
245:August 15,
213:August 15,
190:References
138:ever saw.
135:pantaloons
57:Washington
485:April 20,
241:: 412–451
69:Clackamas
38:Cathlamet
168:See also
130:red char
73:Chinook
385:. 1998
361:
126:canoe
487:2014
468:2013
417:2013
391:2013
359:ISBN
338:2013
313:2013
282:2013
247:2013
215:2013
43:The
89:in
75:."
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20:)
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