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Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians

The Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians in the United States is a federally recognized confederation of more than 27 Native American tribes and bands who once inhabited an extensive homeland of more than 20 million acres from northern California to southwest Washington and between the summit of the Cascades and the Pacific Ocean. After the Rogue River Wars, these tribes were removed to the Coast Indian Reservation, now known as the Siletz Reservation. The tribes spoke at least 11 distinct languages, including Tillamook, Shasta, Lower Chinook, Kalapuya, Takelma, Alsea-Yaquina, Siuslaw/Lower Umpqua, Coos, the Plateau Penutian languages Molala and Klickitat, and several related Oregon Athabaskan languages.[2]

Name[edit]

The confederation takes its name from the Siletz River, which surrounds the original headquarters of the reservation. The word siletz translates to a description of something that is coiled like a rope or a snake, describing the route of the river winding through the mountains circuitously to the ocean. The confederation includes remnants of the Siletz, a Coast Salish people who also became incorporated into the larger confederation.

Tillamook

Siletz

including Yaquina

Alsea

including Wakhiakum, Multnomah, and Clatsop

Chinook

including Hanis and Miluk

Coos

including Santiam, Tualatin, Yamhill, Yoncalla, Marys River band, and others

Kalapuya

(also known as Kuitsh) and Siuslaw

Lower Umpqua

Molalla

including Klamath River people

Shasta

including Shasta, Upper Rogue River Athapaskan peoples: Applegate and Galice Creek, or any of the tribes of Lower Rogue River Athapaskan (or Tututni) people

Rogue River peoples

Klickitat

including Dagelma, Latgawa, and Cow Creek

Takelma

Oregon Athabaskans

Lower Rogue River Athabaskan

The confederation is made up of the following tribes and bands.[3]

Table Rock Indian Reservation

Upper or Shasta Tribe:

Rogue River

Coastal Tribes:

Shasta Costa

Finding records of the ethnic and cultural history of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz is somewhat difficult. A partial attempt at the tribal population makeup before it was forced on reservation lands in the mid-19th century is as follows:

Salishan languages

Tillamook

Shastan languages

Shasta

Penutian languages

Chinookan languages

Na-Dene languages

Athabaskan languages

The ancestors of the Confederated Tribes spoke at least 11 different languages.


According to a report by the National Geographic Society and the Living Tongues Institute for Endangered Languages, Siletz Dee-ni is the last of many tribal languages spoken on the reservation. In 2007 only one living fluent speaker remained.[15] However, according to a later report in The Economist, the language has since been at least partially revived thanks to an on-line dictionary project; in some areas, "many now text each other in Siletz Dee-ni."[16] The tribe has a language revival program with classes in three area offices and Siletz Valley school.[17] As of 2020, a number of younger conversant speakers have learned the language.

drummer for the band Redbone.

Peter "Last Walking Bear" DePoe

Sister , advocate for the restoration of federal recognition

Francella Mary Griggs

Mary "Dolly" Fisher, activist to restore federal recognition of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians from 1974. She won the Nanwood Honeyman Award for significant contribution to the advancement of women in Oregon. She won The National Congress of American Indians award, honoring Indian and Native Women's leadership. Named tribal casino as "Chinook Winds."

(1924–2011), businessman and tribal elder

Calvin Leroy Van Pelt

Delores Ann (Lane) Pigsley, one of the longest serving Tribal leaders in the United States as of 2020, still serving as Siletz Tribal Chairman.

List of Native American Tribal Entities in Oregon

(1977). The Indians of Western Oregon: This Land Was Theirs. Coos Bay, Oregon: Arago Books. ISBN 0-930998-02-2.

Beckham, Stephen Dow

(1991). An Arrow in the Earth: General Joel Palmer and the Indians of Oregon. Portland: Oregon Historical Society. ISBN 0-87595-155-4.

O'Donnell, Terence

(1985) [1847]. Journal of Travels Over the Rocky Mountains. Fairfield, Washington: Ye Galleon Press. ISBN 0-87770-299-3.

Palmer, Joel

Schwartz, E. A. (1997). The Rogue River Indian War and Its Aftermath, 1850-1980. Norman, Oklahoma: . ISBN 0-8061-2906-9.

University of Oklahoma Press

(2010). The People Are Dancing Again: The History of the Siletz Tribe of Western Oregon. Seattle: University of Washington Press. ISBN 978-0-295-99066-8.

Wilkinson, Charles

(official website)

Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians

Tolowa resources

25 U.S.C. 771 et seq. "Siletz Indian Tribe"

Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

"Siletz Indians" 

Kentta, Robert. Siletz Indian Tribe History, Tillamook Oregon, Multnomah County Oregon, Salishan - Part I - Introduction. STBC, n.d. Web. 13 Oct. 2016.

"A Siletz Historical Timeline".