6 Comments

  1. Neat! The drawing of the Lower Umpqua house is at least accurate in that it shows the planks were horizontal. This seems to have been a thing with Coos Bay-Lower Umpqua-Siuslaw plank houses, whereas further south the planks for walls were typically vertical. Why the difference, I have no idea. Red cedar seems to have been preferred at CB, tho’ they may have used Port Orford Cedar. One Coos woman, Lottie Evanoff, who once owned a POC canoe said POC is heavier (making such a canoe a bit harder to dock) so while some people liked using it for canoes, I do wonder if they then preferred to use red cedar for house planks – at least the roof perhaps. About walls, I don’t know. Support posts, when material was mentioned at all, were douglas fir. Were Kalapuyans as big on tule mats? Apparently in CLUS households, tule mats were used for EVERYTHING – ‘rugs’, wall hangings, something nice and squishy to sit on, mattress material for bed platforms…I swear there is not much one can’t do with a tule mat.

  2. David, my grandmother, Ila Dowd, use to tell me that her dad, John aka: Mos, Hudson, (your great great grandfather, my great grandfather) use to leave to sweat in sweat house all the time. It is my understanding that he started doing this as a young boy (probably about 7 yrs.) This would of been in the 1870’s. He would listen to the elders tell there stories in the sweathouse. As you know, he later told these stories to Melville Jacobs. This would of been the last person in our family that was taught to do this because it was the Santiam Kalapuyan way. After that I think the Catholic Church just became to big of an influence on my grandmothers family.

  3. Small Voice Big Truth

    Hey David,

    I hope your Holidays were sweet. How are you? Did you ever hear back from my Tribe or any other Tribe on supporting your work? If not, I am so very sorry my efforts failed you! I just found something on the Umatilla website that sound right up your ally. Hope it is! Big Hugs, Dawn

    http://ctuir.org/system/files/indian%20education%20coordinator%2001%2009%2017.pdf

    On Sat, Dec 31, 2016 at 2:38 PM, NDNHISTORYRESEARCH | Critical & Indigenous Anthropology wrote:

    > David G. Lewis’ Ethnohistory Research, LLC posted: “The question of what > sorts of houses the Kalapuyans had has again surfaced. Over the years this > question has been of prime importance. Many Americans, ignorant of the > diversity and variability of Tribal cultures have assumed that tipis were > the houses for” >

  4. Bonnie Leon

    I’ve been trying to find information about what kind of housing, the Umpqua tribe used, specifically those living on the North Umpqua. Any help is appreciated.

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