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  • 9305-B7371-1.  (l to r) Tom Frank Yallup, Henry Thompson, William Yallup. Celilo Falls, Columbia River, Oregon September 1938.
    9305-B7371-1.tif
  • 9305-B7367-3.  Chief Tommy Thompson at Celilo Falls, Columbia River, Oregon. August 1940.
    9305-B7367-3.tif
  • 9305-B7367-1. Chief Tommy Thompson at Celilo Falls, Columbia River, Oregon. August 1940.
    9305-B7367-1.tif
  • 9305-B7365-4.  Chief Tommy Thompson at Celilo Falls, Columbia River, Oregon. August 1940.
    9305-B7365-4.tif
  • 9305-B7365-3. William Yallup at Celilo Falls. September 1938.
    9305-B7365-3.tif
  • 9305-B7362-3.  Agnes Thompson (wife of Henry Thompson) and daughter Louise Thompson at Celilo Falls. September 1938.
    9305-B7362-3.tif
  • 9305-B7344.  Mary Ann Kelly Switzler. photographed in Markham's Studio in The Dalles, 1928
    9305-B7344.tif
  • 9305-B7076. The last public appearance of Chief Tommy Thompson, photographed here with his wife Flora, as they were arriving in Celilo for the Feast of the First Salmon on Saturday, May 11, 1957. Chief Thompson, age 102, came to "say a few words of farewell" to the salmon and the falls at the annual festival being held just two months after Celilo had been permanently submerged by the backwaters of The Dalles Dam. After the ceremonies and an overnight stay in Celilo village, he returned to his room at the Hanby nursing home in Hood River. According to newspaper accounts, on the night of his return he had nightmares, which caused him to climb over the guardrails of his bed, when he fell and fractured his right hip. He was taken to the Hood River Memorial hospital where surgeons placed a steel pin in his hip. The next year's Salmon Feast was held in Tommy Thompson's honor, but the elderly Chief never again personally attended. He lived two more years and passed away on April 12, 1959.
    9305-B7076.tif
  • 9305-B7025. Bird's-eye view of Celilo from the rimrock above the village, about 1930. The recently-built Shell station on the east end of town is the Tumwater Auto Service Station, owned by the Seufert brothers. on the lower right is the Celilo general store. That general area is where the present Celilo Village and longhouse are located.
    9305-B7025.tif
  • 9305-B7024. Bird's-eye view of Celilo village about 1928. The gas station on the east end of town hasn't been built yet. The road is paved but the white line hasn't been painted yet, that happened in 1933. On the lower left is the 400 foot parking space that Frank Seufert donated in May 1925. In the lower right is the Celilo General Store.
    9305-B7024.tif
  • 9305-B3499-4. "Winquatt Museum, The Dalles. April 2, 1974." Indian rock art (petroglyphs) removed from the Celilo - Wishram area before being submerged under the backwater of the The Dalles Dam in 1957. These were photographed in 1974 while at the Winquatt Museum in The Dalles. The rock art is now located on Temani Pesh-wa Trail in Columbia Hills State Park (formerly Horsethief Lake State Park), on the Washington side of the Columbia River Gorge near The Dalles.
    9305-B3499-4.tif
  • 9305-B3499-3. "Winquatt Museum, The Dalles. April 2, 1974." Indian rock art (petroglyphs) removed from the Celilo - Wishram area before being submerged under the backwater of the The Dalles Dam in 1957. These were photographed in 1974 while at the Winquatt Museum in The Dalles. The rock art is now located on Temani Pesh-wa Trail in Columbia Hills State Park (formerly Horsethief Lake State Park), on the Washington side of the Columbia River Gorge near The Dalles.
    9305-B3499-3.tif
  • 9305-A4563. Bird's-eye view from the rimrock above Celilo showing the falls. Oregon Trail highway 30, Celilo Indian village, and Oregon Trunk railroad bridge. The Shell station on the right is the Tumwater Auto Service Station, owned by the Seufert brothers, had been recently built. About 1930.
    9305-A4563-2.tif
  • 9305-A4292A. Meeting of tribal delegates held at The Dalles, Oregon, on February 23, 1939, to discuss damages to fishing sites and stations by the flooding of Bonneville Dam. The following delegates were present: Warm springs delegates: Frank Queahpama, Jerry Bruno, John Polk, Isaac McKinley.
Umatilla delegation: George Red Hawk, Allen Patowa, Jim Kesine, Jim Billy.
Yakima delegation: Thomas Yallup, Alex Saluskin, David Miller, Philip Olney. Other Indian groups represented: Rock Creek Indians: William Yallup, Willie John, Jimmy George. 
Celilo: Tommy Thompson, 
Cascade: Henry Charley. Officials present: Superintendents O.L. Babcock of Umatilla Agency, J. W. Elliot of Warm Springs Agency and M. A. Johnson of Yakima Agency; Mr. Shoemaker, representing the War Department. (Information from document in Bureau of Indian Affairs, Record Group 75, The National Archives, Seattle Branch.)
    9305-A4292A.tif
  • 9969-540425-01 Celilo Indian Village during the Feast of the First Salmon, April 25, 1954
    9969-540425-01.tif
  • 9969-540425-04. Indians fishing at Horseshoe Falls, April 25, 1954.
    9969-540425-04.tif
  • 9969-6180. Chief Tommy Thompson of Celilo Indians. April 19, 1945. Chief Thompson and his grandson Otis Anderson came to Portland to make final arrangements for the Feast of the First Salmon. He received nearly $500 in donations to help with the annual event to be held that weekend. It was very rare for Thompson to wear a three piece suit and this writer has never seen another one.
    9969-6180.tif
  • 3425 "Warm Springs Indian war dance. April 23, 1938." Warm Springs Indian Reservation Auditorium
    9969-3425.tif
  • 3195 "Decorated Indian tepee at the Indian gathering at Simnasho, Oregon. July 4, 1937." Warm Springs Indian Reservation ceremonial gathering.
    9969-3195.tif
  • 3198 "Decorated Indian tepee, Celeste and Evelyn Moody standing in front. July 4, 1937." Warm Springs Indian Reservation ceremonial gathering.
    9969-3198.tif
  • 3196 "Jim Wilson on his horse, in front of his tepee. July 4, 1937." Warm Springs Indian Reservation ceremonial gathering.
    9969-3196.tif
  • 3093 Clarence Meanus. May 30, 1937.
    9969-3093.tif
  • 3092 Clarence Meanus. May 30, 1937.
    9969-3092.tif
  • 3091 "Mrs. Meanus, her baby Janice, and Mrs. Moody. May 30, 1937."
    9969-3091.tif
  • 0011-01B. Indian house in Celilo Indian Village before demolition by the Army  Corps of Engineers  in 1957.
    0011-01B.tif
  • 0001-F48-02. Fishing at Horseshoe falls. The platforms in the foreground are on the Oregon shore next to Downes Channel. The island on the left is Chinook rock. The island on the other side of it is Standing Island.
    0001-F48-02.tif
  • CS00522-01.  Pendleton Round-Up Parade, 1940s.
    CS00522-01.tif
  • CS00378-07. Indian fish drying shacks at Celilo Indian village, April 24, 1955.
    CS00378-07.tif
  • CS00378-02. Cooking fish at the Feast of the First Salmon, Celilo Indian village, April 24, 1955.
    CS00378-02.tif
  • Y-590415-B1. Indian woman cooking in Celilo Longhouse kitchen April 15, 1959
    Y-590415-B1.tif
  • 9410-02. A tourist carrying a Kodak Brownie camera poses next to an Indian fishing in Downes channel at Celilo Falls. ca. 1936
    9410-02.tif
  • 9305-B7385-09. Looking north from the Oregon shore. From left to right, the fishing scaffolds are suspended from Standing island, Horseshoe falls are in the background, an empty cable car is waiting on its Chinook rock terminus, on the right is the Oregon shore, the upper cable car terminal and below it are Indians fishing Downes channel. October 5, 1956
    9305-B7385-09.tif
  • 9305-B7381-2. Judd Frank (Nez Perce) making pies at the last Feast of the First Salmon at Celilo Village before Celilo Falls were permanently submerged by the backwater of The Dalles Dam. Photo taken April 29, 1956.
    9305-B7381-2.tif
  • 9305-B7361. Kulchiat (Louise Lunie Andrews), photographed in Markham's Studio in The Dalles, 1928
    9305-B7361.tif
  • 9305-B7350. Mildred Smith Tyler. 1928. photographed in Markham's Studio in The Dalles, 1928
    9305-B7350.tif
  • 9305-B7360.  Agnes Henry Jackson. photographed in Markham's Studio in The Dalles, 1928
    9305-B7360.tif
  • 9305-B7346. Oregon Trunk railroad bridge at Celilo after the Celilo Canal was built in 1915. Ladder rungs had been drilled into each granite support of the bridge and that was how Indians accessed fishing stations on Kiska and other islands. During the spring freshet, Celilo Falls itself woud often be completely submerged and then these islands were the best fishing sites.
    9305-B7346.tif
  • 9305-B7326A.  Chief Tommy Thompson at end of long house in Celilo Village. April 16, 1939. Celilo Falls, Oregon
    9305-B7326A.tif
  • 9305-B7051 Dip netting salmon at Horseshoe falls at Celilo using stationary nets (set-dip, or bag-netting). Stationary nets were rested on the bottom of the channel to await a fish, rather than being moved to capture one. These nets were much larger and the net around the hoop was fixed open, rather than movable nets that had a thong which would close the net like a purse around the fish to prevent its escape. Stationary dip nets are much deeper than movable nets, the one shown here may be five to six feet deep. This type of net worked best when fish were likely to be caught falling back from strong currents or attempts to leap the falls. When the fish would strike the net, a vibration would travel through a string to the fisherman, who would lift the fish up quickly. This string can be seen hanging from the hoop and resting on the planks by the fisherman's right foot. The man in the foreground is Louis Jack and on the left is Joe Skahan. Photo by Ralph Gifford ca. 1940
    9305-B7051.tif
  • 9305-B7045. Indian children sit on steps and drink soft drinks at the Celilo General Store and Post Office. The store owner is Charles E Frye, and his wife Laura B. is holding their granddaughter Susan. April 1940
    9305-B7045.tif
  • 9305-B3499-5. "Winquatt Museum, The Dalles. April 2, 1974." Indian rock art (petroglyphs) removed from the Celilo - Wishram area before being submerged under the backwater of the The Dalles Dam in 1957. These were photographed in 1974 while at the Winquatt Museum in The Dalles. The rock art is now located on Temani Pesh-wa Trail in Columbia Hills State Park (formerly Horsethief Lake State Park), on the Washington side of the Columbia River Gorge near The Dalles.
    9305-B3499-5.tif
  • 9305-B3499-2. Petroglyph of an owl. "Winquatt Museum, The Dalles. April 2, 1974." Indian rock art (petroglyphs) removed from the Celilo - Wishram area before being submerged under the backwater of the The Dalles Dam in 1957. These were photographed in 1974 while at the Winquatt Museum in The Dalles. The rock art is now located on Temani Pesh-wa Trail in Columbia Hills State Park (formerly Horsethief Lake State Park), on the Washington side of the Columbia River Gorge near The Dalles.
    9305-B3499-2.tif
  • 9305-A4307A. General Wainwright meets Celilo Indians, November 15, 1945.  Wainwright was a four star general who had recently been liberated from thirty nine months of captivity as a Japanese prisoner of war.  At the time, he was America's most famous hero of the war, having endured the Battan Death March and torture in captivity.  He was making a national tour of appearances to promote the war bond drive.  For personal reasons, he requested a detour from his itinerary so he could visit Celilo Falls.  After his visit, he resumed his tour and made a speech in The Dalles, then traveled to Hood River and on to Portland for more speeches and a national radio broadcast. (left to right) 1: Charley Quitoken (Quetukhin, Quittacken, Quitalkin), 2: General Wainwright, 3: Chief Tommy Thompson, 4: Henry Thompson (son of Tommy Thompson). Celilo Falls in background.
    9305-A4307A.tif
  • 8609-R10-07. Warm Springs Indians. All-Indian rodeo at Tygh Valley. May 22, 1955.
    8609-R10-07.tif
  • 9969-561007-02. Indians fishing at Celilo Falls, October 7, 1956
    9969-561007-02.tif
  • 3424 "Warm Springs Indian war dance. April 23, 1938." Warm Springs Indian Reservation Auditorium
    9969-3424.tif
  • 3199 Indian tepees at Simnasho as glimpsed through the pine trees. July 4, 1937. Warm Springs Indian Reservation ceremonial gathering.
    9969-3199.tif
  • 0011-06A. overview of Indian dwellings and shacks at Celilo Indian village before it's demolition and relocation in 1957.
    0011-06A.tif
  • 0001-F53-03. Fishing on Standing island. Albert Brothers islands on right, Chiefs island on right. September 9, 1956.
    0001-F53-03.tif
  • 0001-F52-04. Motorized cable crossing from the Oregon shore at Horseshoe Falls going to the Albert Brothers islands. September 9, 1956.
    0001-F52-04.tif
  • 0001-F48-11. September 9, 1956.  Oregon Camera Club field trip.  Younger Indian woman in traditional dress is Miss Buster George, of Celilo Village.  Older Indian woman in traditional dress is Rachel Edmo, also of Celilo Village.  (she is the mother of Ed Edmo)
    0001-F48-11.tif
  • 9305-A4406. Chief Thompson at the Quartrback Club, The Dalles, October 14th, 1941
    9305-A4406 2-2.tif
  • Y-480418-22. 2 Indian women serving food to Indian mothers and their children in the Celilo Village longhouse during the Feast of the First Salmon dinner. April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-22.tif
  • Y-480418-02. Celilo Falls, Feast of the First Salmon. April 18, 1948. "Filets. Celilo tribeswoman prepares thick slices of freshly-caught salmon to be served at ceremonial longhouse dinner."
    Y-480418-02.tif
  • Ackroyd C00084-4. View from Chinook rock looking back at the crowds of tourists on the Oregon shore next to the upper cable area overlooking Horseshoe falls, at Celilo Falls, September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-4.tif
  • Ackroyd C00084-2. Celilo Falls September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-2.tif
  • Y-480418-15. Flora Thompson, wife of Chief Tommy Thompson. Celilo Indian village, Feast of the First Salmon. April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-15.tif
  • Y-480418-12. Tim-min-y Moses, sister of Mrs. Tommy Thompson, cooking salmon.  April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-12.tif
  • Y-480418-06. "Small Fry. Right up to date, younger Celilo celebrants blew bubble gum, read comic magazines" Indian children in the Celilo Village longhouse during the Feast of the First Salmon. Note Chief Thopson behind the door. April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-06.tif
  • Ackroyd C00025-1. Celilo Falls aerial September 12, 1947 (color faded, coverted to greyscale)
    ackroyd-C00025-1.tif
  • Y-480418-24. Celilo Village longhouse, Feast of the First Salmon dinner. April 18, 1948. The purpose of this annual feast was to give thanks and welcome the first salmon to start the spring run up the Columbia River. With the beginning of each year's new salmon run, Celilo Indians could eat fresh fish instead of the dried salmon they preserved from the year before. Historically this was expected to be the second or third week of April, but the Indians would begin the celebration only after the fish actually appeared. Just the year before, in 1948, Chief Tommy Thompson had gone to the Warm Springs to invite all the Indians to Celilo for the feast on the weekend the fish were anticapated, but when the fish didn't run he had to postpone the ceremony for another week. And nine years before, in 1940, the feast was held on the first weekend of April, at the time it was said to be the earliest the feast had ever been held. Attendance had ranged from, according to newspaper reports, 47 Indians in 1938, rising to 600 at this one. The following year, in 1949, the feast was again postponed due to no fish. With the end of Celilo in the forseeable future, crowds continued to grow and finally, in 1956, at the last Feast of the First Salmon before the innundation, unseasonably warm weather in the late winter thawed the ice fields and Celilo falls flooded making fishing impossible. Celilo Indians were forced to buy 400 pounds of salmon on the commercial market in Portland to feed the crowd, which the newspaper reported as being comprised of "More white folks with cameras than Indian fishermen with dipnets." Ever since the falls were covered, the feast has been held at a pre-arranged time.
    Y-480418-24.tif
  • Y-480418-19. Indians in Celilo Village during the Feast of the First Salmon, April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-19.tif
  • Y-480418-07. Crowds outside the longhouse at Celilo during the 1948 Feast of the First Salmon. The land surrounding the Long House is barren after being bulldozed to make room for war-surplus prefabricated houses to be moved from Madras and reassembled in Celilo Village. The entire village below the highway was going to be condemmend becasue The Dalles Dam's backwater would innundate it. Indians objected to almost every aspect of the relocation and vigouously opposed it.  April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-07.tif
  • Y-480418-04. Celilo Village longhouse, Feast of the First Salmon dinner. April 18, 1948. Standing in rear, Chief Tommy Thompson and Henry Charlie. The purpose of this annual feast was to give thanks and welcome the first salmon to start the spring run up the Columbia River. With the beginning of each year's new salmon run, Celilo Indians could eat fresh fish instead of the dried salmon they preserved from the year before. Historically this was expected to be the second or third week of April, but the Indians would begin the celebration only after the fish actually appeared. Just the year before, in 1948, Chief Tommy Thompson had gone to the Warm Springs reservation to invite all the Indians to Celilo for the feast on the next  weekend when the fish were anticapated, but when the fish didn't run he had to postpone the ceremony for another week. And nine years before, in 1940, the feast was held on the first weekend of April, at the time it was said to be the earliest the feast had ever been held. Attendance had ranged from, according to newspaper reports, 47 Indians in 1938, rising to 600 at this one. The following year, in 1949, the feast was again postponed due to no fish. With the end of Celilo in the forseeable future, crowds continued to grow and finally, in 1956, at the last Feast of the First Salmon before the innundation, unseasonably warm weather in the late winter thawed the ice fields and Celilo falls flooded making fishing impossible. Celilo Indians were forced to buy 400 pounds of salmon on the commercial market in Portland to feed the crowd, which the newspaper reported as being comprised of "More white folks with cameras than Indian fishermen with dipnets." Ever since the falls were covered, the feast has been held at a pre-arranged time.
    Y-480418-04.tif
  • Ackroyd C00084-7. Celilo Falls September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-7.tif
  • Ackroyd C00084-3. Celilo Falls September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-3.tif
  • Ackroyd C00027-1. "Indians fishing at Celilo Falls September, 1947"
    ackroyd-C00027-1.tif
  • Ackroyd 03991-5. "Indians fishing at Celilo Falls. September 13, 1952"
    Ackroyd-03991-5.tiff
  • Ackroyd 03991-3. "Indians fishing at Celilo Falls. September 13, 1952"
    Ackroyd-03991-3.tif
  • Ackroyd 03991-1. "Indians fishing at Celilo Falls. September 13, 1952"
    Ackroyd-03991-1.tiff
  • Y-480418-16. Indians in Celilo Village during the Feast of the First Salmon, April 18, 1948.
    Y-480418-16.tif
  • Y-480418-09. Celilo Falls, Feast of the First Salmon. April 18, 1948. Indians on platforms dipnetting in Downes channel.
    Y-480418-09.tif
  • Y-480418-03. Timenonwye Mosstocken-Moses_Hypier (Timminy Moses), sister of Flora Thompson cooking salmon at the Feast of the First Salmon. April 18, 1948. She was born and raised in Maryhill, and lived there with a large family.
    Y-480418-03.tif
  • ackroyd-C00084-6. Celilo Falls September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-6.tif
  • Ackroyd C00084-5. Celilo Falls September 13, 1952
    ackroyd-C00084-5.tif
  • Ackroyd 03991-2. "Indians fishing at Celilo Falls. September 13, 1952"
    Ackroyd-03991-2.tiff
  • CS00963-14. Fishing in Downes channel, Spring 1956. The rope coming from the boom pole beside the fisherman is there to keep his net open in the downsteam direction. The setup is good for catching fish who are heading upstream but are beaten back by the strong current. The fishing platform on the opposite side has been rebuilt for the season with new support beams
    CS00963-14.tif
  • CS00962-04. Deck of the ruins of the old Tumwater fishwheel No. 2 in the 1940s. On the left is Big island, on the right is Papoose island and behind it Chief island.
    CS00962-04.tif
  • CS00963-06. Looking toward the Oregon shore from the Oregon Trunk Bridge at Kiska and all the small islands surrounding it during the spring high water, 1956
    CS00963-06.tif
  • CS00364-02. Hand-pulled cable car moving toward Chinook rock at Celilo Falls, September 9, 1956.
    CS00364-02.tif
  • CS00962-02. Oregon shore at Celilo next to the pool below Horseshoe Falls. Downes Channel in the foreground. ca. 1949-1952.
    CS00962-02.tif
  • 9305-B7385-4. Views of Celilo Falls before the permanent innundation. All the equipment and lumber scaffolds used for cable car transport have been stripped from the rocks. October 5, 1956. The channel on the left is between Papoose island (left) and Standing island (to its right, center foreground). The island behind Standing is Chief. Further back on the left is the tip of Big island and the Albert Brothers islands. On the extreme right is Chinook rock and behind it is Horseshoe falls and the Oregon shore.
    9305-B7385-4.tif
  • 9969-7476. "Joy Petchell doing an Indian dance number at the Star Theatre show." February 4, 1949.
    9969-7476.tif
  • 9336-MA32. Indian group on the steps of Holy Family Catholic Church, Burns, Oregon. Identifications: extreme left Takama (mother of Gladys Macey), man 2nd from left with hat glancing left- Clyde Johnson, man 3rd from left on step with no hat- husband of Grace White, woman left of Father Huel with white scarf over hair- Grace White, behind her with cap- Teddy Dick, center- Father Huel, seated center on lower step with hat- Chief Captain Louey, old man seated on second step to right- William Johnson, middle aged man behind him- Jim Tooie, alter boy unidentified, partially obscured young man to the right of the right altar boy- Betchel Capp (son of Johnny and Ada Capp), extreme right standing man with hat- Johnny Capp, woman- Ada Capp. Indians with headdresses are from Pendleton.
    9336-MA32.tif
  • 9336-owl12. New Paiute Indian Camp, 1937
    9336-owl12.tif
  • 9305-B7337. Henry Thompson catching a fish with his dipnet about 1940 at Celilo Falls.
    9305-B7337.tif
  • 9305-B7379. View of Celilo Falls before 1932. Note lack of construction on Albert Brothers island. Photographed early in the season, the building of platforms has just begun. Water is still high from the spring freshet.
    9305-B7379.tif
  • 9305-B7354. A postcard view of Celilo falls dating to the late 1920s.
    9305-B7354.tif
  • 9305-B7349. Portrait of Elsie Pistolhead, mother to Douglas Yallup. 1928.
    9305-B7349.tif
  • Agnes Thompson (wife of Henry Thompson) and daughter Louise Thompson at 1940 Old Fort Dalles Frolics Parade, August 29, 1940.
    9305-A4372-2.tif
  • CS00881-01. Apache Motel neon sign. 166 Fourth E St, Moab, Utah.
    cs00881-01.tif
  • Celilo September 1929
    9904-3636-02.tif
  • 9336-Owl 13 Paiute Indians, Burns, Oregon. 1937. Photo by O. W. Lubcke. Identifications: (from left) 1-Bertha Washington, 2- (standing) Emma Kennedy, 3- Annie Kennedy, 4- Mary Teeman, 5- (little boy) Leonard Bob, 6- (seated woman with baby) Bertha Hoodie or Norma, 7- (Man standing with back to camera) Perry Parker, 8- (seated) Blind Jim, 9th from left is unidentified, 10- (man with stick) Pete Teeman, 11- (standing between windows) Charlie Jim, 12- (standing near right window) Teedy Teeman. Identifications of Indians on the ground: 13- (right of man with cap) Charlie Gill, 14- (man with big hat facing camera) unidentified, 15- (next man with white hat) Jimmie Louie, 16- (next man with black hat) unidentified, 17- Marianne Louie, 18- (big woman) Nally Dave, 19- (woman behind small girl) Jenny Louie, 20- (small girl) Juanita Louie, 21- (extreme right) Minnie Paddy.
    9336-owl-13.tif
  • 9336-MA28 Paiute Indians in front of Skaggs Safeway, Burns, Oregon. Location on NE corner of Broadway and Washington Streets. (directly across street from Heck's studio) (see also AB37, which was taken at the same time) Left- Mary Louie (wife of Jimmie Louie), young girl on left- Ethel Louie, Annie Winnehook (wife of Jake Winnehook), young boy- Raymond Kennedy, adult- Annie Kennedy, baby in arms- Lester Kennedy.
    9336-MA28.tif
  • 9305-B7012-3. The Columbia river at Big Eddy. The entrance to the Celilo Canal is on the right. The Seufert cannery is in the background on the left, Seufert's No. 2 fishwheel is on the point in the center of the image. The Dalles Dam was built in the center of this picture. Taken about 1930.
    9305-B7012-3.tif
  • 9305-B3499-7. "Winquatt Museum, The Dalles. April 2, 1974.
    9305-B3499-7.tif
  • 9305-A4635-03 “Aerial. The Dalles Dam. March 7, 1955”
    9305-A4635-03.tif
  • CS00055-14. Celilo Falls ca. 1949-1952. During the high water of spring, the falls are nearly submerged and fishing is done only at Downes Channel and other sites downriver. The wood cable car terminus is sticking up out of the water on the submerged Chinook Rock.
    CS00055-14.tif
  • 9336-owl11. New Paiute Indian Camp, 1937
    9336-owl11.tif
  • 336-MA36. "Paiute Indians, Burns, Oregon" on the steps of Holy Family Catholic Church. Identifications: seated center left on lower step- Chief Captain Louey, old man seated center right on lower step- William Johnson. Indians with headdresses are from Pendleton.
    9336-MA36.tif
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