The Cascade-Siskiyou National Monument spans more than 66,000 acres of forest lands in southern Oregon and Northern California. These are the traditional homelands of the Takelmans, Athapaskans, Shastans, and Klamath peoples. The Rogue River tribes, as they are known today at Grand Ronde and Siletz reservations, were the Takelma, Athapaskan, Shasta and some Umpqua tribes of the region. Therefore, this monument, established in 2000 at around 24,000 acres, and expanded by president Obama in 2016 to over 66,000 acres, spans the territory of three tribes from Grand Ronde, and including the western edge of the Klamath territory.
In this territory were fought many of the Rogue River Indian wars, 1851-1856, where the tribes fought for their lands against the incursions of gold miners, ranchers, farmers and ranger militia that sought their ultimate extermination. Treaties were signed, 3 in this area, which proposed peace between the tribes and the Americans. Tribes sold their lands for safety yet attacks kept coming. Chief John led the tribes off the Table Rock reserve to fight for their lands against the exterminationists and eventually surrendered at Port Orford. The tribes were removed from the territory in 1856 on several “Trails of Tears.” The tribes came first to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation and settled for a year before some of the tribes resettled at the newly-opened Siletz Agency on the Coast Indian Reservation. On the two reserves many of the Rogue River peoples died of newly introduced diseases in these first few years, decreasing their numbers by about 500 by the 1860s.
Before removal, the tribes of this region lived there since time immemorial, with dates of occupation older than 10,000 years, meaning there were upwards of 500 generations of our peoples in this region. These people were all buried in these lands and they are now part of the land. Many tribes believe the land is the heart of the people and will little doubt we are interrelated in many ways to that land.
Our lands in southern Oregon were always known as rough and mountainous terrain. This made defending that land much easier for the tribes in 1855. But the rough terrain also has not allowed people to settle there in great numbers. The rough terrain and rugged conditions have helped maintain a place of great biodiversity of animal and plant life. It is a logging region, but it is first and foremost a vast natural landscape which the tribe adapted to live with for a very long time. The Rogue River tribes knew the ecology of the region and lived within the seasonal cycles. They hunted, fished and, gathered from all eco-zones of the land. Many of the important places maintain our names, like, Siskiyou, Illahee, and Umpqua.
Establishing this monument preserved the landscape for the future of all Americans. For Native peoples to return and find community in the original landscapes of our peoples is priceless. In this environment we can practice restoring cultural practices. Many people in the Grand Ronde tribe have an affinity to the Rogue region and this monument preserves the wilderness for them and their descendants. In addition, tribal peoples in the region are using the landscape for their own cultural practices. This place is an important vault of information about tribal lifeways.
1849 C Street, N.W.
Washington DC 20240
Over 200 articles on Tribal history are published on the blog site https://ndnhistoryresearch.wordpress.com
by David G. Lewis, Tribal Anthropologist
To Stay updated on Facebook join https://www.facebook.com/DavidLewis4TC/ and https://www.facebook.com/theoregonterritory/
wow…didn’t know about this, thank you David for watching out for our lands like this. I will definately write a letter! Dawn
On Sun, Jul 16, 2017 at 4:15 PM, NDNHISTORYRESEARCH | Critical & Indigenous Anthropology wrote:
> David G. Lewis’ Ethnohistory Research, LLC posted: “The Cascade-Siskiyou > National Monument spans more than 66,000 acres of forest lands in southern > Oregon and Northern California. These are the traditional homelands of the > Takelmans, Athapaskans, Shastans, and Klamath peoples. The Rogue River > tribes, as th” >
Yes get your tribe to get vocal in opposition to any reduction in the national monument.
And I found this article, which gives us some hope Zinke might do the same for our Monument lands. You might include a link to this to let people know Zinke IS LISTENING to people with legitimate feedback!
http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/interior-department-reaffirms-two-national-monuments-after-review/article/2628576
On Sun, Jul 16, 2017 at 4:15 PM, NDNHISTORYRESEARCH | Critical & Indigenous Anthropology wrote:
> David G. Lewis’ Ethnohistory Research, LLC posted: “The Cascade-Siskiyou > National Monument spans more than 66,000 acres of forest lands in southern > Oregon and Northern California. These are the traditional homelands of the > Takelmans, Athapaskans, Shastans, and Klamath peoples. The Rogue River > tribes, as th” >
thanks, they can see this comment. thanks again