fbpx
Wikipedia

Coeur d'Alene people

The Coeur d'Alene Tribe /kɜːrdəˈln/[3] (also Skitswish and in the Coeur d'Alene language: Schi̲tsu'umsh) are a Native American tribe and one of five federally recognized tribes in the state of Idaho.[1]

Coeur d'Alene Tribe[1]
Schitsu'umsh
Skitswish
Coeur d'Alene people and tipis, Desmet Reservation, c. 1907
Total population
1,976[2] (2015 census)
Regions with significant populations
 United States
 Idaho
Languages
English • Coeur d'Alene

The Coeur d'Alene have sovereign control of their Coeur d'Alene Reservation, which includes a significant portion of Lake Coeur d'Alene and its submerged lands.

In Idaho v. United States (2001), the United States Supreme Court ruled against the state's claim of the submerged lands of the lower third of Lake Coeur d'Alene and related waters of the St. Joe River. It said that the Coeur d'Alene were the traditional owners and that the Executive Branch and Congress had clearly included this area in their reservation, with compensation for ceded territory. This area was designated in 1983 by the Environmental Protection Agency as Bunker Hill Mine and Smelting Complex, the nation's second-largest Superfund site for cleanup.

Concerned at the slow pace of progress, in 1991 the tribe filed suit against mining companies for damages and cleanup costs, joined in 1996 by the United States and in 2011 by the state of Idaho. Settlements were reached with major defendants in 2008 and 2011, providing funds to be used in removal of hazardous wastes and restoration of habitat and natural resources.

Historically the Coeur d'Alene occupied a territory of 3.5 million acres in present-day northern Idaho, eastern Washington and western Montana. They lived in villages along the Coeur d'Alene, St. Joe, Clark Fork, and Spokane rivers, as well as sites on the shores of Lake Coeur d'Alene, Lake Pend Oreille, and Hayden Lake. Their native language is Snchitsu'umshtsn, an Interior Salishan language. They are one of the Salish language peoples, which tribes occupy areas of the inland plateau and the coastal areas of the Pacific Northwest.

Name edit

The French name Cœur d'Alêne translates to "heart of an awl". The name is first recorded by the Lewis and Clark Expedition (1805) and was later popularly said to have been given by French traders to one of the chiefs of the tribe noted for his stinginess.[4] The alternative name Skitswish is recorded by Alexander Henry the younger in 1810 (as Skeetshue) and by George Gibbs in Pacific Railroad Report vol. 1 (1853). This is an exonym used by the Sahaptin.[5]

The self-designation Schi̲tsu'umsh is reported from Coeur d'Alene phrasebooks since the 1970s.[6] A modern speaker of Coeur d'Alene was reported as interpreting this name as "the discovered people".[7]

The federally recognized tribe was named the Coeur D'Alene Tribe of the Coeur D'Alene Reservation, but they shortened it to Coeur D'Alene Tribe.[1]

Geography edit

Historically, the Coeur d'Alene lived in what would become the Panhandle region of Idaho and neighboring areas of what is today eastern Washington and western Montana, occupying an area of more than 3.5 million acres (14,164 km2) of grass-covered hills, camas-prairie, forested mountains, lakes, marshes, and river habitat. The territory extended from the southern end of Lake Pend Oreille in the north, running along the Bitterroot Range of Montana in the east, to the Palouse and North Fork of the Clearwater River in the south, to Steptoe Butte and up to just east of Spokane Falls in the west. At the center of this region was Lake Coeur d'Alene. The abundant natural resources included trout, salmon, and whitefish. The tribe supplemented hunting and gathering activities by fishing the St. Joe and Spokane rivers. They used gaff hooks, spears, nets, traps and angled for fish.

History edit

 
Aboriginal territory of the Coeur d'Alene tribe, cdatribe-nsn.gov (ca. 2003)

An Interior Salish peoples, the Coeur d'Alene people first encountered Europeans in 1793. Then their economy was based on fishing, hunting, and plant gathering, with seasonal migratory patterns and retreating to clustered semi-subterranean dwellings during the winter months. The precontact lifeways of Interior Salish peoples are not widely written about, but available evidence favors the possibility of a recent expansion from the coast to the interior, possibly related to an increase in coastal population about 600 to 900 years ago.[8]

The earliest written description of the Coeur d'Alene people comes from the journals of Alexander Henry the younger, a fur trader with the North West Company. He and British explorer David Thompson traded and traveled in their lands from 1810 to 1814. He wrote about the Coeur d'Alene:

The Skeetshue [Skitsuish] or Pointed Hearts [Coeur d'Alene] Indians dwell further southward [than the Kallispell or Pend d'Oreille tribes], about Skeetshue [Coeur d'Alene] Lake and [Spokane] River; they are a distinct nation, and have a different language [Salish] from the Flat Heads. They are very numerous, and have a vast number of horses, as their country is open and admits of breeding them in great abundance.[9]

Ross Cox, a clerk with the Pacific Fur Company and then the North West Company, spent considerable time at the trading post of Spokane House between 1812 and 1817:

The Pointed Hearts, or as the [French] Canadians call them, les Coeurs d' Alênes (Hearts of Awls), are a small tribe inhabiting the shores of a lake about fifty miles to the eastward of Spokan House. Their country is tolerably well stocked with beaver, deer, wild-fowl, &c.; and its vegetable productions are similar to those of Spokan. Some of this tribe occasionally visited our fort at the latter place with furs to barter, and we made a few excursions to their lands. We found them uniformly honest in their traffic; but they did not evince the same warmth of friendship for us as the Spokans, and expressed no desire for the establishment of a trading post among them.
About twenty years before our arrival [hence in the early 1790s], the Spokans and Pointed Hearts were at war, caused by a kind of Trojan origin. A party of the former [Spokane Indians] had been on a hunting visit to the land of the latter [Coeur d'Alene], and were hospitably received. One day, a young Spokan discovered the wife of a Pointed Heart alone, some distance from the village, and violated her. Although she might have born this in silence from one of her own tribe, she was not as equally forbearing with regard to a stranger, and immediately informed her husband of the outrage. He lost no time in seeking revenge, and shot the Spokan as he entered the village. The others fled to their own lands, and prepared for war. A succession of sanguinary conflicts followed, in the course of which the greatest warriors of both side were nearly destroyed. At the end of a year, however, hostilities ceased; since which period they have been at peace. The two nations now intermarry, and appear to be on the best terms of friendship.[10]

 
Coeur d'Alene Mission of the Sacred Heart on Lake Coeur d'Alene in Idaho, United States, about 1855.

Many of the tribe were converted to Roman Catholicism in 1842 by Fr. Pierre-Jean De Smet, a Belgian Jesuit missionary from St. Louis, Missouri, who was active throughout the Northwest. The twin towns of De Smet and Tensed (originally Temsed), Idaho, are named for him. The United States acquired this territory in 1846 by treaty with Great Britain. European-American settlers and other immigrants began to move from the United States into parts of the territory in the 1840s. After the Indian defeat in the Skitswish War of May–September 1858, many more speculators were attracted after the discovery of silver in 1863 in the north Panhandle near the city of Coeur d'Alene. Mining and development revealed this to be an area of the second-largest silver deposits in the United States.[11]

In 1873 the Coeur d'Alene lands were reduced to approximately 600,000 acres (940 sq mi; 2,400 km2) when President Ulysses S. Grant established the Coeur d'Alene Indian Reservation by executive order. Chief Peter Moctelme traveled to Washington D.C. to meet with the President to discuss his disagreement of allotments. Upon ratification, Chief Peter Moctelme's land was reduced by 1/3 and sold to white settlers. The US agreement with the tribe "expressly included part of the St. Joe River (then called the St. Joseph), and all of Lake Coeur d'Alene except a sliver cut off by the northern boundary."[12]

As of 1885, Congress had neither ratified the 1873 agreement nor compensated the Tribe. This inaction prompted the Tribe to petition the Government again, to "make with us a proper treaty of peace and friendship ... by which your petitioners may be properly and fully compensated for such portion of their lands not now reserved to them; [and] that their present reserve may be confirmed to them."[12] Successive government acts put a reservation boundary across Lake Coeur d'Alene, rather than following customary practice of using the high water line, and reduced the size of the reservation to 345,000 acres (1,400 km2) near Plummer, south of the town of Coeur d'Alene.

20th century to present edit

 
Coeur D'Alene man, Phillip Wildshoe and family, in his Chalmers automobile.

Due to extensive mining and smelting operations in the Panhandle during the 19th and 20th centuries, there was hazardous waste in water discharges and pollution in air emissions. The mining industry "left several thousand acres of land and tributaries, connected to the Coeur d'Alene Basin, contaminated with heavy metals."[11] These mining operations have contributed "an estimated 100 million tons of mine waste to the river system."[11]

In the early 21st century, the federally recognized Tribe has approximately 2,000 enrolled citizens. The Tribe manages the sovereign Coeur d'Alene Reservation, which includes the lower third of Lake Coeur d'Alene and the Saint Joe River, and their submerged lands. Members of the tribe reside in such area cities as DeSmet, Harrison, Parkline, Plummer, St. Maries (part on the reservation, population 734), Tensed, and Worley.

In 1935, Ignace Garry was one of a group of chiefs who managed the tribe. In 1949 he was selected as the last traditional chief of the Coeur d'Alene; he served until his death in 1965. During this period the tribe worked to restore its government under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. It gained approval of a written constitution in 1949 and elected representatives to the Tribal Council. In the 1950s, the tribe was one of several that came under termination pressure by the United States Congress. It helped found the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians, an organization to represent the Salish peoples in both Coastal and Plateau tribes, and resisted termination of its federal status.

Within Idaho, in the late 20th century the Coeur d'Alene organized with the four other federally recognized tribes in the state to form the Five Tribes Council, including the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho, Nez Perce, Shoshone-Bannock, and Shoshone-Paiute. The peoples work together for mutual benefit, for instance, in applying for grants or negotiating with the state government on Native American affairs.

Government edit

The tribe reorganized under a written constitution approved by the Bureau of Indian Affairs, United States Department of Interior, on September 2, 1949, and amended in 1961. The constitution provides for an elected Tribal Council to serve as the legislature and governing body of the Tribe. It defined all tribal members of voting age as the General Council. At the time, the Tribe was still governed by Ignace Garry, the last traditional chief. The seven members of the tribal council are elected by citizens of the tribe to 3-year terms; with staggered expiration years. The elected head of the tribe is the chairman.[13][14]

Since 2005, the chairman has been Chief James Allan ("Chief" is his given first name). Born in 1972 in Spokane, Allan grew up in Idaho on the Coeur d'Alene Reservation and graduated from Eastern Washington University in Cheney. He served in administrative and elected positions in the tribe and with the National Congress of American Indians in Washington, DC before being elected as chairman.[15]

Joseph Garry, son of Chief Ignace, was the first Native American to be elected to the Idaho state legislature. He also served as chairman of the tribe for 10 years. In 1984 his niece, Jeanne Givens, was the first Native American woman to be elected to the Idaho state legislature, serving two terms.[14]

The Coeur d'Alene Tribe operates a health care facility, the Benewah Medical Center, which opened in 1998. The center was recognized as a national model for Indian Health Care and rural health care.[by whom?] The clinic provides comprehensive primary care services including dental, mental health services, and community health outreach services to both the Native American population and general community.[16]

Economy edit

Tribal businesses include the Coeur d'Alene Casino, Hotel, and Circling Raven Golf Club in southwestern Kootenai County, about three miles (5 km) northwest of Worley and thirty miles (50 km) south of the city of Coeur d'Alene, via U.S. Route 95. Tribal gaming employs about 500 and generates about $20 million in profits annually, funding programs, contributing to economic development.

The tribe also operates the Benewah Automotive Center, the Benewah Market, the first three floors of the Coeur d'Alene Resort, and Ace Hardware, which are located a few miles south of Worley at Plummer, in northwestern Benewah County. The tribe has invested in two businesses, a manufacturing plant (BERG Integrated Systems), and a bakery (HearthBread Bakery), in both of which the tribe owns a majority share.

The tribal farm covers about 6,000 acres (24 km2). It produces wheat, barley, peas, lentils, and canola. It also harvests timber among its natural resources.

Culture edit

Tribal traditions include a respect and reverence for natural law, and for responsible environmental stewardship. The tribe is active in the protection, conservation and enhancement of fish and wildlife resources; as well as conservation issues that impact tribal land and water resources.

Traditionally the tribe had a flexible kinship system with both paternal and maternal lines recognized within the extended family. People may claim ancestors on either side, and address all cousins the same. This enabled them to have a flexible society, as they would live in differently sized groups during different seasons, in order to adapt to the environment.

Environmental suit, land claim and compensation edit

In 1991, the Coeur d'Alene Tribe began the Coeur d'Alene Basin Restoration Project.[12] That year tribal leaders, including Henry SiJohn, Lawrence Aripa, and Richard Mullen, decided to file a lawsuit against the mining companies, as they were concerned that cleanup progress by EPA and the state was too slow in the Basin and at the Bunker Hill Mine and Smelting Complex Superfund site. They filed suit against Hecla Mining Company, ASARCO and other companies for damages and recovery of cleanup costs of the site. In 1996 their suit was joined by the United States.[13]

In 2001 the United States and the Coeur d'Alene litigated a 78-day trial against Hecla and ASARCO over liability issues. In 2008, ASARCO LLC, reached a settlement of $452 million with the Coeur d'Alene Tribe and United States for the Bunker Hill site[17] after emerging from Chapter 11 bankruptcy.[13]

In 2011 the government, the Coeur d'Alene, and the state of Idaho (which joined the suit that year) reached settlement with the Hecla Mining Company to resolve one of the largest cases ever filed under CERCLA, the Superfund statute. Hecla Mining Company will pay $263.4 million plus interest to the United States and other parties to "resolve claims stemming from releases of wastes from its mining operations. Settlement funds will be dedicated to restoration and remediation of natural resources in the Coeur d'Alene Basin."[13] The trustees intend to restore habitat for fish, birds and other natural resources, for stewardship while working for economic progress in the region.[13] This was one of the top 10 settlement cash awards in Superfund history.[17]

In a related case, at the turn of the 21st century, U.S. courts ruled in Idaho v. United States (2001) that the Coeur d'Alene tribe has legal jurisdiction over the submerged land of the lower third of Lake Coeur d'Alene, which the US holds in trust for the tribe, as well as under a related 20 miles (32 km) of the St. Joe River.[12] The case was initiated by the US government to "quiet title" with the state, and the Tribe entered to assert its interest. The State of Idaho had appealed a lower court decision but that was upheld by the United States Supreme Court.[12]

The tribe has worked with the US Department of Justice in filing suit also against the Union Pacific Railroad over contamination of the lake and related lands.[11]

Representation in other media edit

  • Smoke Signals (1998) is an independent film that was set in the Coeur d'Alene Reservation. It was based on the short story, "This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix, Arizona", collected in the book The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven (1993) by Sherman Alexie (Spokane-Coeur d'Alene). Alexie wrote the screenplay and served as film producer. The film focuses on a personal quest journey of two young men from the Coeur d'Alene Reservation. It was an all-Native American production.

Notable people edit

  • Peter Moctelme (Chief, Coeur d'Alene Band 1907–1932)
  • Sherman Alexie (Spokane-Coeur d'Alene), author and filmmaker
  • Lawrence Aripa, one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against mining companies for environmental cleanup;[13] vice chairman 1990 to 1998[18]
  • Mildred Bailey (1907–1951), popular jazz singer and recording artist of the 1930s and 1940s, performed with Paul Whiteman and Benny Goodman, became known as "Mrs. Swing".[19]
  • Ignace Garry, last traditional chief of the Coeur d'Alene, serving with a group from 1935 to 1948, and as chief from 1949 until his death in 1965. Since then chairmen have been elected democratically.[14]
  • Joseph Garry, son of Ignace, politician and the first Native American elected to the Idaho State House; also elected as Chairman of the Coeur d'Alene, serving for 10 years.[14]
  • Jeanne Givens, politician; in 1984 she was the first Native American woman elected to the Idaho State House, where she served as representative for four years. She is granddaughter of Ignace Garry and niece of Joseph Garry.[14] She was chair of the North Idaho College Board of Trustees; appointed by President Bill Clinton to the Board of Directors of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe, N.M.,[20] where she served as chair for several years; and served on Board of Directors of Americans for Indian Opportunity[21]
  • Janet Campbell Hale, writer
  • Paulette Jordan, Democratic candidate for governor of Idaho in 2018 and former member of the Idaho House of Representatives from 2014 to 2018; at her reelection in 2016, she was the only Democrat in state office north of Boise.
  • Richard Mullen, historian, one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against the mining companies for environmental cleanup;[13] also on Tribal Council and served as vice chairman
  • Henry SiJohn, Tribal Council, one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against the mining companies for environmental cleanup;[13] vice chairman from October 1998 to his death in February 1999[22]
  • Al Rinker, musician and younger brother of Mildred Bailey, grew up on the reservation. Member of the popular trio "The Rhythm Boys" with Bing Crosby and Harry Barris through 1931.
  • Charles Rinker, lyricist and younger brother of Mildred Bailey, grew up on the reservation. Active in Los Angeles.

See also edit

Neighboring tribes:

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c "Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs". Federal Register. 87 (FR 2112): 2112–16. January 12, 2023. Retrieved May 1, 2023.
  2. ^ Bureau, U.S. Census. "American FactFinder – Results". factfinder.census.gov. Archived from the original on February 14, 2020. Retrieved May 17, 2018.
  3. ^ Laurie Bauer, 2007, The Linguistics Student's Handbook, Edinburgh
  4. ^ Mooney, J. (1908). Coeur d'Alêne Indians. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company (newadvent.org)
  5. ^ The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, vol. 7 (1991) p. 219, fn. 1.
  6. ^ Gary B. Palmer, Khwi' Khwe Guł Schi̲tsu'umsh = "These Are The Coeur d'Alene People" : A Book Of Coeur d'Alene Personal Names (1987).
  7. ^ Handbook of North American Indians vol. 12 (1998), p. 325. "A modern Coeur d'Alene speaker has translated the name as the discovered people from čic- 'find' and -umš 'people' (Nicodemus 1975)."
  8. ^ M. Dale Kinkade, Prehistory of Salishan languages, University of British Columbia (2009); M. Ritchie et al., "Beyond culture history: Coast Salish Settlement Patterning and Demography in the Fraser Valley, BC," Journal of Anthropological Archaeology, Volume 43 (September 2016), 140-54.
  9. ^ Journals of Alexander Henry and David Thompson, edited by Elliott Coues, Vol. II, p. 711
  10. ^ See Chapter 22 of Ross Cox's The Columbia River, or scenes and adventures during a residence of six years on the western side of the Rocky Mountains among various tribes of Indians hitherto unknown; together with "A Journey across the American Continent," first published in 1831.
  11. ^ a b c d Dennis Zotigh, "Meet Native America: Paulette E. Jordan, Idaho House Representative", Blog, National Museum of the American Indian, December 19, 2014; accessed May 30, 2016
  12. ^ a b c d e Idaho v. United States 533 U.S. 262 (2001), JUSTIA: US Supreme Court, accessed May 30, 2016
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h "Hecla Mining Company to Pay $263 Million in Settlement to Resolve Idaho Superfund Site Litigation and Foster Cooperation", Press release, US Department of Justice, June 13, 2011; accessed May 31, 2016
  14. ^ a b c d e Maureen Dolan, "The last traditional chief", CDA Press, November 10, 2010; accessed May 30, 2016
  15. ^ "Tribal Council: Chief Bio" June 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, Coeur d'Alene Tribe website
  16. ^ "Area Offices: Portland; Tribe: Coeur d'Alene" November 17, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, US Indian Health Service
  17. ^ a b Becky Kramer, "Hecla Mining Co. settles Superfund cleanup lawsuit", The Spokesman, June 14, 2011; accessed May 31, 2016
  18. ^ "Lawrence Aripa, 72, CDA tribal elder", Lewiston Tribune, October 14, 1998; accessed May 31, 2016
  19. ^ Miller, John. "Idaho tribe: ‘Mrs. Swing’ was Indian.", Associated Press via The Wenatchee World. March 16, 2012. Retrieved March 27, 2012.
  20. ^ "Jeanne Givens Receives Presidential Appointment", The Spokesman-Review, November 21, 1997; accessed May 30, 2016
  21. ^ "Givens Law Firm", official website
  22. ^ AP, "Henry Sijohn, Coeur D'alene Leader", Seattle Times, February 16, 1999; accessed May 31, 2016

Further reading edit

  • , Idaho Encyclopedia
  • Hale, Janet Campbell. Bloodlines: Odyssey of a Native Daughter. New York: Random House, 1993.
  • Peterson, Jacqueline. Sacred Encounters: Father DeSmet and the Indians of the Rocky Mountain West. Pullman: The DeSmet Project, Washington State University in association with the Norman and London: University of Oklahoma Press, 1993.
  • Peltier, Jerome. Manners and Customs of the Coeur d'Alene Indians. Spokane: Peltier: Publications, 1975.
  • Peltier, Jerome. A Brief History of the Coeur d'Alene Indians: 1806–1909. Fairfield, Washington: Ye Galleon Press, 1981.
  • Teit, James and Franz Boas. Folk-Tales of Salish and Sahaptin Tribes. Lancaster, Pennsylvania: American Folklore Society, 1917. Available online through the Washington State Library's Classics in Washington History collection

External links edit

  • Coeur d'Alene Tribe, official website
  • Coeur d’Alene Casino
  • Idaho v. US
  • Coeur d’Alene Tribal School
  • Coeur d'Alene Essay by Rodney Frey, University of Washington Digital Collection
  • Coeur d’Alene Tribe, Northwest Portland Indian Health Board

Language edit

  • Reichard's Coeur d'Alene Texts

coeur, alene, people, coeur, alene, tribe, ɜːr, also, skitswish, coeur, alene, language, schi, umsh, native, american, tribe, five, federally, recognized, tribes, state, idaho, coeur, alene, tribe, schitsu, umshskitswish, tipis, desmet, reservation, 1907total,. The Coeur d Alene Tribe k ɜːr d e ˈ l eɪ n 3 also Skitswish and in the Coeur d Alene language Schi tsu umsh are a Native American tribe and one of five federally recognized tribes in the state of Idaho 1 Coeur d Alene Tribe 1 Schitsu umshSkitswishCoeur d Alene people and tipis Desmet Reservation c 1907Total population1 976 2 2015 census Regions with significant populations United States IdahoLanguagesEnglish Coeur d AleneThe Coeur d Alene have sovereign control of their Coeur d Alene Reservation which includes a significant portion of Lake Coeur d Alene and its submerged lands In Idaho v United States 2001 the United States Supreme Court ruled against the state s claim of the submerged lands of the lower third of Lake Coeur d Alene and related waters of the St Joe River It said that the Coeur d Alene were the traditional owners and that the Executive Branch and Congress had clearly included this area in their reservation with compensation for ceded territory This area was designated in 1983 by the Environmental Protection Agency as Bunker Hill Mine and Smelting Complex the nation s second largest Superfund site for cleanup Concerned at the slow pace of progress in 1991 the tribe filed suit against mining companies for damages and cleanup costs joined in 1996 by the United States and in 2011 by the state of Idaho Settlements were reached with major defendants in 2008 and 2011 providing funds to be used in removal of hazardous wastes and restoration of habitat and natural resources Historically the Coeur d Alene occupied a territory of 3 5 million acres in present day northern Idaho eastern Washington and western Montana They lived in villages along the Coeur d Alene St Joe Clark Fork and Spokane rivers as well as sites on the shores of Lake Coeur d Alene Lake Pend Oreille and Hayden Lake Their native language is Snchitsu umshtsn an Interior Salishan language They are one of the Salish language peoples which tribes occupy areas of the inland plateau and the coastal areas of the Pacific Northwest Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 3 History 4 20th century to present 4 1 Government 4 2 Economy 4 3 Culture 5 Environmental suit land claim and compensation 6 Representation in other media 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 Notes 10 Further reading 11 External links 11 1 LanguageName editThe French name Cœur d Alene translates to heart of an awl The name is first recorded by the Lewis and Clark Expedition 1805 and was later popularly said to have been given by French traders to one of the chiefs of the tribe noted for his stinginess 4 The alternative name Skitswish is recorded by Alexander Henry the younger in 1810 as Skeetshue and by George Gibbs in Pacific Railroad Report vol 1 1853 This is an exonym used by the Sahaptin 5 The self designation Schi tsu umsh is reported from Coeur d Alene phrasebooks since the 1970s 6 A modern speaker of Coeur d Alene was reported as interpreting this name as the discovered people 7 The federally recognized tribe was named the Coeur D Alene Tribe of the Coeur D Alene Reservation but they shortened it to Coeur D Alene Tribe 1 Geography editHistorically the Coeur d Alene lived in what would become the Panhandle region of Idaho and neighboring areas of what is today eastern Washington and western Montana occupying an area of more than 3 5 million acres 14 164 km2 of grass covered hills camas prairie forested mountains lakes marshes and river habitat The territory extended from the southern end of Lake Pend Oreille in the north running along the Bitterroot Range of Montana in the east to the Palouse and North Fork of the Clearwater River in the south to Steptoe Butte and up to just east of Spokane Falls in the west At the center of this region was Lake Coeur d Alene The abundant natural resources included trout salmon and whitefish The tribe supplemented hunting and gathering activities by fishing the St Joe and Spokane rivers They used gaff hooks spears nets traps and angled for fish History editFurther information Indigenous peoples of the Northwest Plateau nbsp Aboriginal territory of the Coeur d Alene tribe cdatribe nsn gov ca 2003 An Interior Salish peoples the Coeur d Alene people first encountered Europeans in 1793 Then their economy was based on fishing hunting and plant gathering with seasonal migratory patterns and retreating to clustered semi subterranean dwellings during the winter months The precontact lifeways of Interior Salish peoples are not widely written about but available evidence favors the possibility of a recent expansion from the coast to the interior possibly related to an increase in coastal population about 600 to 900 years ago 8 The earliest written description of the Coeur d Alene people comes from the journals of Alexander Henry the younger a fur trader with the North West Company He and British explorer David Thompson traded and traveled in their lands from 1810 to 1814 He wrote about the Coeur d Alene The Skeetshue Skitsuish or Pointed Hearts Coeur d Alene Indians dwell further southward than the Kallispell or Pend d Oreille tribes about Skeetshue Coeur d Alene Lake and Spokane River they are a distinct nation and have a different language Salish from the Flat Heads They are very numerous and have a vast number of horses as their country is open and admits of breeding them in great abundance 9 Ross Cox a clerk with the Pacific Fur Company and then the North West Company spent considerable time at the trading post of Spokane House between 1812 and 1817 The Pointed Hearts or as the French Canadians call them les Coeurs d Alenes Hearts of Awls are a small tribe inhabiting the shores of a lake about fifty miles to the eastward of Spokan House Their country is tolerably well stocked with beaver deer wild fowl amp c and its vegetable productions are similar to those of Spokan Some of this tribe occasionally visited our fort at the latter place with furs to barter and we made a few excursions to their lands We found them uniformly honest in their traffic but they did not evince the same warmth of friendship for us as the Spokans and expressed no desire for the establishment of a trading post among them About twenty years before our arrival hence in the early 1790s the Spokans and Pointed Hearts were at war caused by a kind of Trojan origin A party of the former Spokane Indians had been on a hunting visit to the land of the latter Coeur d Alene and were hospitably received One day a young Spokan discovered the wife of a Pointed Heart alone some distance from the village and violated her Although she might have born this in silence from one of her own tribe she was not as equally forbearing with regard to a stranger and immediately informed her husband of the outrage He lost no time in seeking revenge and shot the Spokan as he entered the village The others fled to their own lands and prepared for war A succession of sanguinary conflicts followed in the course of which the greatest warriors of both side were nearly destroyed At the end of a year however hostilities ceased since which period they have been at peace The two nations now intermarry and appear to be on the best terms of friendship 10 nbsp Coeur d Alene Mission of the Sacred Heart on Lake Coeur d Alene in Idaho United States about 1855 Many of the tribe were converted to Roman Catholicism in 1842 by Fr Pierre Jean De Smet a Belgian Jesuit missionary from St Louis Missouri who was active throughout the Northwest The twin towns of De Smet and Tensed originally Temsed Idaho are named for him The United States acquired this territory in 1846 by treaty with Great Britain European American settlers and other immigrants began to move from the United States into parts of the territory in the 1840s After the Indian defeat in the Skitswish War of May September 1858 many more speculators were attracted after the discovery of silver in 1863 in the north Panhandle near the city of Coeur d Alene Mining and development revealed this to be an area of the second largest silver deposits in the United States 11 In 1873 the Coeur d Alene lands were reduced to approximately 600 000 acres 940 sq mi 2 400 km2 when President Ulysses S Grant established the Coeur d Alene Indian Reservation by executive order Chief Peter Moctelme traveled to Washington D C to meet with the President to discuss his disagreement of allotments Upon ratification Chief Peter Moctelme s land was reduced by 1 3 and sold to white settlers The US agreement with the tribe expressly included part of the St Joe River then called the St Joseph and all of Lake Coeur d Alene except a sliver cut off by the northern boundary 12 As of 1885 Congress had neither ratified the 1873 agreement nor compensated the Tribe This inaction prompted the Tribe to petition the Government again to make with us a proper treaty of peace and friendship by which your petitioners may be properly and fully compensated for such portion of their lands not now reserved to them and that their present reserve may be confirmed to them 12 Successive government acts put a reservation boundary across Lake Coeur d Alene rather than following customary practice of using the high water line and reduced the size of the reservation to 345 000 acres 1 400 km2 near Plummer south of the town of Coeur d Alene 20th century to present edit nbsp Coeur D Alene man Phillip Wildshoe and family in his Chalmers automobile Due to extensive mining and smelting operations in the Panhandle during the 19th and 20th centuries there was hazardous waste in water discharges and pollution in air emissions The mining industry left several thousand acres of land and tributaries connected to the Coeur d Alene Basin contaminated with heavy metals 11 These mining operations have contributed an estimated 100 million tons of mine waste to the river system 11 In the early 21st century the federally recognized Tribe has approximately 2 000 enrolled citizens The Tribe manages the sovereign Coeur d Alene Reservation which includes the lower third of Lake Coeur d Alene and the Saint Joe River and their submerged lands Members of the tribe reside in such area cities as DeSmet Harrison Parkline Plummer St Maries part on the reservation population 734 Tensed and Worley In 1935 Ignace Garry was one of a group of chiefs who managed the tribe In 1949 he was selected as the last traditional chief of the Coeur d Alene he served until his death in 1965 During this period the tribe worked to restore its government under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 It gained approval of a written constitution in 1949 and elected representatives to the Tribal Council In the 1950s the tribe was one of several that came under termination pressure by the United States Congress It helped found the Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians an organization to represent the Salish peoples in both Coastal and Plateau tribes and resisted termination of its federal status Within Idaho in the late 20th century the Coeur d Alene organized with the four other federally recognized tribes in the state to form the Five Tribes Council including the Kootenai Tribe of Idaho Nez Perce Shoshone Bannock and Shoshone Paiute The peoples work together for mutual benefit for instance in applying for grants or negotiating with the state government on Native American affairs Government edit The tribe reorganized under a written constitution approved by the Bureau of Indian Affairs United States Department of Interior on September 2 1949 and amended in 1961 The constitution provides for an elected Tribal Council to serve as the legislature and governing body of the Tribe It defined all tribal members of voting age as the General Council At the time the Tribe was still governed by Ignace Garry the last traditional chief The seven members of the tribal council are elected by citizens of the tribe to 3 year terms with staggered expiration years The elected head of the tribe is the chairman 13 14 Since 2005 the chairman has been Chief James Allan Chief is his given first name Born in 1972 in Spokane Allan grew up in Idaho on the Coeur d Alene Reservation and graduated from Eastern Washington University in Cheney He served in administrative and elected positions in the tribe and with the National Congress of American Indians in Washington DC before being elected as chairman 15 Joseph Garry son of Chief Ignace was the first Native American to be elected to the Idaho state legislature He also served as chairman of the tribe for 10 years In 1984 his niece Jeanne Givens was the first Native American woman to be elected to the Idaho state legislature serving two terms 14 The Coeur d Alene Tribe operates a health care facility the Benewah Medical Center which opened in 1998 The center was recognized as a national model for Indian Health Care and rural health care by whom The clinic provides comprehensive primary care services including dental mental health services and community health outreach services to both the Native American population and general community 16 Economy edit Tribal businesses include the Coeur d Alene Casino Hotel and Circling Raven Golf Club in southwestern Kootenai County about three miles 5 km northwest of Worley and thirty miles 50 km south of the city of Coeur d Alene via U S Route 95 Tribal gaming employs about 500 and generates about 20 million in profits annually funding programs contributing to economic development The tribe also operates the Benewah Automotive Center the Benewah Market the first three floors of the Coeur d Alene Resort and Ace Hardware which are located a few miles south of Worley at Plummer in northwestern Benewah County The tribe has invested in two businesses a manufacturing plant BERG Integrated Systems and a bakery HearthBread Bakery in both of which the tribe owns a majority share The tribal farm covers about 6 000 acres 24 km2 It produces wheat barley peas lentils and canola It also harvests timber among its natural resources Culture edit Tribal traditions include a respect and reverence for natural law and for responsible environmental stewardship The tribe is active in the protection conservation and enhancement of fish and wildlife resources as well as conservation issues that impact tribal land and water resources Traditionally the tribe had a flexible kinship system with both paternal and maternal lines recognized within the extended family People may claim ancestors on either side and address all cousins the same This enabled them to have a flexible society as they would live in differently sized groups during different seasons in order to adapt to the environment Environmental suit land claim and compensation editIn 1991 the Coeur d Alene Tribe began the Coeur d Alene Basin Restoration Project 12 That year tribal leaders including Henry SiJohn Lawrence Aripa and Richard Mullen decided to file a lawsuit against the mining companies as they were concerned that cleanup progress by EPA and the state was too slow in the Basin and at the Bunker Hill Mine and Smelting Complex Superfund site They filed suit against Hecla Mining Company ASARCO and other companies for damages and recovery of cleanup costs of the site In 1996 their suit was joined by the United States 13 In 2001 the United States and the Coeur d Alene litigated a 78 day trial against Hecla and ASARCO over liability issues In 2008 ASARCO LLC reached a settlement of 452 million with the Coeur d Alene Tribe and United States for the Bunker Hill site 17 after emerging from Chapter 11 bankruptcy 13 In 2011 the government the Coeur d Alene and the state of Idaho which joined the suit that year reached settlement with the Hecla Mining Company to resolve one of the largest cases ever filed under CERCLA the Superfund statute Hecla Mining Company will pay 263 4 million plus interest to the United States and other parties to resolve claims stemming from releases of wastes from its mining operations Settlement funds will be dedicated to restoration and remediation of natural resources in the Coeur d Alene Basin 13 The trustees intend to restore habitat for fish birds and other natural resources for stewardship while working for economic progress in the region 13 This was one of the top 10 settlement cash awards in Superfund history 17 In a related case at the turn of the 21st century U S courts ruled in Idaho v United States 2001 that the Coeur d Alene tribe has legal jurisdiction over the submerged land of the lower third of Lake Coeur d Alene which the US holds in trust for the tribe as well as under a related 20 miles 32 km of the St Joe River 12 The case was initiated by the US government to quiet title with the state and the Tribe entered to assert its interest The State of Idaho had appealed a lower court decision but that was upheld by the United States Supreme Court 12 The tribe has worked with the US Department of Justice in filing suit also against the Union Pacific Railroad over contamination of the lake and related lands 11 Representation in other media editSmoke Signals 1998 is an independent film that was set in the Coeur d Alene Reservation It was based on the short story This Is What It Means to Say Phoenix Arizona collected in the book The Lone Ranger and Tonto Fistfight in Heaven 1993 by Sherman Alexie Spokane Coeur d Alene Alexie wrote the screenplay and served as film producer The film focuses on a personal quest journey of two young men from the Coeur d Alene Reservation It was an all Native American production Notable people editPeter Moctelme Chief Coeur d Alene Band 1907 1932 Sherman Alexie Spokane Coeur d Alene author and filmmaker Lawrence Aripa one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against mining companies for environmental cleanup 13 vice chairman 1990 to 1998 18 Mildred Bailey 1907 1951 popular jazz singer and recording artist of the 1930s and 1940s performed with Paul Whiteman and Benny Goodman became known as Mrs Swing 19 Ignace Garry last traditional chief of the Coeur d Alene serving with a group from 1935 to 1948 and as chief from 1949 until his death in 1965 Since then chairmen have been elected democratically 14 Joseph Garry son of Ignace politician and the first Native American elected to the Idaho State House also elected as Chairman of the Coeur d Alene serving for 10 years 14 Jeanne Givens politician in 1984 she was the first Native American woman elected to the Idaho State House where she served as representative for four years She is granddaughter of Ignace Garry and niece of Joseph Garry 14 She was chair of the North Idaho College Board of Trustees appointed by President Bill Clinton to the Board of Directors of the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe N M 20 where she served as chair for several years and served on Board of Directors of Americans for Indian Opportunity 21 Janet Campbell Hale writer Paulette Jordan Democratic candidate for governor of Idaho in 2018 and former member of the Idaho House of Representatives from 2014 to 2018 at her reelection in 2016 she was the only Democrat in state office north of Boise Richard Mullen historian one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against the mining companies for environmental cleanup 13 also on Tribal Council and served as vice chairman Henry SiJohn Tribal Council one of three leaders who brought the 1991 tribal lawsuit against the mining companies for environmental cleanup 13 vice chairman from October 1998 to his death in February 1999 22 Al Rinker musician and younger brother of Mildred Bailey grew up on the reservation Member of the popular trio The Rhythm Boys with Bing Crosby and Harry Barris through 1931 Charles Rinker lyricist and younger brother of Mildred Bailey grew up on the reservation Active in Los Angeles See also editNeighboring tribes Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation Kootenai Salish Flatheads Nez Perce SpokaneNotes editThis article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Coeur d Alene people news newspapers books scholar JSTOR January 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message a b c Indian Entities Recognized by and Eligible To Receive Services From the United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Federal Register 87 FR 2112 2112 16 January 12 2023 Retrieved May 1 2023 Bureau U S Census American FactFinder Results factfinder census gov Archived from the original on February 14 2020 Retrieved May 17 2018 Laurie Bauer 2007 The Linguistics Student s Handbook Edinburgh Mooney J 1908 Coeur d Alene Indians In The Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company newadvent org The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition vol 7 1991 p 219 fn 1 Gary B Palmer Khwi Khwe Gul Schi tsu umsh These Are The Coeur d Alene People A Book Of Coeur d Alene Personal Names 1987 Handbook of North American Indians vol 12 1998 p 325 A modern Coeur d Alene speaker has translated the name as the discovered people from cic find and ums people Nicodemus 1975 M Dale Kinkade Prehistory of Salishan languages University of British Columbia 2009 M Ritchie et al Beyond culture history Coast Salish Settlement Patterning and Demography in the Fraser Valley BC Journal of Anthropological Archaeology Volume 43 September 2016 140 54 Journals of Alexander Henry and David Thompson edited by Elliott Coues Vol II p 711 See Chapter 22 of Ross Cox s The Columbia River or scenes and adventures during a residence of six years on the western side of the Rocky Mountains among various tribes of Indians hitherto unknown together with A Journey across the American Continent first published in 1831 a b c d Dennis Zotigh Meet Native America Paulette E Jordan Idaho House Representative Blog National Museum of the American Indian December 19 2014 accessed May 30 2016 a b c d e Idaho v United States 533 U S 262 2001 JUSTIA US Supreme Court accessed May 30 2016 a b c d e f g h Hecla Mining Company to Pay 263 Million in Settlement to Resolve Idaho Superfund Site Litigation and Foster Cooperation Press release US Department of Justice June 13 2011 accessed May 31 2016 a b c d e Maureen Dolan The last traditional chief CDA Press November 10 2010 accessed May 30 2016 Tribal Council Chief Bio Archived June 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine Coeur d Alene Tribe website Area Offices Portland Tribe Coeur d Alene Archived November 17 2011 at the Wayback Machine US Indian Health Service a b Becky Kramer Hecla Mining Co settles Superfund cleanup lawsuit The Spokesman June 14 2011 accessed May 31 2016 Lawrence Aripa 72 CDA tribal elder Lewiston Tribune October 14 1998 accessed May 31 2016 Miller John Idaho tribe Mrs Swing was Indian Associated Press via The Wenatchee World March 16 2012 Retrieved March 27 2012 Jeanne Givens Receives Presidential Appointment The Spokesman Review November 21 1997 accessed May 30 2016 Givens Law Firm official website AP Henry Sijohn Coeur D alene Leader Seattle Times February 16 1999 accessed May 31 2016Further reading edit Coeur d Alene Idaho Encyclopedia Hale Janet Campbell Bloodlines Odyssey of a Native Daughter New York Random House 1993 Peterson Jacqueline Sacred Encounters Father DeSmet and the Indians of the Rocky Mountain West Pullman The DeSmet Project Washington State University in association with the Norman and London University of Oklahoma Press 1993 Peltier Jerome Manners and Customs of the Coeur d Alene Indians Spokane Peltier Publications 1975 Peltier Jerome A Brief History of the Coeur d Alene Indians 1806 1909 Fairfield Washington Ye Galleon Press 1981 Teit James and Franz Boas Folk Tales of Salish and Sahaptin Tribes Lancaster Pennsylvania American Folklore Society 1917 Available online through the Washington State Library s Classics in Washington History collectionExternal links editCoeur d Alene Tribe official website Idaho Natives Project Coeur d Alene Casino Idaho v US Lifelong Learning Online Project Coeur educational video Coeur d Alene Tribal School Coeur d Alene Essay by Rodney Frey University of Washington Digital Collection Coeur d Alene Tribe Northwest Portland Indian Health BoardLanguage edit Hnqwa qwe elm language Reichard s Coeur d Alene Texts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coeur d 27Alene people amp oldid 1193133756, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.