COMPOUND OBJECT (4 Items)

Still Fighting after All These Years: A Puyallup Tribal Member's Perspective Item Info

Rachael Williamson, research essay...
Rachael Williamson, research essay - application/pdf
PDF
Nancy Shippentower-Games, transcript
Nancy Shippentower-Games, transcript - application/pdf
PDF
Nancy Shippentower-Games, interview
Nancy Shippentower-Games, interview - audio
AUDIO
Project bibliography
Project bibliography - application/pdf
PDF
Title:
Still Fighting after All These Years: A Puyallup Tribal Member's Perspective
Creator:
Williamson, Rachael
Date Created:
2017
Description:
Nancy Shippentower-Games is a member of the Puyallup Tribe in Washington State. Nancy's parents are Donald and Janet McCloud. She has seven siblings and grew up on the banks of the Nisqually River and Puyallup Rivers and currently resides in Yelm, Washington. Nancy grew up during the fishing wars that took place on both the Nisqually and Puyallup Rivers. Her mother Janet McCloud and her uncle, Billy Frank Jr., were very active advocates during the battle over salmon. She remembers vividly the violence, racism and injustices that she and her people suffered as they fought for what was rightfully theirs. By revisiting the circumstances and propositions set forth in the Medicine Creek Treaty of 1854, a better understanding of what the Puyallup and Nisqually tribes have been fighting for comes into focus. While the Boldt Decision of 1974 was a turning point for Northwest Tribes, concerns such as climate change, overpopulation, and proposals such as the LNG plant in Tacoma continue to put the salmon runs at risk.
Subjects:
Tacoma Coast Salish peoples Indigenous peoples Fishing Activists Race discrimination Politics Environmental aspects
Location:
Puyallup Reservation
Latitude:
47.23648939411235
Longitude:
-122.40910344939977
Source:
Tacoma Community History Project
Type:
record
Format:
compound_object
Source
Preferred Citation:
"Still Fighting after All These Years: A Puyallup Tribal Member's Perspective", Tacoma Community History Project, University of Washington Tacoma Library
Reference Link:
https://erika-b.github.io/tchp/items/chp201706.html
Rights
Rights:
Individuals may use project materials for scholarly or research purposes, according to the provisions of fair use, but reproducing, publishing, or broadcasting any oral history project materials requires permission. For more information, see http://content.lib.washington.edu/tacomacommweb/using-projects.html
Standardized Rights:
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/