Death of Celilo Falls
Death of Celilo Falls by Katrine Barber. Chapter 5: Relocation and the Persistence of Celilo Village: “We Don’t ‘Come From’ Anywhere”
- Celilo spring ceremony for return of salmon: feast, music, dance, gambling
 - 1952 changed atmosphere
 - 36 families moved due to Dalles inundation
 - First Salmon ceremony stability
 - year-round residents followed seasonal cycles + regional fishers and Wyam; fluctuating population due to cultural relocation
 - Tommy Thompson: appointed salmon chief
- fighting for treaty rights
 - Marshall Dana and Martha McKeown
 - drew attention to issues
 
 - C.G. Davis: BIA subagent “rivaling” Thompson
 - John Whiz, no authorization, Yakama fisher: 1940 “rehabilitation” request to DC and back; used by Roy Taylor for campaign
 
cleanup and restoration
- 1929: Dalles Chamber of Commerce proposals for health cleanup, assimilationism, termination, culminating in inundation
 - poverty discrimination and blame
 - modernization and civilization; protests to assimilation
 - New Celilo protests
 - reasons to relocate: “rocky soil” and sewage costs, highway expansion
 - 1956: 50 families applied for aid; 36 qualified
 - Mid-April: 17 negotiated homes, 12 finding homes, 3 contemplating, 1 waiting for eligibility
 - August: 2 finding homes
 - 5 of 36 families moved to New Celilo, all families without children; others moved to Gresham, Dalles, Washington State, reservations
 - fragmented community; nuclear families emphasized
 - 1957 inundation
 - Thompson death 1959; “death of Celilo Falls”
 - “I hope you can understand. We don't 'come from' anywhere; this is where we were born, this is where we lived all our lives and we don't want to leave.”