9 Comments

  1. This is fantastic, David and Esther. I hope you get a productive response. Let me know if you would like any help in promoting or distributing this letter. Is it going out to teachers, or to the Board of Education? It would be an excellent supplement to the new Native curriculum.

  2. beadresearcher

    Excellent essay, David. I was skeptical at first, but you won me over by the end with your well-written, well-argued piece.

    I noticed that you noted some minor edits from the original. I wanted to note another suggested edit at the top of your last full paragraph. You say “To rename Lane County as Kalapuyan County” while referring to it later in the paragraph as Kalapuya County.

    I’ll be watching this issue with great interest.

    Best of luck,

    Alice Scherer, Oregon City

    alice@europa.com

  3. As a 37-year resident of “Lane County” I wholeheartedly support this proposal and will write to the County Commissioners. Let’s move beyond colonialism/colonization. I want to be a resident of Kalapuya County, Oregon.

  4. I have always been interested in First Nations history but sadly have devoted little time to it. Life’s complexities have found their way into my life-stream. Nevertheless, Dr. Lewis’s essays here fascinate me as they provide a currency to contemporary events as well as redressing conventional beliefs about American history. The latter was so “white-washed” (and I am not using this term in a racist sense as pertaining to White/European settlers/colonizers) but rather the “manifest destiny” of American ideals from shore to shore neglected to truthfully depict the devastation and infamy suffered by aboriginals on this land. As an undergraduate, little time was spent on this issue and it was relegated to extracurricular and optional reading. Unhappily, history repeats itself elsewhere and so mankind does not seem to learn from its past. Thank you for your essay, Dr. Lewis. I hope you continue a relentless pursuit of telling Native American histories.

  5. Edward H. Teague

    I strongly support the name change. I also think the name of “Whiteaker” as in that Eugene neighborhood should be changed. Oregon’s first elected governor, Whiteaker had well documented pro-slavery views while in office. His tomb is in Eugene Masonic Cemetery. From Wikipedia: “Although nicknamed “Honest John”, this did not deflect his controversial stands on issues of national importance. Whiteaker held pro-slavery views which did not sit well with a population mostly in the abolitionist camp.[1] Opponents often used this to attack him as a traitor as the United States descended into the Civil War. ” Perhaps there is another First Nations word appropriate for that area.

  6. Dear David, nice to see your name come across my desk recently. I have been thinking about developing a petition to rename Polk County to Luckimiute County. The geographic boundaries are nearly identical. I wouldn’t know where to start, but your essay here gives me hope. Thank you for your work.

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