Nooksack Indian Tribe: Difference between revisions

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To get started in [[Indigenous Peoples of the United States Genealogy|Indigenous Peoples of the United States Research]]
Homeland: Northern Puget Sound near Strait of Georgia in Northwest Washington
Linguistic group: Salishan


[[Image:NooksackIndians Logo.png|thumb|right|NooksackIndians Logo.png]]  
[[Image:NooksackIndians Logo.png|thumb|right|NooksackIndians Logo.png]]  
[[Image:Nooksack indian location map.png|right|400px|Nooksack indian location map.png]]


=== Tribal Headquarters  ===
=== Tribal Headquarters  ===


'''Nooksack Indian Tribe'''<br>5016 Deming Road / P.O. Box 157<br>Deming, WA 98244<br>Phone: 360-592-5176<br>[https://nooksacktribe.org/ Website]
Nooksack Indian Tribe<br>5016 Deming Road<br>P.O. Box 157<br>Deming WA 98244<br>Ph. 1-360-592-5176<br>FAX 1-360-592-2125


=== History  ===
*Official [http://www.nooksack-tribe.org/ Nooksack Tribal web site]


Homeland: Northern Puget Sound near Strait of Georgia in Northwest Washington
<br> [[Image:Nooksack indian location map.png|right|400px|Nooksack indian location map.png]]


Linguistic group: Salishan
=== History  ===


==== Brief Timeline  ====
==== Brief Timeline  ====

Revision as of 12:02, 17 September 2020

Native American Topics
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Buffalo Hunt under the Wolf-Skin Mask
Beginning Research
Tribes
Record Types
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Other Topics


To get started in Indigenous Peoples of the United States Research

Homeland: Northern Puget Sound near Strait of Georgia in Northwest Washington

Linguistic group: Salishan

NooksackIndians Logo.png

Tribal Headquarters[edit | edit source]

Nooksack Indian Tribe
5016 Deming Road
P.O. Box 157
Deming WA 98244
Ph. 1-360-592-5176
FAX 1-360-592-2125


Nooksack indian location map.png

History[edit | edit source]

Brief Timeline[edit | edit source]

1787: Charles Barkley a European fur trader encountered the Nooksack tribe

1846: Treaty of Washington divides the the Nooksack land betweenCanada and United States

1855: Bad weather delayed tribal leaders from attending the Point Elliott Treaty, lost the opportunity to have a reservation

1971: The tribe is federal recognized, and the Nooksack Reservation was established

Additional References to the History of the Tribe[edit | edit source]

Frederick Webb Hodge, in his Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico, gave a more complete history of the Nooksack tribe, with estimations of the population of the tribe at various time periods.

Reservations[edit | edit source]

Nooksack Reservation

Agencies[edit | edit source]

Records[edit | edit source]

The majority of records of individuals were those created by the agencies. Some records may be available to tribal members through the tribal headquarters.They were (and are) the local office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and were charged with maintaining records of the activities of those under their responsibility. Among these records are:

Important Websites[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]


Bibliography[edit | edit source]