Indians, Puyallup (General) - 29
- 5.1.2-TNT0058I
- 12/04/1973
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Indians, Puyallup
Photograph by Jerry Buck
Two people look to be fishing from a boat with an outboard motor on the water.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 29
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Indians, Puyallup
Photograph by Jerry Buck
Two people look to be fishing from a boat with an outboard motor on the water.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 5
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Fireworks stands fizzle
Puyallup Indian fireworks stands that boomed with business on the reservation last week lie fizzled out after the July Fourth celebration.
photo by Bruce Kellman
Back of photo: Cascadia Juvenile Reception Diagnostic Center Photograph by Jerry Buck
Bennett, Ramona (Puyallup) - 2
Back of Photo:
Ramona Bennett
Staff photo by Jerry Buck
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 24
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Indians, Puyallup
Puyallup Tribal members and others served as security guards during the sale of fireworks for Fourth of July. It was part of an ongoing conflict of who should be allowed to sell fireworks consisting of jury trials and public protests. The United States Marshalls only did a single drive by. Two people sit on the hood of a car holding pump shotguns.
Nisqually law enforcement officers, Jack Jewart, left, and Clyde Parsons, check over their new patrol boat at the Steilacoom Marina. The boat will be used for tribal fisheries regulation enforcement on Puget Sound.
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Indians, Nisqually
Tepees and tents of 300 Native Americans were set up in a field in Washington D.C. The camp had been setup following a transcontinental motor trip called the Trial of Self-Determination. Sid Mills, a Nisqually tribal member said in an interview in D.C. that they were there to secure a future for Native Americans because currently there is none.
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Indians, Nisqually
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Indians, Nisqually
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 40
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Indians, Puyallup
Photograph by Bob Rudsit
Four people sit around a table talking.
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Indians, Puyallup
Adults and children examine what is inside a small fishing net.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 15
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Indians, Puyallup
Two people, one is holding a clipboard, sort through various boxed and canned food items.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 17
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Ramona Bennett
Cascadia now "Leschi"
Photo by Bruce Kellman
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Indians, Puyallup
Photo by Russ Carmack
People sit and chant or sing in a circle as the crowd behind them raise one of their arms with their hands in a fist.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 35
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Cascadia "Leschi"
Photo by Bruce Kellman
A young person holding a stack of bread slices stands next to an officer.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 36
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Indians, Puyallup
People stand in a circle with raised first. One person films with a camera.
Steve Wilson, left, and Nisqually leader George Kalama inspect gravel channel created for rearing fish on the Nisqually River to supplement fish that are produced naturally.
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Indians, Nisqually
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 34
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Cascadia "Leschi"
Photo by Bruce Kellman
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 21
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Indians, Puyallup
A person holds binoculars and looks at the camera.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 25
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Indians, Puyallup
Photo by Kai Silva
Puyallup Tribal members try to stop Wildlife agents from confiscating fish. Ralph Larson director of the state Game department had restricted all fishing starting on December 5th. Three Puyallup tribal officers were cited for permitting tribal members to fish in waters that were closed to all. Photo by Kai Silva.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 12
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Indians, Puyallup
Joe Washington, shaman of the Lummis, led the Puyallup Tribe in a ceremony marking the start of the salmon run. The ancient ceremony was held on tribal land near the Portland Avenue Bridge. The ceremony ended with a wedding. Joe Washington asked for the tribe’s adults to remember what they had seen and to pass the knowledge on to their children. Photo by Tribune staff member Russ Carmack.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 4
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Indians, Puyallup
U.S. District Court Judge Walter T. McGovern signed a temporary injunction citing a federal statute that prohibits liquor sales on tribal lands unless under a tribal liquor code. Judge McGovern stated that because the Puyallup Tribe does not have a liquor code it was illegal to sell liquor there. Some establishments continued to sell alcohol throughout the day. The image is of the Indian Trading Post located on Puyallup Tribal land and owned by Robert Satiacum and Victoria Satiacum.
Back of photo: Cascadia Jan 1 1977
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Indians, Nisqually
A person in rubber boots weighs a bucket
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 16
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Indians, Puyallup
Joe Washington, shaman of the Lummis, led the Puyallup Tribe in a ceremony marking the start of the salmon run. The ancient ceremony was held on tribal land near the Portland Avenue Bridge. The ceremony ended with a wedding. Joe Washington asked for the tribe’s adults to remember what they had seen and to pass the knowledge on to their children. Photo by Tribune staff member Russ Carmack.
Robert Thomas wears a raven headdress during the dedication ceremonies for the new Nisqually Tribal Center west of Yelm. Several hundred tribal members and guests attended the ceremonies which included speeches, songs, dances, and an outdoor feast prepared by Army and Nisqually cooks.
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Indians, Nisqually
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Indians, Puyallup
Dan Thayer, a fisheries biologist for the Puyallup tribe helped to release 16,500 chum salmon from the tribe’s hatchery into a tributary of the Hylebos Creek in South King County.
Sterud, Bill (Puyallup Tribal Official) - 1
Back of Photo:
Bill Sterud
Front of Photo:
Photo by Bruce A. Kellman