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Cupeño

The Cupeño (or Kuupangaxwichem) are a Native American tribe of Southern California.

Cupeño
Kuupangaxwichem
Traditional lands of the Cupeño people in light purple
Total population
1,000 (1990)[1]
Regions with significant populations
United States (California)
Languages
English, Spanish, formerly Cupeño language
Religion
Traditional tribal religion, Christianity (Roman Catholic, Protestant)
Related ethnic groups
Cahuilla, Luiseño, Serrano, and Tongva

They traditionally lived about 50 miles (80 km) inland and 50 miles (80 km) north of the modern day Mexico–United States border in the Peninsular Range of Southern California.[2] Today their descendants are members of the federally recognized tribes known as the Pala Band of Luiseno Mission Indians, Morongo Band of Cahuilla Mission Indians, and Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla and Cupeno Indians.[3]

History Edit

Several different groups combined to form Cupeño culture around 1000 to 1200 AD. They were closely related to Cahuilla culture.[4] The Cupeño people traditionally lived in the mountains in the San Jose Valley at the headwaters of the San Luis Rey River.[5] Their name in their own language is "Kuupangaxwichem" ("people who slept here").[6][2]

They lived in two autonomous villages, Wilákalpa and Kúpa (or Cupa),[3] located north of present-day Warner Springs, California. Their homelands extended to Agua Caliente, located east of Lake Henshaw in an area now crossed by State Highway 79 near Warner Springs. The 200-acre (0.81 km2) Cupeño Indian village site is now abandoned but evidence of its historical importance remains.[7]

Spanish and Mexican occupation Edit

 
The Cupeño villages also showing Warner Springs for reference

Spaniards entered Cupeño lands in 1795[5] and took control of the lands by the 19th century. After Mexico achieved independence, its government granted Juan Jose Warner, a naturalized American-Mexican citizen, nearly 45,000 acres (180 km2) of the land on November 28, 1844. Warner, like most other large landholders in California at the time, depended primarily on Indian labor.[8] The villagers of Kúpa provided most of Warner's workforce on his cattle ranch. The Cupeño continued to reside at what the Spanish called Agua Caliente after the American occupation of California in 1847 to 1848, during the Mexican–American War. They built an adobe ranch house in 1849 and barn in 1857, that were still standing as of 1963.[8]

According to Julio Ortega, one of the oldest members of the Cupeño tribe, Warner set aside about 16 miles (26 km) of land surrounding the hot springs as the private domain of the Indians. Warner encouraged the Cupeño to construct a stone fence around their village and to keep their livestock separated from that of the ranch. Ortega felt that if the village had created its own boundaries, the Cupeño would still live there today.[8]

American occupation Edit

 
The Cupeño village of Cupa in 1893

In observing the Cupeño's living conditions in 1846, W. H. Emory, a brevet major with the United States Army Corps of Engineers, described the Indians as being held in a state of serfdom by Warner, and as being ill-treated.[9] In 1849, Warner was arrested by the American forces for consorting with the Mexican government and was taken to Los Angeles.[10]

In 1851, because of several issues of conflict, Antonio Garra, a Yuma Indian living at Warner's Ranch, tried to organize a coalition of various southern California Indian tribes to drive out all of the European Americans.[10] His 'Garra Revolt' failed, and the settlers executed Garra. The Cupeño had attacked Warner and his ranch, burning some buildings. They lost structures at their settlement of Kúpa, too. Warner sent his family to Los Angeles, but continued to operate the ranch with the help of others.[citation needed]

Forced eviction Edit

 
Forced relocation from Warner's Ranch to Pala, 1903

Following European contact but prior to the time of their eviction, the Cupeños sold milk, fodder, and craftwork to travelers on the Southern Immigrant Trail and passengers on the stagecoaches of the Butterfield Overland Mail, that stopped at Warner's Ranch and passed through the valley. The women made lace and took in laundry, which they washed in the hot springs. The men carved wood and manufactured saddle pads for horses. They also raised cattle and cultivated 200 acres (0.81 km2) of land. In 1880, after numerous suits and countersuits, European-American John G. Downey acquired all titles to the main portion of Warner's Ranch.[11][12]

In 1892, Downey, the former governor of California and owner of the ranch since 1880, began proceedings to evict the Cupeño from the ranch property. Legal proceedings continued until 1903, when the court ruled in Barker v. Harvey against the Cupeño. The United States government offered to buy new land for the Cupeño, but they refused. In 1903, Cecilio Blacktooth, Cupeño chief at Agua Caliente, said: "If you give us the best place in the world, it is not as good as this. This is our home. We cannot live anywhere else; we were born here, and our fathers are buried here."[13]

Cupeño trail of tears Edit

 
Cupeño rock mortars for grinding acorns

On May 13, 1903, the Cupa Indians were forced to move 75 miles (121 km) away, to Pala, California on the San Luis Rey River[12] It has been referred to by the Los Angeles Times, academics, and the Pala Band of Mission Indians as the Cupeño trail of tears given the traumatic nature of the event.[14][15][16] The forced relocation to the Pala reservation also included "the Luiseño villages at Puerta la Cruz and La Puerta, and the Kumeyaay villages at Mataguay, San José, and San Felipe." It was described by historian Phil Brigandi as "the last of Indian 'removals' in the United States, ending a federal policy of forced relocations that had begun 75 years earlier.[17]

Reactions Edit

On the morning of the removal Roscinda Nolasquez, who was eleven years old at the time, recalled the last morning at Cupa. Orders were shouted in English at the Cupeño: “We were so scared. We didn’t know what he was saying. We didn’t know what was going on. We saw old people running back and forth. We cried, too, because we were afraid.” She recalls that morning trying to ensure that her cats would not be left behind, which she managed to find.[17]

In 1903, an article for the Los Angeles Herald described it as such: “The springs proved the Indians’ undoing. White men wanted them, and now, after years of impatient waiting, they have possession. No matter the legal aspect of the case, the act is deplorable. It is one of the saddest sequels to the white man’s first notice to the [natives] on the Atlantic coast to move on. They have been moving on ever since.”[12] An article for the Los Angeles Daily Times featured the headline: "Indians Bundled Away Like Cattle To Pala."[17]

Two weeks after the forced relocation, American journalist Grant Wallace wrote, “Many of the older people were still ‘muy triste....’ Every other tent or brush ramada was still a ‘house of tears,’ for their love of home is stronger than with us.”[12] The houses provided by the U.S. government were Ducker Patent Portable Houses; described in a report to the Indian Office as "very unsatisfactory," some of which quickly fell into disrepair or collapsed.[17] In 1922, the Henshaw Dam was built, which significantly worsened the flow of the San Luis Rey River that ran through the relocation site.[17]

Present-day Edit

Indians at the present-day reservations of Los Coyotes, San Ygnacio, Santa Ysabel, and Mesa Grande are among descendants of the Warner Springs Cupeño. Many Cupeño believe that their land at Kúpa will be returned to them. They are seeking legal relief to that end. The Cupa site serves as a rallying point for the land claims movement of contemporary Indian people, particularly their effort to regain cultural and religious areas.[11][12]

Culture Edit

 
Mercedes Nolasquez, a Cupeño basket maker at Warner's Ranch, ca. 1900

The tribe is divided into two moieties, the Coyote and Wildcat, which are divided into several patrilineal clans. Clans are led by hereditary male clan leaders and assistant leaders. Marriages were traditionally arranged.[3] Traditional foods included acorns, cactus fruit, seeds, berries, deer, quail, rabbits, and other small game.[3][4]

The Cupa Cultural Center was founded in 1974 in Pala and underwent a major expansion in 2005. The center exhibits artwork; hosts classes and activities such as basket making and beading; and offers Cupeño language classes. During the first weekend of every May, Cupa Days is celebrated at the cultural center.[18]

Language Edit

 
The territorial boundaries of the Southern California Indian tribes based on dialect, including the Cupeño language

The Cupeño language belongs to the Cupan group, which includes the Cahuilla and Luiseño languages. This grouping is of the Takic branch within the Uto-Aztecan family of languages.[2] Roscinda Nolasquez (1892–1987), of Mexican Yaqui descent, is considered the last truly fluent Cupeño speaker.[19] The language today is widely regarded as being extinct. In 1994, linguist Leanne Hinton estimated one to five people still spoke Cupeño, and nine people in the 1990 US census said they spoke the language.[20] Educational materials for the language exist and young people still learn to sing in Cupeño, particularly Bird Songs.[21]

Population Edit

Alfred L. Kroeber estimated the 1770 population of the Cupeño as 500. Lowell John Bean and Charles R. Smith put the total in 1795 between 500 and 750. By 1910, the Cupeño population had dropped to 150, according to Kroeber. Later estimates have suggested that there were fewer than 150 Cupeño in 1973,[10] but about 200 in 2000.

Notes Edit

  1. ^ "California Indians and Their Reservations: P. SDSU Library and Information Access. (retrieved 18 May 2010)
  2. ^ a b c "California Indians and Their Reservations. February 5, 2009, at the Wayback Machine SDSU Library and Information Access. (retrieved 18 May 2010)
  3. ^ a b c d Pritzker, 125
  4. ^ a b Bean and Smith, 588
  5. ^ a b Pritzker, 124
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-03-31. Retrieved 2018-03-30.
  7. ^ "Cupa: San Diego County" 2005-08-29 at the Wayback Machine, A History of American Indians in California: Historic Sites, National Park Service, accessed 18 Nov 2009
  8. ^ a b c Morrison, 1962, p.21
  9. ^ May 1902, Out West, p. 471
  10. ^ a b c Bean and Smith, 589
  11. ^ a b "The Cupeños' own Trail of Tears". Los Angeles Times. 2012-03-17. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  12. ^ a b c d e "At a certain point, the Cupeño stopped looking back. | San Diego Reader". www.sandiegoreader.com. Retrieved 2022-12-23.
  13. ^ May 1902, Out West, p.475
  14. ^ "The Cupeños' own Trail of Tears". Los Angeles Times. 2012-03-17. Retrieved 2022-12-23. The history of the Pala Band of Mission Indians begins with an event so traumatic that it is known as the Cupeño Trail of Tears.
  15. ^ Bahr, Diana (1997). "Cupeño Trail of Tears: Relocation and Urbanization". American Indian Culture and Research Journal. 21 (3): 75–82 – via UCLA American Indian Studies Center.
  16. ^ "Pala Band of Mission Indians – NAHC Digital Atlas". nahc.ca.gov. Retrieved 2022-12-23. On May 12, 1903, Indian Bureau agents and 44 armed teamsters arrived to oversee the Cupeños' eviction. The forced removal is known as the Cupeño trail of tears.
  17. ^ a b c d e Brigandi, Phil (Winter 2018). "In the Name of the Law: The Cupeño Removal of 1903". The Journal of San Diego History. 64 (1) – via San Diego History Center.
  18. ^ "Cupa Cultural Center", Pala Band of Mission Indians. 2006 (retrieved 18 May 2010)
  19. ^ Brigandi, P. "Roscinda Nolasquez Remembered." The Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology. 9 (1) 2009: 3.
  20. ^ Hinton, 28
  21. ^ Hinton, 29, 42

References Edit

  • Bean, Lowell John, and Charles R. Smith. "Cupeño". Heizer, Robert F., volume ed. Handbook of North American Indians: California, Volume 8. pp. 91–98. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1978. ISBN 978-0-16-004574-5.
  • Hinton, Leanne. Flutes of Fire: Essays on California Indian Languages. Berkeley: Heyday Books, 1994. ISBN 0-930588-62-2
  • Pritzker, Barry M. A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. ISBN 978-0-19-513877-1.

External links Edit

  • Pala Band of Mission Indians official website
  • Barker v. Harvey (1901) - US Supreme Court decision evicting the Cupeño

cupeño, language, language, kuupangaxwichem, native, american, tribe, southern, california, kuupangaxwichemtraditional, lands, people, light, purpletotal, population1, 1990, regions, with, significant, populationsunited, states, california, languagesenglish, s. For the language see Cupeno language The Cupeno or Kuupangaxwichem are a Native American tribe of Southern California CupenoKuupangaxwichemTraditional lands of the Cupeno people in light purpleTotal population1 000 1990 1 Regions with significant populationsUnited States California LanguagesEnglish Spanish formerly Cupeno languageReligionTraditional tribal religion Christianity Roman Catholic Protestant Related ethnic groupsCahuilla Luiseno Serrano and TongvaThey traditionally lived about 50 miles 80 km inland and 50 miles 80 km north of the modern day Mexico United States border in the Peninsular Range of Southern California 2 Today their descendants are members of the federally recognized tribes known as the Pala Band of Luiseno Mission Indians Morongo Band of Cahuilla Mission Indians and Los Coyotes Band of Cahuilla and Cupeno Indians 3 Contents 1 History 1 1 Spanish and Mexican occupation 1 2 American occupation 1 3 Forced eviction 1 3 1 Cupeno trail of tears 1 3 1 1 Reactions 1 3 2 Present day 2 Culture 3 Language 4 Population 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksHistory EditSeveral different groups combined to form Cupeno culture around 1000 to 1200 AD They were closely related to Cahuilla culture 4 The Cupeno people traditionally lived in the mountains in the San Jose Valley at the headwaters of the San Luis Rey River 5 Their name in their own language is Kuupangaxwichem people who slept here 6 2 They lived in two autonomous villages Wilakalpa and Kupa or Cupa 3 located north of present day Warner Springs California Their homelands extended to Agua Caliente located east of Lake Henshaw in an area now crossed by State Highway 79 near Warner Springs The 200 acre 0 81 km2 Cupeno Indian village site is now abandoned but evidence of its historical importance remains 7 Spanish and Mexican occupation Edit The Cupeno villages also showing Warner Springs for referenceSpaniards entered Cupeno lands in 1795 5 and took control of the lands by the 19th century After Mexico achieved independence its government granted Juan Jose Warner a naturalized American Mexican citizen nearly 45 000 acres 180 km2 of the land on November 28 1844 Warner like most other large landholders in California at the time depended primarily on Indian labor 8 The villagers of Kupa provided most of Warner s workforce on his cattle ranch The Cupeno continued to reside at what the Spanish called Agua Caliente after the American occupation of California in 1847 to 1848 during the Mexican American War They built an adobe ranch house in 1849 and barn in 1857 that were still standing as of 1963 8 According to Julio Ortega one of the oldest members of the Cupeno tribe Warner set aside about 16 miles 26 km of land surrounding the hot springs as the private domain of the Indians Warner encouraged the Cupeno to construct a stone fence around their village and to keep their livestock separated from that of the ranch Ortega felt that if the village had created its own boundaries the Cupeno would still live there today 8 American occupation Edit The Cupeno village of Cupa in 1893In observing the Cupeno s living conditions in 1846 W H Emory a brevet major with the United States Army Corps of Engineers described the Indians as being held in a state of serfdom by Warner and as being ill treated 9 In 1849 Warner was arrested by the American forces for consorting with the Mexican government and was taken to Los Angeles 10 In 1851 because of several issues of conflict Antonio Garra a Yuma Indian living at Warner s Ranch tried to organize a coalition of various southern California Indian tribes to drive out all of the European Americans 10 His Garra Revolt failed and the settlers executed Garra The Cupeno had attacked Warner and his ranch burning some buildings They lost structures at their settlement of Kupa too Warner sent his family to Los Angeles but continued to operate the ranch with the help of others citation needed Forced eviction Edit Forced relocation from Warner s Ranch to Pala 1903Following European contact but prior to the time of their eviction the Cupenos sold milk fodder and craftwork to travelers on the Southern Immigrant Trail and passengers on the stagecoaches of the Butterfield Overland Mail that stopped at Warner s Ranch and passed through the valley The women made lace and took in laundry which they washed in the hot springs The men carved wood and manufactured saddle pads for horses They also raised cattle and cultivated 200 acres 0 81 km2 of land In 1880 after numerous suits and countersuits European American John G Downey acquired all titles to the main portion of Warner s Ranch 11 12 In 1892 Downey the former governor of California and owner of the ranch since 1880 began proceedings to evict the Cupeno from the ranch property Legal proceedings continued until 1903 when the court ruled in Barker v Harvey against the Cupeno The United States government offered to buy new land for the Cupeno but they refused In 1903 Cecilio Blacktooth Cupeno chief at Agua Caliente said If you give us the best place in the world it is not as good as this This is our home We cannot live anywhere else we were born here and our fathers are buried here 13 Cupeno trail of tears Edit Cupeno rock mortars for grinding acornsOn May 13 1903 the Cupa Indians were forced to move 75 miles 121 km away to Pala California on the San Luis Rey River 12 It has been referred to by the Los Angeles Times academics and the Pala Band of Mission Indians as the Cupeno trail of tears given the traumatic nature of the event 14 15 16 The forced relocation to the Pala reservation also included the Luiseno villages at Puerta la Cruz and La Puerta and the Kumeyaay villages at Mataguay San Jose and San Felipe It was described by historian Phil Brigandi as the last of Indian removals in the United States ending a federal policy of forced relocations that had begun 75 years earlier 17 Reactions Edit On the morning of the removal Roscinda Nolasquez who was eleven years old at the time recalled the last morning at Cupa Orders were shouted in English at the Cupeno We were so scared We didn t know what he was saying We didn t know what was going on We saw old people running back and forth We cried too because we were afraid She recalls that morning trying to ensure that her cats would not be left behind which she managed to find 17 In 1903 an article for the Los Angeles Herald described it as such The springs proved the Indians undoing White men wanted them and now after years of impatient waiting they have possession No matter the legal aspect of the case the act is deplorable It is one of the saddest sequels to the white man s first notice to the natives on the Atlantic coast to move on They have been moving on ever since 12 An article for the Los Angeles Daily Times featured the headline Indians Bundled Away Like Cattle To Pala 17 Two weeks after the forced relocation American journalist Grant Wallace wrote Many of the older people were still muy triste Every other tent or brush ramada was still a house of tears for their love of home is stronger than with us 12 The houses provided by the U S government were Ducker Patent Portable Houses described in a report to the Indian Office as very unsatisfactory some of which quickly fell into disrepair or collapsed 17 In 1922 the Henshaw Dam was built which significantly worsened the flow of the San Luis Rey River that ran through the relocation site 17 Present day Edit Indians at the present day reservations of Los Coyotes San Ygnacio Santa Ysabel and Mesa Grande are among descendants of the Warner Springs Cupeno Many Cupeno believe that their land at Kupa will be returned to them They are seeking legal relief to that end The Cupa site serves as a rallying point for the land claims movement of contemporary Indian people particularly their effort to regain cultural and religious areas 11 12 Culture Edit Mercedes Nolasquez a Cupeno basket maker at Warner s Ranch ca 1900The tribe is divided into two moieties the Coyote and Wildcat which are divided into several patrilineal clans Clans are led by hereditary male clan leaders and assistant leaders Marriages were traditionally arranged 3 Traditional foods included acorns cactus fruit seeds berries deer quail rabbits and other small game 3 4 The Cupa Cultural Center was founded in 1974 in Pala and underwent a major expansion in 2005 The center exhibits artwork hosts classes and activities such as basket making and beading and offers Cupeno language classes During the first weekend of every May Cupa Days is celebrated at the cultural center 18 Language Edit The territorial boundaries of the Southern California Indian tribes based on dialect including the Cupeno languageThe Cupeno language belongs to the Cupan group which includes the Cahuilla and Luiseno languages This grouping is of the Takic branch within the Uto Aztecan family of languages 2 Roscinda Nolasquez 1892 1987 of Mexican Yaqui descent is considered the last truly fluent Cupeno speaker 19 The language today is widely regarded as being extinct In 1994 linguist Leanne Hinton estimated one to five people still spoke Cupeno and nine people in the 1990 US census said they spoke the language 20 Educational materials for the language exist and young people still learn to sing in Cupeno particularly Bird Songs 21 Population EditFurther information Population of Native California Alfred L Kroeber estimated the 1770 population of the Cupeno as 500 Lowell John Bean and Charles R Smith put the total in 1795 between 500 and 750 By 1910 the Cupeno population had dropped to 150 according to Kroeber Later estimates have suggested that there were fewer than 150 Cupeno in 1973 10 but about 200 in 2000 Notes Edit California Indians and Their Reservations P SDSU Library and Information Access retrieved 18 May 2010 a b c California Indians and Their Reservations Archived February 5 2009 at the Wayback Machine SDSU Library and Information Access retrieved 18 May 2010 a b c d Pritzker 125 a b Bean and Smith 588 a b Pritzker 124 Pala Band of Mission Indians The History Archived from the original on 2018 03 31 Retrieved 2018 03 30 Cupa San Diego County Archived 2005 08 29 at the Wayback Machine A History of American Indians in California Historic Sites National Park Service accessed 18 Nov 2009 a b c Morrison 1962 p 21 May 1902 Out West p 471 a b c Bean and Smith 589 a b The Cupenos own Trail of Tears Los Angeles Times 2012 03 17 Retrieved 2022 12 23 a b c d e At a certain point the Cupeno stopped looking back San Diego Reader www sandiegoreader com Retrieved 2022 12 23 May 1902 Out West p 475 The Cupenos own Trail of Tears Los Angeles Times 2012 03 17 Retrieved 2022 12 23 The history of the Pala Band of Mission Indians begins with an event so traumatic that it is known as the Cupeno Trail of Tears Bahr Diana 1997 Cupeno Trail of Tears Relocation and Urbanization American Indian Culture and Research Journal 21 3 75 82 via UCLA American Indian Studies Center Pala Band of Mission Indians NAHC Digital Atlas nahc ca gov Retrieved 2022 12 23 On May 12 1903 Indian Bureau agents and 44 armed teamsters arrived to oversee the Cupenos eviction The forced removal is known as the Cupeno trail of tears a b c d e Brigandi Phil Winter 2018 In the Name of the Law The Cupeno Removal of 1903 The Journal of San Diego History 64 1 via San Diego History Center Cupa Cultural Center Pala Band of Mission Indians 2006 retrieved 18 May 2010 Brigandi P Roscinda Nolasquez Remembered The Journal of California and Great Basin Anthropology 9 1 2009 3 Hinton 28 Hinton 29 42References EditBean Lowell John and Charles R Smith Cupeno Heizer Robert F volume ed Handbook of North American Indians California Volume 8 pp 91 98 Washington DC Smithsonian Institution 1978 ISBN 978 0 16 004574 5 Hinton Leanne Flutes of Fire Essays on California Indian Languages Berkeley Heyday Books 1994 ISBN 0 930588 62 2 Pritzker Barry M A Native American Encyclopedia History Culture and Peoples Oxford Oxford University Press 2000 ISBN 978 0 19 513877 1 External links EditPala Band of Mission Indians official website The Cupa people Barker v Harvey 1901 US Supreme Court decision evicting the Cupeno Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cupeno amp oldid 1167718364, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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