Celilo Village, Oregon

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Location of Celilo Village 0560T Celilo Village Locator Map.svg
Location of Celilo Village
Modern Native American Longhouse in Celilo Village with the Columbia River and Oregon Trunk Rail Bridge in the background Celio Village Oregon Longhouse.jpg
Modern Native American Longhouse in Celilo Village with the Columbia River and Oregon Trunk Rail Bridge in the background
Native Americans drying salmon at Celilo Falls, circa 1900 Indians drying salmon by James M Davis, c1900.jpg
Native Americans drying salmon at Celilo Falls, circa 1900

Celilo Village, Oregon is an unincorporated Native American community on the Columbia River in northeastern Wasco County in the U.S. state of Oregon. [1] It is near Lake Celilo, the former site of Celilo Falls; it is just south of the community of Wishram, Washington, across the Columbia River.

In 2003 about 100 permanent residents lived in 14 dwellings. The site was once a major cultural and trading center, until Celilo Falls was inundated by The Dalles Dam in 1957. [2] The 2000 census reported a total resident population of 44 persons living on a land area of 102.11 acres (0.4132 km2). The United States Army Corps of Engineers provided funding for construction of a new tribal long house in 2006. [3] [4] The Corps of Engineers built and maintains the dams that have annihilated the salmon runs upon which Native ceremonial, commercial and dietary life depend.

Most residents of Celilo are members of either the Yakama Nation or Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. Some may be members of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, or the Nez Perce tribe. Many residents are fishers engaging in ceremonial, subsistence, and commercial fisheries for salmon, steelhead, and sturgeon in the Columbia River. While the historic fishing site at Celilo Falls is gone, there is an "in lieu" fishing site provided by the Army Corps of Engineers after litigation with the Tribes against the COE, that maintains access for tribal members to the river.[ citation needed ] Most tribal fishing is done currently with gillnets or from platforms built along the river.[ citation needed ]

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Celilo Falls was a tribal fishing area on the Columbia River, just east of the Cascade Mountains, on what is today the border between the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington. The name refers to a series of cascades and waterfalls on the river, as well as to the native settlements and trading villages that existed there in various configurations for 15,000 years. Celilo was the oldest continuously inhabited community on the North American continent until 1957, when the falls and nearby settlements were submerged by the construction of The Dalles Dam. In 2019, there were calls by tribal leaders to restore the falls.

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tenino people</span>

The Tenino people, commonly known today as the Warm Springs bands, are several Sahaptin Native American subtribes which historically occupied territory located in the North-Central portion of the American state of Oregon. The Tenino people included four localized subtribes — the Tygh or "Upper Deschutes" divided in Tayxɫáma, Tiɫxniɫáma and Mliɫáma, the Wyam (Wayámɫáma) (Wayámpam) or "Lower Deschutes", also known as "Celilo Indians", the Dalles Tenino or "Tinainu (Tinaynuɫáma)", also known as "Tenino proper"; and the Dock-Spus (Tukspush) (Takspasɫáma) or "John Day."

Celilo Fish Committee is a committee formed by the representatives from Yakama Nation.

The Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission (CRITFC) is a fishery resource for the treaty tribes of the Columbia River. Under the treaty, the native tribes, The Nez Perce Tribe, Warm Springs Reservation Tribe, and Umatilla Indian Reservation Tribe, have to the right to fish in the Columbia River, which means their fishery must be reserve and protect.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Skinpah</span> Indigenous people of America

The Skinpah were a Sahaptin-speaking people of the Tenino dialect living along the northern bank of the Columbia River in what is now south-central Washington. They were first recorded as the E-nee-shers in 1805 by Lewis and Clark. Their village, Sk'in, was located adjacent to Celilo Falls in modern day Klickitat County.

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Celilo Village, Oregon
  2. Celilo Falls: Gone but not forgotten Archived 2005-07-16 at the Wayback Machine by Jean Johnson, Indian Country Today, 2004-08-24
  3. http://www.coopercm.com/news/DJC_092106_Celilo_Village_Rebuild.pdf%5B%5D
  4. "Celilo Village ribbon cutting and new home blessing". May 24, 2008.

45°38′41″N120°57′59″W / 45.64472°N 120.96639°W / 45.64472; -120.96639