Seattle (city): platted at Little Crossing-Over Place,
37
; naming of,
37
–
38
; complex geography and geology of,
38
,
93
; “village period” defined,
41
; perceptions of among early visitors,
40
,
42
; built by indigenous labor,
47
–
49
; attempts to remove Indians from,
51
–
53
,
54
,
62
,
63
; incorporation of,
54
; beginning of urban sprawl in 1870s,
75
–
78
; growth in 1880s,
80
–
86
; and Panic of 1893,
86
; environmental transformations of landscape,
93
–
95
; development of regional Indian hinterland,
107
–
13
,
116
,
117
; advertised with Indian imagery,
114
–
15
,
116
–
17
,
130
–
31
,
158
–
60
; and Second World War,
163
–
65
; and postwar urban renewal,
169
,
173
,
180
; rise of multicultural politics,
168
–
70
; ecotopian turn of,
187
Seattle Arts Commission,
173
Seattle Historical Society,
146
Seattle Indian Heritage High School,
173
Seattle Liberation Front,
170
Seattle, Mandy,
91
Seattle, Mary Sam,
91
Seattle Spirit,
144
,
197
; and racial conflict,
145
–
47
; and the Cold War,
184
–
85
Seeathl (Duwamish/Suquamish; also known as Seattle and Sealth),
42
–
43
,
51
,
54
,
58
,
201
; and city-founding process,
26
,
28
,
34
; reactions to naming of town after him,
37
–
38
; on the “Changers,”
80
; death of,
126
; grave of,
127
,
148
; synonymy with city,
128
–
29
; warplane named after,
164
; as environmentalist icon,
187
–
88
.
See also
Chief Seattle Day; Chief Seattle Speech
Seeayay (Puyallup),
35
Seetoowathl (Duwamish; also known as Old Indian George),
79
,
97
,
103
,
210
,
236
Seward Park,
168
Shelton, Gram Ruth Sehome (Tulalip),
131
Shilshoolabsh or Shilshole (people),
76
,
88
,
98
,
100
; relationship to the Duwamish,
23
; and raids by northern peoples,
107
–
8
,
182
–
83
,
221
,
222
Simmons, Michael T.,
51
Single resident occupancy (SRO) hotels,
155
,
156
,
175
Siwash (“Indian” in Chinook Jargon; also racist term),
34
,
49
,
157
Skagit (people),
153
Skhandoo (Chilkoot Tlingit shaman),
120
Skid Road (neighborhood),
14
,
167
,
190
; descriptions of,
165
; as “Indian territory,”
174
–
76
; discrimination in,
177
.
See also
Pioneer Square
S'Klallam (people),
105
,
118
,
157
Skokomish/Twana (people),
120
Smallpox (“Comes out all over”),
101
,
110
; and ecological imperialism,
24
–
25
; urban anxieties over,
60
–
63
.
See also
Epidemics (other than smallpox)
Smart, Lillian,
18
Smith, Henry A.,
227
Smith Tower,
103
Sneatlum, Amelia (Suquamish),
112
,
210
Snohomish (people),
81
,
148
,
150
,
157
Snoqualmie Pass,
45
Solomon, Ben (Duwamish),
43
Somers, Joe,
76
South Park (neighborhood),
153
Speidel, Bill,
177
Spencer, Ernest (Yakama),
157
Spirit Canoe (place),
100
“Squaw Men” (racist term for white men living with or married to Indian women),
61
.
See also
Class; Intermarriage/“miscegenation”
Standless, J. E. “Daddy.”
See
Ye Olde Curiosity Shop
Stevens, Isaac Ingalls,
50
–
51
,
52
,
53
Stewart, Robert M. and Helen,
74
Stosach (Duwamish) and family,
70
Subsistence practices (indigenous): central to pioneer life in Seattle,
48
–
49
; destruction of by urban development,
89
,
97
,
99
–
100
; criminalization by conservation laws,
99
–
100
,
189
.
Also see
the atlas
Suquamish (people),
158
–
59
; indigenous geography of,
23
–
24
; as hosts of Chief Seattle Day,
126
,
148
–
49
; legal status in city,
190
,
196
,
198
,
200
Suquamish (Port Madison) Reservation,
86
,
90
,
126
,
127
,
148
–
49
Swanton, John R.,
116
Tafoya, Terry,
195
Taholah (Quinault leader),
120
Tecumseh, Sam (Duwamish/ Muckleshoot),
84
–
85
,
240
Tecumseh (Duwamish),
47
Temple, Richard (Suquamish),
158
–
59
Thomas, Cecilia,
72
Thomas, Jimmy (Tlingit),
155
Thompson, Earle (Yakama),
179
Thomson, Reginald H.,
95
Tight Bluff (place),
21
Tilikums of Elttaes,
133
–
35
,
140
–
41
,
144
Tleebooleetsa (Hachooabsh; also known as Madeline),
88
–
89
,
91
Tlingit (peoples),
155
,
156
,
157
; Stikine,
107
; Hutsnuwu,
110
–
11
; Ganaxádi/ Tongass,
113
,
118
,
159
; Chilkoot,
120
; Hoonah,
120
,
152
–
53
; Taku,
120
; Chilkat,
120
,
129
Tollen family,
76
Tolmie, William,
26
Totem House Fish & Chips,
160
Totem poles,
115
,
116
,
134
,
158
,
159
,
169
.
See also
Chief-of-All-Women Pole
Treaty of Point Elliott,
50
–
51
,
89
Tsetseguis (Hachooabsh),
225
Tsimshian (people),
109
,
111
,
120
–
21
,
157
Tsootsalptud (Duwamish),
234
Tucked Away Inside (Shilshoolabsh community),
23
,
77
,
88
,
91
,
97
,
107
–
8
Tulalip Reservation and Tribes,
51
,
86
,
119
,
120
Turner, Franklin (Choctaw) and Ellen,
153
Turner, Frederick Jackson,
147
Twin Tepees Lounge,
160
Uhlman, Wes,
177
United Indians of All Tribes,
171
,
181
,
182
,
185
.
See also
Daybreak Star Cultural Center
United States v. Washington. See
Boldt, George
University of Washington,
88
,
127
,
170
,
184
,
209
,
211
Urban history: in opposition to Indian history,
11
–
12
Valley-Lightener, Marian,
160
–
61
Van Asselt, Henry, and family,
29
,
42
Vendiola, Diane (Swinomish),
156
–
57
,
171
Victoria, British Columbia,
60
–
61
Vietnam War,
56
Wahalchoo, Jacob (Suquamish),
20
–
21
,
98
,
158
,
232
–
33
Warren, Pearl (Makah),
165
,
169
,
171
Waterman, Thomas Talbot,
92
,
97
,
98
,
209
–
11
,
213
–
14
Webster, Lawrence (Suquamish),
158
–
59
Weed, Gideon,
62
West Point (place),
85
,
90
,
107
,
195
–
96
West Seattle: growth of,
83
–
84
,
99
,
100
,
101
West Seattle Business Association,
19
West Seattle Charlie (Duwamish),
83
,
86
West Seattle Land Improvement Company,
83
Whatcom, Betsy (Muckleshoot),
210
Whitebear, Bernie Reyes (Colville),
157
,
169
,
182
Whitney, Lizzie,
73
Whitworth, Mary, and family,
73
Whulshootseed (language),
24
,
25
,
28
,
68
,
131
; conventions of use in this book,
xvi
,
215
–
26
; use of, place names in Seattle,
14
,
26
,
37
,
92
–
93
,
102–
3
,
127
; use by settlers,
64
–
65
,
220
; at Potlatch festivals,
148
,
149
; place-naming practices in,
214
–
18
.
Also see
the atlas
Wilbur, Ollie (Muckleshoot),
79
,
103
William (Duwamish leader),
53
Williams, Art (Duwamish/Puyallup/ Muckleshoot),
99
–
100
,
111
Williams, Bena (Muckleshoot),
243
Williams, Harriet Shelton (Snohomish),
148
,
150
Williams, Sam (Ditidaht),
116
Winthrop, Theodore,
220
Wirtz, Jacob and Mattie,
72
Woolene, Louise,
72
Woolley, Nellie (Haida) and John,
153
Wrobel, David,
141
Wynn, Florence “Dosie” Starr (Muckleshoot),
102
,
203
,
242
Yakama (people),
112
,
157
,
164
,
179
,
237
Ye Olde Curiosity Shop,
116
,
159
Yesler, Henry,
37
,
50
,
51
–
52
,
54
,
138
; and sawmill
14
,
47
,
53
,
81
; as Indian agent,
52
Yesler, Julia (Duwamish),
57
Young, Ralph (Hoonah Tlingit),
152
–
53
Youngblood, Minnie (Makah) and John,
154
Youngstown (neighborhood),
155
WEYERHAEUSER ENVIRONMENTAL BOOKS
The Natural History of Puget Sound Country
by Arthur R. Kruckeberg
Forest Dreams, Forest Nightmares: The Paradox of Old Growth in the Inland West
by Nancy Langston
Landscapes of Promise: The Oregon Story, 1800–1940
by William G. Robbins
The Dawn of Conservation Diplomacy: U.S.-Canadian Wildlife Protection Treaties
in the Progressive Era
by Kurkpatrick Dorsey
Irrigated Eden: The Making of an Agricultural Landscape in the American West
by Mark Fiege
Making Salmon: An Environmental History of the Northwest Fisheries Crisis
by Joseph E. Taylor III