Coquelle Thompson, Athabaskn Witness: Cultural Biography

Coquelle Thompson, Athabaskn Witness: Cultural Biography

Coquelle Thompson, Athabaskn Witness: Cultural Biography

Coquelle Thompson, Athabaskn Witness: Cultural Biography

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Overview

Coquelle Thompson (1849-1946) was an Upper Coquille Athabaskan Indian from along the Oregon coast. During his lifetime, he worked along as farmer, hunting/fishing guide, teamster, tribal policeman, and served as expert witness on Upper Coquille and reservation life and culture for anthropologists.

While captain of the tribal police, Thompson was assigned to investigate the Warm House Dance, the Siletz Indian Reservation version of the famous Ghost Dance. Thompson became a proselytizer for the Warm House Dance, helping to carry its message and performance from Siletz along the Oregon coast to as far south as Coos Bay.

Thompson lived through the conclusion of the Rogue River Indian War of 1855-56 and his tribe’s subsequent removal from southern Oregon to the Siletz Reservation. During his lifetime, the Siletz Reservation went from one million acres to seventy-seven individual allotments and four sections of tribal timber.

Lionel Youst and William R. Seaburg include an examination of the works of six anthropologists who interviewed Thompson over the years: J. Owen Dorsey, Cora Du Bois, Philip Drucker, Elizabeth Derr Jacobs, Jack Marr, and John Peabody Harrington.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780806134482
Publisher: University of Oklahoma Press
Publication date: 11/28/2002
Series: Civilization of the American Indian Series , #243
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

Lionel Youst is an independent scholar specializing in the history and anthropology of the Pacific Northwest. He resides in Coos Bay, Oregon.

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