Bennett, Ramona (Puyallup) - 2
- 5.1.2-TNT0090B
- Item
- 10/29/1975
Back of Photo:
Ramona Bennett
Staff photo by Jerry Buck
Bennett, Ramona (Puyallup) - 2
Back of Photo:
Ramona Bennett
Staff photo by Jerry Buck
Bennett, Ramona (Puyallup) - 10
Front of Photo:
Ramona Bennett shown with her daughter, Ee-Nuck-A-Mee, 7, is best known for her years of activism as Chairwomen of the Puyallup Tribe in Tacoma, Wash. Today, Ms. Bennett is Director of Family Services at the Seattle Indian Center where her job involves finding Indian foster homes for homeless Indian children.
Staff photo by Bruce Kellman
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.
Back of Photo:
Indians, Nisqually
Back of Photo:
Indians, Nisqually
Two people are standing by a campfire, while two other people lead two horses along the bank of a river. Two unmanned boats rest on the shore nearby.
Nugent Kautz Jr., age 2, stands by two salmon placed along the Nisqually River by fisherman George McCloud Jr.
Back of Photo:
Nugent Kantz Jr. age 2
Two Nisqually tribal members prepare nets in lower Nisqually River in defiance of state regulations. Nisqually tribal members planned to exercise their right to fish under the Medicine Creek Treaty following a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision which allowed states to regulate off-reservation Native fishing.
Back of Photo:
Fisheries Men Watch
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.
Back of Photo:
Indians, Nisqually
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 1
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Confrontation between Puyallup tribal members and police about fishing rights guaranteed in the Medicine Creek Treaty (1854) resulted in a riot police unit being brought in to disperse the fishing camp. Shots were fired and tear gas was used. Photo taken by Tribune staff member Warren Anderson.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 4
Back of Photo:
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.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 24
Back of Photo:
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.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 26
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Puyallup Tribal members blocked all entrances to the Cascadia Juvenile Diagnostic Center in protest of a U.S. Supreme court ruling allowing for all cigarettes sold on reservation smoke shops to be taxed by the state and to force the state to pay rent for use of the facility.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 27
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Russ Carmack Photographer
A person hands over two shotguns to another person. One person holds a third shotgun and a fourth gun rests on the hood of a nearby car.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 29
Back of Photo:
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) - 30
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Photograph by Jerry Buck
Two people sit in an encampment.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 34
Back of Photo:
Cascadia "Leschi"
Photo by Bruce Kellman
Back of photo: Cascadia Jan 1 1977
Demonstrations 1975 thru 1980 - 1
Back of Photo:
Demonstrations
Two protestors in warm clothing stand in the center of the photograph, holding signs that read "Chunksa Yuha Is Not Our Messanger," and "Hell No Hanta Yo Is Not Our "Roots."
Native American protesters confront author Ruth Beebe Hill over claims her book Hanta Yo is filled with misinformation about Indigenous history, specifically Hill’s saga about two Sioux families.