Southwest Oregon Research Project
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Southwest Oregon Research Project
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Southwest Oregon Research Project
SWORP
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SWORP
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The primary purpose of the Southwest Oregon Research Project (SWORP) is to gather photocopies of widely scattered and overlooked original documents pertaining to the history of the Native peoples of Oregon. Native peoples have undergone a history of genocide, discrimination, and federal termination by the United States government in the past 200 years, but this history has been largely concealed in various archives and federal research institutions. SWORP aims to repatriate materials in national repositories to the Native American tribes. The project was executed in three phases, and further work is planned for the future. SWORP I began in 1995 and in 1997, the materials gathered by these researchers were shared with five Oregon and Northern California tribes in a Potlatch. SWORP II gathered further materials on Oregon tribes and also expanded their focus to include Northern California and Washington tribes. In 1999 the SWORP collection was reorganized to make the materials easier to use. The reorganization included material descriptions, indexes, and a finding aid for researchers. Future SWORP research will reach out to other archives to obtain manuscripts of wider historical importance.
The primary purpose of the Southwest Oregon research Project (SWORP) is to gather photocopies of widely scattered and overlooked original documents pertaining to the history of the Native peoples of greater Oregon. Many of these documents have been languishing in national repositories, particularly in Washington, D.C. SWORP aims to repatriate these materials to the Native American Tribes. Through the agency of Native Americans themselves, the archive and continuing project allows Native American and university scholars to continue to research and rewrite histories of colonization that have been imposed upon Native peoples.
Native peoples of greater Oregon have undergone a history of genocide, discrimination and federal termination by the Unites States government in the past 200 years, but this history has been largely concealed in various archives and federal research institutions. Coquille tribal elder George Wasson, Jr. noticed this problem and termed it "a cultural back hole" (Wasson, 1994). Wasson conceived the idea for a project like SWORP in the 1970s while doing research at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C.
The project itself was executed in three phases, and further work is planned for the future. The first effort, SWORP I, was carried out in 1995, with a research team that combined Coquille tribal members with University of Oregon graduate students. In 1997, the materials gathered by SWORP I researchers were shared with five Oregon and Northern California tribes in a unique event--a Potlatch, or "giveaway"--organized by the Coquille tribe and the students. After the Potlatch, work began on SWORP II, an effort to gather further materials on the Oregon tribes. Additionally, SWORP II expanded the focus of research to include Northern California and Washington tribes. In 1999, the SWORP collection was reorganized to make the materials easier to use. The reorganization included material descriptions, indexes, and a finding aid for researchers. As yet, SWORP does not exhaust the material that exists about Oregon Native peoples in worldwide collections. In the future, SWORP researchers will reach out to other archives to bring back additional manuscripts of longer and wider historical importance. For more information about the history of the project see "A Detailed History of SWORP," below.
SWORP is the first known project of its type to be undertaken for a Native American Nation in cooperation with a major university. The SWORP process of using research teams with a combination of Native and non-native researchers significantly breaks away from previous models of anthropological research upon Native peoples by academic institutions. Historically, non-native historians, anthropologists and ethnographers have defined the parameters of the field of American Indian and Native American history. Some academic researchers sought to exploit Native peoples by mining their languages, artworks and culture as part of the "dying culture" theory. The early efforts of research on Native peoples have mainly benefited those in academic disciplines, while Tribal governments and peoples have not equally benefited from this unbalanced relationship. In addition, Native cultures have been studied by researchers who had a European cultural bias, and such a cultural filter does not usually recognize a Native cultural worldview when interpreting Native culture and society. Donald Fixico writes "Historians who study Indian history must think in terms of culture, community, environment, and metaphysics (Mihesuah 1998:87).
The sharing of SWORP materials through the potlatch by the Smithsonian Institution, the University of Oregon and the Coquille Indian Tribe creates a unique "gift of history" in which all of the regional tribes receive portions of the SWORP collection relevant to their cultural context. In addition, part of the SWORP collection contains letters and petitions from Native people struggling to survive within the reservation system. Through the use of these letters, and other correspondence from United States Indian Agents, teaches at Day and Boarding schools, physicians and the ethnographic documents of this same period, we can now reconstruct an informed history of the early Grande Ronde and Siletz Reservations.
A Detailed History of SWORP
The first effort, SWORP I, was carried out in 1995 under the direction of University of Oregon graduate students and Coquille Tribal members George Wasson and Jason Younker. At the University of Oregon, Dr. Jon Erlandson, then an Assistant Professor of Anthropology, served as faculty advisor and helped raise and administer the funds and provided liaison and logistical support. The SWORP I research team combined Coquille tribal members with University of Oregon graduate students. Team members included R. Scott Byram (University of Oregon), Dennis Griffin (University of Oregon), Mark Tveskov (University of Oregon), Shirod Younker (Coquille/University of Oregon), Denise Mitchell (Hockema) (Coquille/University of Oregon), Jeff Weidemann (University of Oregon), Jason Younker (Coquille/University of Oregon), and George Wasson (Coquille/University of Oregon. SWORP I was co-funded by the Coquille Economic Development Corporation (CEDCO), the Smithsonian Institution National Museum of Natural History's American Indian Program and the University of Oregon Graduate School (Younker 1997:24). The field research team spent 10 weeks working under the direction of Dr. JoAllyn Archibald at the National Anthropology Archives and the National Archives in Washington, D.C.
In the spirit of the original efforts to crate the SWORP collection, the Coquille Indian Tribe and the University of Oregon initiated a potlatch or "giveaway," the first of such events in a century for the tribe. The purpose of the Potlatch was to disseminate copies of the entire SWORP collection to five federally recognized tribes of western Oregon and northwest California: the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde; the Confederated Tribes of Siletz; the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua, and Siuslaw; the Cow Creek Band of Umpqua Indians; and Smith River Rancheria Subsequently a copy of the archived materials was given to Elk Valley Rancheria of northern California. The Potlatch was jointly sponsored and funded by the Coquille Indian Tribe and the University of Oregon to "honor and celebrate the memory of the indigenous people who lived through he holocaust-like conditions of the early settlement period of Oregon (Younker 1997:23).
Organized primarily by Jason Younker, George Wasson, and Jon Erlandson of the Anthropology Department, and staff of the Knight Library, the Potlatch was held on May 17, 1997, at the University of Oregon's Willamette Hall Atrium and had nearly 350 attendees. Don Ivy, Director of the Cultural Department of the Coquille Tribe, was Master of Ceremonies for the Potlatch. While at the Potlatch, George Wasson honored the women of the Coquille tribe for carrying on the tribal traditions despite the history of discrimination and termination against the Native people of Oregon. Also honored were all the participants and organizers of the SWORP I project. Distinguished visitors from other Native American Nations were also honored, including Dr. JoAllyn Archambault, Director of the American Indian Program at the Smithsonian Institutions' Museum of National History; Ed Edmo, traditional storyteller, and Dr. N. Scott Momaday, traditional storyteller and writer. Loren Bommelyn of Smith River Rancheria and Bud Lane of the Siletz Tribe brought their two groups of Feather Dancers for the Potlatch presentation and commemoration and presented tradition Tolowa/Tutuni songs and dances of blessings for the occasion.
As a result of the Potlatch, Jason Younker wrote a master's thesis, "Revival of a Potlatch Tradition: Coquille Giveaway," which was completed December 12, 1997 and the following year a videotape commemorating the Potlatch was also completed. Both the Master's thesis and videotape are in the SWORP Collection in the University of Oregon Special Collections & University Archives, Knight Library.
After the Potlatch, planning began for a second trip to Washington, D.C. to gather additional archival materials. SWORP's indigenous regional focus was expanded to include northern California and Southwest Washington, as the records from these areas were likely to hold important information for the western Oregon tribes. Additionally, the project team looked for more records from within western Oregon.
SWORP II was carried out in the summer of 1998 under the direction of Mark Tveskov and Jason Younker, with Jon Erlandson again serving as faculty facilitator and liaison. Field researchers Denise Mitchell and Amanda Mitchell of the Coquille Indian Tribe, Patty Whereat, Director of the Culture Department of the Confederated Tribes of the Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw, Robert Kentta, Director of the Cultural Department of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community, David Lewis of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community, and Mark Tveskov from the Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon spent eight weeks in Washington, D.C. scanning through the National Anthropology Archives and the National Archives.
As in SWORP I, Dr JoAllyn Archambault acted as sponsor for the SWORP II team at the National Anthropological Archives. The filed research was co-funded by the Coquille Tribe, the University of Oregon Graduate School, and the Smithsonian Institution's Native American Internship Program. SWORP II was sent to the Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, where Mark Tveskov then spent nine months organizing and indexing the collection at Southern Oregon University with the help of students in the Department of Sociology/Anthropology there.
The reorganization project for SWORP began in August 1999 when David Lewis, graduate student in the Department of Anthropology, began indexing and describing SWORP I and SWORP II. The effort was supported by a graduate teaching fellowship from the Graduate School of the University of Oregon and was supervised by Dr. Jon Erlandson of the Department of Anthropology, and Linda Long, Manuscripts Librarian, in Special Collections & University Archives at the University of Oregon Libraries. Physical amalgamation of the SWORP I and SWORP II collections began in spring 2000 and was completed in summer 2000 by David Lewis under the direction of Linda Long.
Works cited:
Mihesuah, Devon A. ed. Natives and Academics: Researching and Writing about American Indians . University of Nebraska Press: Lincoln, 1998.
Wasson, George B. The Coquille Indians and the Cultural, "Black Hole" of the Southwest Oregon Coast . Thesis, Department of Anthropology, University of Oregon, Eugene, 1994.
Younker, Jason. Revival of a Potlatch Tradition: Coquille Giveaway . Masters thesis, University of Oregon, Department of Anthropology, Eugene, 1997.
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Anthropology
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
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