Yakama Reservation Through a Native Lens.

This is a PocketSights assignment for my English 103 Class for Heritage University.

Yakama Reservation Through a Native Lens.

Toppenish, Washington 98948, United States

Created By: Heritage University

Tour Information

The following tour is of Toppenish through a Native lens. I will be focusing on our Tribal community and public sights for those who have in interest of learning who we are.

THE LAND

Upon central Washington’s plateau and along the Columbia River reside tribal people called the Yakama’s. The Cascade mountains shelter this central portion from marine showers. The rolling foothills and Yakima River are the eastern border.

Due west in majestic glory is Pahto, 12,307 feet high. It is one of five Cascade volcanoes that dot the landscape from California to Washington. Her snow melts through canyons, forests, meadows and valleys to provide gifts to our people.

The tribal people comprising the Yakama Nation have lived in this area since the beginning of time. They used the entire land base, from the lowlands around the Columbia River to the snow-peaked Cascade Mountains.

Yakama people spent the coldest months in winter villages generally located on the valley floor, a place with a relatively moderate climate. A reliable source of wood and water, and protection from cold winds could be found there. Villages were located on or near waterways, in places where a variety of resources could be obtained including deer, elk, fish, riparian and desert plants, and animal resources.

In the springtime, as soon as the first edible greens appeared above the ground, tribal people began moving across the countryside for fresh food resources. The melting snows would be followed upland, and edible roots collected as they matured. Some tribal people would go to the rivers to fish. Others would remain in the mountains, following the maturing plants upslope, ending with the huckleberry harvest in the fall. At that time, foods would be either stored or transported back to the winter village from both the mountains and the rivers, and people would settle in, once more living on stored foods and occasional fresh meat until the next spring.

Bordering the reservation, the Yakima River flows southward from the Cascade Mountains to the Columbia River. Along the river there is a pass, a gap in Ahtanum Ridge called Union Gap. The Yakima River flowed through this area before the ridges existed. The Toppenish Basin is shaped like a scoop that is open to the east. The higher sides of the scoop are Ahtanum Ridge to the North, Toppenish ridge to the south and the Lost Horse Plateau to the west. Located along the eastern slopes of the Cascade Mountain Range, the Yakama Nation forest consists of 600,000 acres of timbered lands.

All this for future generations yet unborn according to teachings by our elders. https://www.yakama.com/about/


Tour Map

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What You'll See on the Tour

This is the Yakama Nations Indian Agency, this building holds many individual programs for the Yakama Nation and its people. Also inside are several departments of the BIA (Buraeu of Indian Affairs.) These all range from Department of Reven... Read more
The Following is of one of our last Chiefs to resist and fight during the Indian Wars of 1855-1858. Kamiakin was an influential chief of the Yakama Tribe, a reluctant signer of the 1855 treaty creating the Yakama Reservation, and a key trib... Read more
ABOUT LEGENDS CASINO HOTEL Legends Casino Hotel is owned and operated by the Yakama Nation. The Yakama Nation was established through the Treaty of 1855 and is made up of 14 Tribes and Bands, which include the following: Palouse, Pisquouse,... Read more
The Cultural Center is an awesome place to visit and one of my places I would recommend anyone to go! As the name states its our Cultural Center. We have a Museum that houses some of our Yakama artifacts and information that shows what used... Read more
First and foremost I want to mention that Fort Simcoe was a boarding school to the Native peoples first. Having said that, I want to express that not all people view Fort Simcoe as a fantastic place of history. Some would see it as one of t... Read more
This was where I was first told as a child NOT to run around unattended. When I stopped and asked why? I was told very reluctantly about the spirits that live in the hills and forest. There Stick People were the ones in particular that I wa... Read more
The Following is our closed and Ceded areas and the benifit of being an Enrolled Yakama member. Information for Tribal Members on Hunting on the Yakama Reservation and Ceded Areas Introduction  The following guidelines are designed to help... Read more
A MOUNT ADAMS STORY Posted on January 13, 2015 by Haven under Blog, Folklore A Mount Adams Story   Pahto | © 2010 H a v e n Mount Adams (12,307 feet in altitude), the second highest peak in Washington, stands in the southwestern pa... Read more

 

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