Klallam
|
Missing image
Klallam_people_near_canoe.jpg
Klallam_people_near_canoe.jpg
Klallam people near canoe
Missing image
Klallam_boys_carrying_clams_on_beach.jpg
Klallam_boys_carrying_clams_on_beach.jpg
Klallam boys carrying clams on beach
Missing image
Klallam_chief,_Chits-a-man-han_&_his_wife.jpg
Klallam_chief,_Chits-a-man-han_&_his_wife.jpg
chief Chits-a-man-han & wife
Missing image
Coast_Salish_style_canoe.jpg
Coast_Salish_style_canoe.jpg
Coast Salish style canoe
Missing image
Klallam_men_in_western_clothes_on_beach.jpg
Klallam_men_in_western_clothes_on_beach.jpg
Klallam men in western clothes on beach
Klallam (also Clallam, although this spelling is disliked by the Klallam community) refers to four distinct but otherwise related bands of Native Americans from western Washington state in the United States and British Columbia in Canada. Three Klallam bands live on the Olympic Peninsula in the far northwest corner (bordering the Strait of Juan de Fuca) of the state and one at Becher Bay on southern Vancouver Island in British Columbia.
- Klallam (Lower Elwha) Native American subtribe
- S'Klallam (Jamestown) Native American subtribe
- S'Klallam (Port Gamble, aka Little Boston) Native American subtribe
- Becher Bay Reserve
See also: Klallam language, Coast Salish.
External links
- Elaine Grinnell, Klallam storyteller and basket & drum maker (http://www.nwfolklife.org/P_ED/nativeamerican.html#grinnell)
- Washington Post: "Northwest Tribe Struggles to Revive Its Language" (http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn?pagename=article&contentId=A54559-2003Mar30¬Found=true)
- Klallam language (http://www.ling.unt.edu/~montler/Klallam/)
Missing image
Klallam_pole_for_catching_ducks.jpg
Klallam_pole_for_catching_ducks.jpg
Klallam pole for netting ducks