MSN Home  |  My MSN  |  Hotmail
Sign in to Windows Live ID Web Search:   
go to MSNGroups 
Free Forum Hosting
 
Important Announcement Important Announcement
The MSN Groups service will close in February 2009. You can move your group to Multiply, MSN’s partner for online groups. Learn More
The Wakan Circle[email protected] 
  
What's New
  
  Welcome to the Wakan Circle  
  Management list & Msn Code of Conduct  
  TheWakanCircleGuidelines  
  TheWakanCircleBeginning-  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  TO WALK THE RED ROAD~  
  What is The Red Road  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Dedicated to Our Ancestors  
  In Loving Memory.... Mamthesonak....5..1..2008  
  ***********************************  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Happy Thanksgiving to All  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MESSAGE BOARD  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Wakan CHAT ROOM #! 1  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  ELDERS QUESTIONS  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  MEMBERS BIOS  
  Cherokee ? Board  
  NAME in CHEROKEE  
  Indian News  
  DID YOU KNOW???  
  American Indian Radio  
  Reservation Help  
  AdoptAElder&Grandparent  
  Prayer & Healing  
  YourPersonalPrayerCircle  
  Prayer Ties  
  Wakan Journeys  
  Mourning Place  
  OurCreator OurStrength  
  Spirit of Red Man  
  Abuse Shelter  
  Recovery Room  
  MemberProfiles&ContactList  
  Warning Message>  
  WHY AMERICAN INDIAN??  
  TheCherokeeWayOfTheCircle  
  Culture& History  
  Medicine Wheel & Shield  
  Earth Wheel,  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Daily Motivation  
  Elder Meditation  
  Healing Stones  
  Inspirational  
  Words of Wisdom  
  Quotes  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  A Womans World  
  Women Warriors  
  Women Of Courage  
  American IndianWomenRights  
  NativeAmericanMilitaryWomen  
  Words&Remedys(women)  
  *****************************************  
  Herbs, Oils, Etc  
  Medicinal Herbs.  
  Natural Soaps  
  Plants & Culture  
  Wakan Medicines  
  TalkingStick  
  Sacred Animals  
  Animal Medicines Etc  
  Totems & meanings  
  All Totems  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Pow Wow Updates  
  Events Updates  
  POW WOW Guidelines  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Leonard Peltier  
  Genealogy  
  Dreamcatchers Information  
  Dreamcatchers  
  Your Dreams  
  Indian Music +++  
  Storytime  
  Childrens Corner  
  Childrens Board  
  Our Storytellers  
  More Storyteller  
  Crafty Corner  
  Picture of Members  
  Pictures  
  Our Poetry Page  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Poetry  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Heart Songs  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Annie's Country Kitchen  
  FAMILY RECIPES  
  Old&New Remedies  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Folklore  
  Legends - Tales  
  FirstPipe&WhiteBuffaloWoman  
  White Buffalo Legend  
  White BuffaloECT  
  The Sacred PIPE  
  Age of the Sacred Pipe".  
  Sweat Lodge  
  Vision Quests  
  Smudging ect.  
  SMUDGING  
  Our Elders  
  Trail Of Tears  
  TrailOfTears Park(Powwow)  
  TrailOfTearsHistory...today  
  Cherokee Nation...Trail Map  
  Samuel Cloud turned 9 years old on the Trail  
  TrailOfTearsTimeline----&SpecialPoem  
  Cherokee Rose +  
  *^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^*^  
  Cherokee History  
  Cherokee..Lessons on Life  
  SouthernCherokee  
  Cherokee Sayings  
  The Cherokee Belief System  
  Cherokee Traditions  
  Cherokee Tribes  
  Our Cherokee Language  
  Cherokee Moons ect  
  Cherokee Seasons  
  Seven Clans of Cherokee Society  
  Cherokee history  
  Cherokee Words  
  Cherokee Nation  
  Building Body and Mind  
  NativeSymbolsOrigin&Meaning  
  Goal of Indian Spirituality  
  American IndianCodeOfEthics  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Maps of our Nations  
  Indian Prayers  
  AmericanIndianCommadments  
  American IndianLegends  
  Battle inHistory  
  American Indian Philosophy  
  Indian Poetry  
  Indian Authors  
  American Indians Poems  
  Wisdom  
  Great Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes  
  American Indian Quotes (more)  
  American Indian Spirituality #1  
  American Indian Spirituality# 2  
  Many Legends  
  Indian Heritage  
  Indian Genealogy  
  American Indian Religion  
  More Religion  
  Indian Beliefs  
  Indian Languages  
  Navajo Words  
  Blackfoot Words  
  Lakotah Words..  
  Ojibwe Words  
  Mohawk Words  
  Cherokee Lessons  
  Strength Of Our Ancestors  
  Our Military  
  Code Talkers  
  Todays History  
  Our Founding Fathers  
  The Six Nations:  
  History of Native Americans  
  In Honor of my People!!!!!  
  In Remembrance of The People  
  OUR LAND WAS TAKE----------------(message from our people)  
  Sign Language  
  Ceremonies!!!  
  SACRED HOOP  
  The DRUM  
  Cherokees�?Treasure  
  Power of the Flute  
  Ceremonial Dance  
  Spiritual Warrior  
  Indian Lands  
  Indian Spirituality.message  
  Spiritual Animals  
  Indian Myths ect  
  Indian Tribes !  
  Choctaw  
  Pawnee  
  Black Indians  
  Indian Tribes  
  Indian Quotes  
  Chiefs ect  
  Native Men  
  Todays Indians  
  Are You Indian????  
  Tribal Colors  
  Geronimo  
  Seven Teachings  
  Sacred Prayers ect  
  Our Prayer Carriers  
  The Philosophies  
  Moons ect.  
  Prophecies  
  Native American Code Of Ethics  
  Mother Earths Lament  
  Copyright Corner © Disclaimer...Copyright info  
  ALL Links Pages  
  Other Websites Links ect  
  Banner Exchange  
  Members Birthdays  
  World Clock & More  
  PSP Makers groups Links  
  PRAYERS  
  
  
  Tools  
 
Indian Tribes : Wyiot Tribe
Choose another message board
 
     
Reply
 Message 1 of 1 in Discussion 
From: MSN NicknameAnnie-LL  (Original Message)Sent: 2/24/2006 1:46 AM
Indian Island is the center of the Wiyot People's world. It is home to the ancient village of Tuluwat, and a traditional site of the World Renewal Ceremony. Once a year, the Wiyot people would get together for the World Renewal Ceremony. During this ceremony, all people were welcomed, no one was turned away. The leader of the Humboldt Bay Wiyot People was a man named Captain Jim. He was the man who would organize and lead the ceremony to start the new year. The ceremony would continue for at least seven to ten days. It was held at the village site of Tuluwat on the northern part of the island. Traditionally, the men would leave the island and return the next day with the days supplies. The elders, women and children were left to rest on the island along with a few men. Early on the cool winter morning of February 26, 1860, a group of settlers armed with hatchets, clubs and knives (they left their guns behind so that their presence on the Island would not be know to the nearby neighbors in Eureka) paddled to what is now known as Indian Island. There, sleeping Wiyot men, women and children, exhausted from a week of ceremonial dance were caught unaware and brutally slain. This was not the only massacre that took place that night. Two other village sites were raided. One on the Eel River and another on the South Spit. Eighty to one hundred people or more were slain that night. A baby, Jerry James (Captain Jim's son), was the only infant that survived from the massacre on the Island. The Wiyot people were decimated. For their protection, the Wiyot people were corralled at Fort Humboldt. This was another case of the Army protecting the Indigenous People of California from the violent and barbaric settlers. Later, some were herded to other Indian centers within California. However, they would keep returning to their homeland. An Indian Island Candlelight Vigil is held every February to remember those who lost their lives in the Massacre. The memorial was also set up to help heal the community. The first vigil was held on the last Saturday of February in 1992. A vigil has been held each year since that time. With each year, the number of participants has grown. The first year there were 75 participants; in 1996, there were more than 300 people. It is the intention of the Wiyot to hold the vigil at some point on Indian Island, which at the present time is inaccessible to the Tribe. This Vigil may be the first memorial for the lives lost where the Wiyot, other Indian nations, and the non-Indian communities have come together. This process helps heal the whole community. A fire is lit. A Wiyot elder lights their candle from the fire and from that candle all candles are lighted. A moment of silence is observed, a prayer is given remembering all who have gone before us, songs are sung, poems are read, and one leaves with a feeling of accomplishment. See the 2006 Flyer Photo: Left to Right, Leona Seidner Wilkinson, Marian L. Seidner, Loreta Brown, Cheryl A. Seidner. Candlelight Vigil on February 24th, 1996. Listen to our Tribal Chairwoman, Cheryl Seidner, talk about the meaning of the Annual Vigil via Video Clips. The 15th Annual Indian Island Candlelight Vigil will be held rain or shine Saturday February 22, 2003 from 6-8 p.m. on Woodley Island. Community is Welcome. Please bring a candle. Click on the thumbnail for a larger picture of our project site/location. One hundred and forty years later, Table Bluff Reservation - Wiyot Tribe is working to dance once more on Indian Island. Recently, the Tribe purchased a portion of the Island. There are plans to restore the cultural heritage and protect ecological resources. If you wish to help support this undertaking of reclaiming the village of Tuluwat for the Wiyot people, please visit our Wiyot Sacred Sites Fund web page. Wiyot people have inhabited California's northern shores for thousands of years. This area has long been renowned for its majestic redwood forests and thick salmon runs. Before the coming of white settlers, Wiyot people around Humboldt Bay and on Indian Island hunted the area's wildlife, fished for salmon and gathered roots for medicine, food and basketry. Indian Island is the center of the Wiyot world and a sacred place. Each year, Tuluwat Village on the island hosted the World Renewal Ceremony to ask the creator's blessings for all people and the land for the coming year. The brutal 1860 massacre of Indian Island's inhabitants and visitors abruptly ended centuries of ceremonial dancing and celebration. Most of the men among the Wiyot celebrants had traveled to the mainland during the night in order to replenish supplies. As a result, mostly women, children, and elders were killed. Only one newborn child survived. Several other Wiyot village sites on the mainland were also attacked on that night. It is estimated that approximately 200 people were murdered. Following the massacres, the vitality of our people suffered greatly. U.S. troops collected the surviving Wiyot people from other villages ranging between the Mad and Eel Rivers, confining them to the Klamath River Reservation. After a disastrous flood on the Klamath, our people were taking to the Smith River Reservation, and later to the Hoopa and Round Valley Reservations. **Taken from the "Gale Encyclopedia of Native American Tribes, Vol. IV"** When we attempted to return to our homeland, we often found our homes destroyed and our land taken. But still we returned and found new places to live. We ceased to perform our ceremonies and speak our language, hoping to be spared from the anger and weapons of the settlers. Our culture was almost completely forgotten. Only in recent years have we begun to recover and rebuild our lost heritage. Some of our remaining Wiyot people reside on 88 acres of land called Table Bluff Reservation, 16 miles south of the City of Eureka. Currently we have over 300 enrolled members who continue to struggle for the survival of our culture. The Wiyot territory starts at Little River and continues down the coast to Bear River, then inland to the first set of mountains. Towns that are within the traditional Wiyot territory are McKinleyville, Blue Lake, Arcata, Eureka, Kneeland, Loleta, Fortuna, Ferndale, and Rohnerville. Rivers within this territory are Mad River (Batwat), Elk River, Eel River and the Van Duzen River. Pre 1850, there were approximately 1500 to 2000 Wiyot people living within this area. After 1860 there were an estimated population of 200 people left. By 1910 there was an estimate of less than 100 full blood Wiyot people living within Wiyot territory. This rapid decline in population was due to disease, slavery, target practice, "protection," and being herded from place to place, and of course, massacres. Read Cheryl Seidner's interview regarding the history of the Wiyot people and the Indian Island Massacre. Protection of a Sacred Burial Ground The ground beneath Tuluwat village is an enormous clamshell mound (or midden). This mound, measuring over six acres in size and estimated to be over 1,000 years old, is an irreplaceable physical history of the Wiyot way of life. Contained within it are remnants of meals, tools, and ceremonies, as well as many burial sites. At the end of the 19th century, settlers built dikes and channels on the island. These modifications changed tidal action along the shore, resulting in erosion of the edge of the mound. Between 1913 and 1985, an estimated 2000 cubic yards of the shell mound were lost to erosion, which continues and seems to even be accelerating. In addition, the shell mound was the site of uncontrolled digging in the early part of the 20th century. One amateur archeologist was said to have looted as many as 500 of our gravesites. In addition, structures of the Tuluwat village that were still visible in 1913 are now gone, having been destroyed or carried away by wind and waves. It is imperative to prevent further destruction of the mound. The planned restoration will eliminate continued erosion and looting while creating and enhancing wildlife habitat. Cultural Items Wiyot Leader, Ki-we-lat-tah, circa 1882 by S.W. Shaw Wiyot Woman and Child, circa 1800s, Smithsonian Collection. As stated earlier, only one newborn child survived the Massacre. That child was Jerry James (above, circa Sept. 1910), son of Captain Jim.


First  Previous  No Replies  Next  Last