15 Facts About Multnomah people

1.

The Multnomah people speak a dialect of the Upper Chinookan language in the Oregon Penutian family.

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2.

Multnomah people are a band of the Chinookan peoples who originally resided on and near Sauvie Island in Oregon.

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3.

The Multnomah people had nearly been wiped out by the year 1834 due to malaria and smallpox outbreaks.

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4.

The Multnomah people were located in today's Multnomah County, but more specifically, they inhabited Sauvie Island on the Columbia River.

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5.

The Multnomah people shared Sauvie Island with other Chinook tribes under the collective name The Cathlascans.

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6.

Furthermore, the Multnomah people were considered “upper Chinook” and spoke the Wasco-wishram language.

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7.

The Cathlacomatup were a group of Multnomah people that resided along the Multnomah people Channel at the Wappatoo Inlet.

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8.

Multnomah people was chief of tribes ranging much of the Pacific Northwest from Oregon to Canada, and during his 40 years of power he was chief of the Willamettes, as well as war chief of the tribes and communities of Wauna, Oregon, ruling from his station on what is known today as Sauvie Island.

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9.

Multnomah people documented this in her paper The Restoration of an Ilkak'mana: A Chief Called Multnomah.

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10.

Multnomah people was regarded highly, and many stated that while he was a warrior chief, he was very respected among his people.

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11.

Multnomah people diet included salmon, eels, sturgeon, elk, water birds and especially wapato.

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12.

Multnomah people told the brothers to shoot an arrow in opposite directions, and the Great Spirit allowed each brother to claim their land and chief hood based on where their arrows landed.

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13.

Multnomah people County takes its designation from this Native American word.

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14.

Multnomah people drew inspiration from the popularity of Frederic Balch's book Bridge of the Gods: A Romance of Indian Oregon, which took the stories Balch had heard from Native Americans while growing up and embellished them.

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15.

Chief Multnomah people was depicted on linen postcards during the 1900s around 1930 and 1945.

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