{"title":"Snoqualmie Ethnicity: Community and Continuity","authors":"K. Tollefson, Martin Abbott","doi":"10.2307/1184834","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This study seeks to analyze the extent to which the Snoqualmie Indians have maintained a sense of identity and community in the presence of severe opposition, including the loss of aboriginal villages, reduction in subsistence resources, and persistent pressure for assimilation. It proposes to measure the membership's perception of their identity and community in several significant areas: social networks, political participation, tribal leadership, religious symbols, and symbols of identity. Three divisions of this document include a section addressing the theoretical idea of ethnicity and community, a section describing individual perceptions of social organization and ethnic boundaries in the 1990s, and a section analyzing responses to a survey questionnaire on identity and community. Many Snoqualmie Indians continue to live within their aboriginal territory, the Snoqualmie River drainage system, between Monroe and North Bend, Washington, some twenty-five miles east of the city of Seattle. The Snoqualmies signed the Point Elliott Treaty, ratified April 11, 1859, which granted the tribe reservation lands. They were prohibited from moving to the reservation due to inadequate subsistence resources, poor soil for agriculture, and lack of governmental funds.' In 1937, Indian Agent E. M. Johnston proposed a 10,240-acre reservation at the mouth of the Tolt River, but World War II erupted and the national emergency took precedence.2 Nevertheless, the Snoqualmies are listed in the Congressional Record in 1953 as a recognized tribe. However, at some later date the Bureau of Indian Affairs, in direct disregard of congressional powers, dropped the Snoqualmies from the federal list of recognized tribes without any record or rationalization of the action.4 Consequently, the Snoqualmies went through the governmental process and received federal recognition on August 22, 1997. Their recognition is now being challenged in the Indian Review Court. Additional data concerning the history and social organization of the Snoqualmies is available in several professional journals.5 Kenneth D. Tollefson is emeritus professor of anthropology at Seattle Pacific University. Martin L. Abbott is professor of sociology and dean of the College of Arts and Science at the same university. Tollefson has done extensive research among the Duwamish, Snoqualmie, and Tlingit Tribes and was formally adopted into each tribe.","PeriodicalId":80425,"journal":{"name":"American Indian quarterly","volume":"22 1","pages":"415"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1998-01-23","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.2307/1184834","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"American Indian quarterly","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2307/1184834","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2
Abstract
This study seeks to analyze the extent to which the Snoqualmie Indians have maintained a sense of identity and community in the presence of severe opposition, including the loss of aboriginal villages, reduction in subsistence resources, and persistent pressure for assimilation. It proposes to measure the membership's perception of their identity and community in several significant areas: social networks, political participation, tribal leadership, religious symbols, and symbols of identity. Three divisions of this document include a section addressing the theoretical idea of ethnicity and community, a section describing individual perceptions of social organization and ethnic boundaries in the 1990s, and a section analyzing responses to a survey questionnaire on identity and community. Many Snoqualmie Indians continue to live within their aboriginal territory, the Snoqualmie River drainage system, between Monroe and North Bend, Washington, some twenty-five miles east of the city of Seattle. The Snoqualmies signed the Point Elliott Treaty, ratified April 11, 1859, which granted the tribe reservation lands. They were prohibited from moving to the reservation due to inadequate subsistence resources, poor soil for agriculture, and lack of governmental funds.' In 1937, Indian Agent E. M. Johnston proposed a 10,240-acre reservation at the mouth of the Tolt River, but World War II erupted and the national emergency took precedence.2 Nevertheless, the Snoqualmies are listed in the Congressional Record in 1953 as a recognized tribe. However, at some later date the Bureau of Indian Affairs, in direct disregard of congressional powers, dropped the Snoqualmies from the federal list of recognized tribes without any record or rationalization of the action.4 Consequently, the Snoqualmies went through the governmental process and received federal recognition on August 22, 1997. Their recognition is now being challenged in the Indian Review Court. Additional data concerning the history and social organization of the Snoqualmies is available in several professional journals.5 Kenneth D. Tollefson is emeritus professor of anthropology at Seattle Pacific University. Martin L. Abbott is professor of sociology and dean of the College of Arts and Science at the same university. Tollefson has done extensive research among the Duwamish, Snoqualmie, and Tlingit Tribes and was formally adopted into each tribe.
本研究旨在分析斯诺夸尔米印第安人在面临严重反对的情况下,在多大程度上保持了认同感和社区意识,这些反对包括土著村庄的丧失、生存资源的减少和持续的同化压力。它建议在几个重要领域衡量成员对其身份和社区的看法:社会网络、政治参与、部落领导、宗教符号和身份符号。本文件分为三个部分,其中一个部分涉及种族和社区的理论概念,一个部分描述了20世纪90年代个人对社会组织和种族边界的看法,还有一个部分分析了对身份和社区调查问卷的回应。许多斯诺夸尔米印第安人继续生活在他们的原住民领地,即华盛顿州门罗和北本德之间的斯诺夸尔米河排水系统,位于西雅图市以东约25英里处。Snoqualmies签署了Point Elliott条约,并于1859年4月11日批准,该条约授予部落保留地土地。由于生存资源不足、农业土壤贫瘠以及缺乏政府资金,他们被禁止搬到保留区。1937年,印第安特工e.m.约翰斯顿提议在托尔特河河口建立一个10,240英亩的保留区,但第二次世界大战爆发,国家紧急状态优先然而,Snoqualmies在1953年被国会记录列为一个公认的部落。然而,在不久的将来,印第安事务局无视国会的权力,在没有任何记录或理由的情况下,将斯诺夸利斯人从联邦承认的部落名单上除名因此,Snoqualmies通过了政府程序,于1997年8月22日获得了联邦政府的承认。他们的承认现在在印第安复审法院受到质疑。关于Snoqualmies的历史和社会组织的其他资料可在一些专业杂志上找到Kenneth D. Tollefson是西雅图太平洋大学人类学名誉教授。马丁·l·阿博特(Martin L. Abbott)是该校社会学教授兼文理学院院长。Tollefson在Duwamish, Snoqualmie和Tlingit部落中做了广泛的研究,并被每个部落正式收养。