Kittitas people

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Kittitas
Pshwánapam
Luqaiot, Kittitas chief
Languages
Sahaptin language (Yakama dialect)
Related ethnic groups
Yakama, other Sahaptin groups

The Kittitas (Sahaptin: Pshwánapam,[1] also known as the Upper Yakama)[2] are a Sahaptin tribe closely related to the Yakama, sometimes described as a band or subtribe of the Yakama.[3] Their traditional territories are found within Kittitas and Yakima counties within Washington state, chiefly in the Kittitas Valley, Naches Valley, Wenas Valley, and upper Yakima Valley.[2] Individuals of Kittitas descent are today enrolled in the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakima and the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation, but the Kittitas are not recognized as a distinct band by either tribal government.[4]

Etymology[edit]

Kittitas is derived from the Sahaptin toponym k'ɨtɨtáš "gravel bank place", referring to a location along the banks of the Yakima River.[5] Pshwánapam ("rock people") is the common Sahaptin endonym for the group,[1] formerly transliterated as Pisch-wan-wap-pam.[6] Kittitas County is named for the tribe.[7]

History[edit]

The Kittitas traditionally occupied an intermediary role between other Plateau groups and the Coast Salish groups west of the Cascades. The course of the upper Yakima in the Kittitas Valley offered access to Snoqualmie Pass and Stampede Pass, both used as trade routes to the Puget lowlands. The Kittitas acquired horses by the 1730s, and traded for cattle and western vegetables with the Hudson's Bay Company outpost at Fort Nisqually.[2]

During the 1804-1806 expedition, Lewis and Clark referred to the Kittitas as the 'Shan-wap-pom'.[8]

Fur trader Alexander Ross was the first European to enter the Kittitas Valley, encountering a large tribal gathering in 1814.

This mammoth camp could not have contained less than 3000 men, exclusive of women and children, and treble that number of horses. It was a grand and imposing sight in the wilderness, covering more than six miles in every direction. Councils, root gathering, hunting, horse-racing, foot-racing, gambling, singing, dancing, drumming, yelling, and a thousand other things which I cannot mention, were going on around us.[3][9]

In December 1847, Chief Owhi visited Old Fort Walla Walla and requested missionaries to be sent to the Yakama and Kittitas. A small group of Catholic missionaries arrived the following year and constructed the one-room Immaculate Conception Mission on Manastash Creek in July 1848. Father Pandosy headed the mission, but fell into poverty and mental disturbance, and was recalled to the Yakima Valley in September 1849.[10]

The Kittitas were removed from Wenas Valley in 1858.[2] White settlers entered the Kittitas Valley in the early 1860s, and the Kittitas were removed to the Yakama Indian Reservation.[7]

Geography[edit]

Kittitas camped at Taneum Creek near Ellensburg, 1900–1909.

Kittitas villages were located along the Upper Yakima and adjacent streams and rivers. Most had Sahaptin names, but two (N'tsamtsa'mtcin and Tc'kla'xan) are Interior Salish toponyms. [11]

  • A'tca – village located on the east bank of the Yakima river at Thrall
  • K'tɨ'taas – large village located on the west bank of the Yakima two miles below Ellensburg. Population of 300 to 400 in summer, when largest.
  • Yuúmaash – large winter village located on the east bank of the Yakima four miles below Thorp, with a population of around 400.
  • Ktłáktła – located one mile above Thorp, at the mouth of Taneum Creek. Largest permanent population of all Kittitas villages, roughly 500.
  • Ti'plas – Located at the mouth of Swauk Creek between Thorp and Teanaway. Permanent population of roughly 50.
  • Tyánanish – permanent village at the confluence of the Teanaway with the Yakima. Permanent population of roughly 50, but attracted more during fall hunting.
  • Tatx̣anísha – at Indian John Hill four miles below Cle Elum. Village population of 50-60.
  • Tlyálɨm – Large village at the south end of Cle Elum Lake along the Cle Elum River. Large salmon traps lead to populations exceeding 1,000 during early summer, with a smaller population staying year-round.
  • Naánɨm – Large permanent village on Naneum Creek, seven miles northwest of Ellensburg. Population of roughly 400.
  • N'tsamtsa'mtcin and Tc'kla'xan – Two closely located villages at the site of Kittitas. Populated during May and June for root digging.[12]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ a b Jacobs, Melville (1931). A Sketch of Northern Sahaptin Grammar. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 220.
  2. ^ a b c d Ott, Jennifer (February 23, 2014). "Upper Yakamas in the Wenas Valley, led by Owhi, host Longmire-Byles wagon train headed for Naches Pass on September 20, 1853". HistoryLink.
  3. ^ a b Becker, Paula (September 25, 2005). "Kittitas County — Thumbnail History". HistoryLink.
  4. ^ Steward, Peggy (June 21, 1998). "Kittitas Indians Fear Few Left To Carry On Band's Culture". Ellensburg Daily Record.
  5. ^ Bright, William (2004). Native American placenames of the United States. Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3598-4.
  6. ^ Splawn, A. J. (1917). Ka-Mi-Akin, The Last Hero of the Yakimas. Kilham Stationery & Printing Company. p. 390. ISBN 9781548541682.
  7. ^ a b Ochran, Jennifer. "A History of Kittitas County". Kittitas County, WA.
  8. ^ Bright, William (September 2004). "A Glossary of Native American Toponyms and Ethnonyms from the Lewis and Clark Journals". Names. 52 (3): 163–237. doi:10.1179/nam.2004.52.3.163. S2CID 161216583.
  9. ^ Ross, Alexander (1855). The Fur Hunters of the Far West. Smith, Elder & Co. p. 23.
  10. ^ Becker, Paula (October 10, 2005). "Father Pandosy establishes the Immaculate Conception Mission on Manastash Creek in the Kittitas Valley in July 1848". HistoryLink.
  11. ^ Beavert Martin, Virginia R.; Walker, Deward E. (1992). "The Ellen Saluskin (hápteliks sáwyalilx) Narratives, 1992: Traditional Religious Beliefs and Practices". Northwest Anthropological Research Notes. 26 (2): 215–216.
  12. ^ Ray, Verne F. (April 1936). "Native Villages and Groupings of the Columbia Basin". Pacific Northwest Quarterly. 27 (2): 99–152. JSTOR 20698112 – via JSTOR.