Post-Contact Life
The Klamath felt the influence of Euro-Americans well before
extensive exploration and settlement reached the Klamath Basin. By the
early nineteenth century the presence of Hudson's Bay Company traders
along the Columbia River served both to expand native trade networks and
to arm many of the Sahaptin tribes of that region. The Klamath
encountered Hudson's Bay personnel beginning in 1825. Nonetheless for
several decades the Klamath remained relatively isolated from the
Euro-American presence centered on the Columbia (Stem 1956a:230-32).
In the 1840s the American expeditions led by John C. Fremont marked
a new era, in which the goal was conquest and subjugation of the Indian
peoples, rather than merely exploration and trade. Changing conditions
drew the Klamath into sporadic though unsuccessful warfare against white
settlers. At the same time, the wealth that could be gained through
slave raiding and trading provided greater incentives for warfare
against other Indian tribes. These factors led to a series of changes:
greater prestige for leadership in warfare, a more permanent pattern of
leadership, and "a heightened sense of Klamath political, as well as
cultural, integrity" (Stem 1956a:241).
Over the next two decades the white presence in southern Oregon,
military and civilian, steadily increased. In 1864 a treaty was
negotiated, not only with the Klamath but with the Modoc and a group of
Northern Paiutes as well, ceding vast territories to the federal
government,and creating in compensation a reservation of approximately
1,100,000 acres. This established the federally recognized Klamath
Tribe, bringing together Klamath, Modoc, and Paiute on what had been
exclusively Klamath territory (Stern 1956a; Kappler et al.
19041941:2:865-868; Ruby and Brown 1986:91). This event began a radical
transformation of the Klamath way of life.
As a result of the 1864 treaty the Klamath had to contend with a new
authority, the U.S. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Here as elsewhere the
Bureau sought to transform Indian culture. As Indian Commissioner
Thomas J. Morgan, in 1889, acknowledge the Bureau's long-standing
policy, "The Indians must conform to 'the white man's ways,' peaceably
if they will, forcibly if they must" (in Hagan 1988:61). For the
Klamath, as Stern has noted, this policy "effected sweeping social
change on the reservation, levelling the nascent class distinctions by
freeing slaves as full members of the reservation and banning polygyny,
a prerogative particularly of the wealthy" (Stern n.d.:53). More
broadly,
An enforced culture change began with the treaty. There was as a
result proscription of the shaman's ecstatic curing activities and an
intensity of Christian missionization. Other introductions included a
new technology, White education in reservation boarding schools, a new
status in relation to an established administrative agency, and new
concepts of property, society, and political tribe. (Spencer
1952b:219)
The Klamath historian and former tribal chairman Lynn Schonchin
described the change in these terms:
The Klamath experineced the situation of being bound to the land in
a different sense. In the aboriginal sense, they were bound to the
land by birth because it provided subsistence. Now, they were bound to a
reservation by law. This also changed the way in which they lived.
Cultural practices were forbidden, no longer could they use the
sweatlodge, no longer could they go to the mountains and streams on
power quests, no longer could they practice their religion, even their
language was forbidden. Yet, because of the strong cultural foundation
they had, they adjusted to the new society, and adopted its practices.
(Schonchin 1990:150)
It is a testimony to the strength of Klamath culture that, despite
the government's best efforts, the Klamath language and many significant
elements of Klamath tradition survived.
Among the reactions to this policy of forced culture change was the
enthusiastic acceptance of a series of millenarian movements: in 1871
the Ghost Dance and in 1874 the Earthlodge Cult. Both movements taught
that if proper ritual were followed, the dead would return and a new era
of felicity would begin for the Indians. These movements carried at
least an implicit anti-white sentiment, at times becoming overt in
doctrines predicting the disappearance of the whites as part of the
predicted world transformation. In the mid-1870s the Dream Dance
appeared. This had a different character: rather than offering
millenarian images, it provided a new vehicle for traditional (and
officially prohibited) shamanistic performance (see Spier 1927a; Nash
1937; DuBois 1939:11-12). The Indian Shaker Church, a syncretic
religious movement originating oil Puget Sound which combined
traditional and Christian elements, came to the Klamath Reservation in
1914. It remained influential there for several decades, and retains a
small but active following today (Barnett 1957; Stem1966:223-37; Amoss
1990).
The modern Klamath Reservation has had a complex history. Tribal
boundaries have been repeatedly redrawn, and complex schemes of
compensation undertaken (Ruby andBrown 1986:90-95). The General
Allotment (Dawes) Act of 1887, intended to break up tribal holdings and
convert traditional Indian peoples into Americanized farmers, proved
comparatively ineffective on Klamath Reservation. The Klamath
Reservation lands consisted largely of timber, inhospitable to farming,
and in any case too valuable to be declared surplus and sold to
outsiders. As a result, from early in the twentieth century tribal
members received substantial income from timber operations (Stern
1961:172-73). The comparative wealth this allowed served as an effective
goad to culture change, and in particular to the abandonment of much
traditional economic activity:
From 1913, tribal members began to enjoy dividends from the cutting
of tribal timber, in the form of semi-annual per capita payments. They
also saw the mushroom growth of mill towns upon the face of the
reservation, where sizeable bodies of whites, far exceeding the total
tribal membership, lived under state jurisdiction and offered a scale of
living previously beyond ken and reach of tribal members, but now close
and seemingly attainable. (Stern 1961:173)
In 1955 the Klamath Tribe had 2118 enrolled members (Stem 1966:316).
Over time, an increasing number of tribal members have moved from the
reservation. While at the turn of the century roughly ten percent lived
off the reservation, by 1958 over fifty percent did so (Stern 1966:185).
Of these absentee tribal members, about a quarter lived in Klamath
County in towns near the reservation, while others "were scattered
throughout areas of southern Oregon and northern California where
Klamath had long had ties" (Stem 1966:185).
The most dramatic event in the history of the Klamath Reservation
came in 1954, with the passage of Public Law 587, which terminated the
Klamath Reservation, and ended the Klamath tribe as a federally
recognized entity. (The Western Oregon Termination Act, also passed in
1954, terminated among other groups the Confederated Tribes of the
Siletz Indians, both of which included descendants of Takelma, Molala,
and Upper Umpqua peoples, and the Cow Creeks, a group of Takelma
descendants.)
The policy of termination--while ostensibly intended to benefit
Indian peoples by allowing them to escape from a stifling federal
paternalism--proved extremely destructive (see Nash 1988:270-72). In the
Klamath case, compensation was most commonly administered through an
elaborate series of court-mandated trusteeships. Most of the former
reservation lands were purchased by the federal government (at
below-market prices), from which the Winema National Forest was created
in 1961. As one team of economists judged the results, "It appears that
individual Klamath received few lasting economic benefits from
termination. For the majority, termination simply meant substitution of
private for federal paternalism," privately administered trusts
replacing federal bureaucracies (Trulove and bunting 1971:17).
Despite these events, a tnbal political organization survived the
termination process. In the 1970s and 80s the tribal organization
achieved a number of victories which strengthened the capacity of the
Klamath to endure as a people. In 1974 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that
Klamath fishing and hunting rights granted by treaty survived the
termination process (Kimbol v. Callaghan). In 1979 another legal victory
guaranteed minimum stream flows in the Klamath River to protect fish and
wildlife. In 1986 Congress rescinded the 1954 termination by
reestablishing the Klamath as a federally recognized tribe, thus making
the tribe and its members eligible for wide range of medical,
educational, and economic opportunities (Schonchin 1987).
Introduction | Adaptations | Social
Organization | Ritual
Myth | Post-Settlement
Life | Crater Lake