Last updated: March 3, 2021
Place
The Enduring Aramai
VIEW FROM WAYSIDE: The wayside is set in a corner of the boardwalk. Behind the wayside is the wooden fence of the boardwalk and the flat scrubby grassland that leads up to the rolling hills in the distance. Depending on the time of year, the grassland can be covered in brightly colored wildflowers. In the dryer, winter season, the landscape is more browns and greens. On the boardwalk slightly behind you and to the left, are two benches that face the hillside, offering opportunities for reflection or watching the wildlife.
WAYSIDE LAYOUT: The wayside has 2 columns and a sidebar with additional text and one image. The first column has the main text and 1 image and the second column has 2 images.
Column 1
TEXT: The Enduring Aramai Who were the first people of these lands? The Aramai settled at Calera Creek and used lands at Mori Point for over 3,000 years. Their villages, Timigtac and Pruristac, totaling 50 people, made up a distinct tribe among dozens of independent Ohlone tribes that lived from the Carquinez Strat south to Monterey Bay.
DESCRIPTION OF IMAGE #1: Located on the left side, center of wayside. Colored illustration depicting a large group of Native Americans. In the background is a large, two story, Spanish style mission building. In the center of the image is a large cross, towering above the group of people. The mountains can be seen in the far distance. Featured in the foreground are 5 Native Americans appearing to be performing or speaking to a group of seated individuals.
CAPTION: The Aramai were among the first native people brought to the Spanish colonial Mission Dolores where they were joined by a diverse tribal people from the Bay region. Mission Dolores natives became the Doloreños, one of several new world communities of diverse native people that formed at the California missions.
Column 2
DESCRIPTION OF IMAGE #2: Located top center of column. This is a scientific illustration of Arroyo Willow, Salix Iasiolepis . The illustration features long, thin green leaves that spread out along thin multiple branches.
CAPTION: Willows, which currently grow in abundance at Mori Point, have served Ohlone people for countless generations, providing the framework for thatched houses, a pain reliever found in the bark, and material for weaving the various baskets so important in everyday life.
DESCRIPTION OF IMAGE #3: Located in the center at the bottom. Small, rectangular colored photo of a garter snake. The snake is slightly coiled into itself, as if to strike. The snake has red, white and black stripes running down the length of its body. It is resting on brown, dried grass.
CAPTION: Two Native Words and a Vow of Protection: The park honors the heritage of the Aramai by naming two of its trails in the San Francisco Bay Ohlone language - Timigtac after their village at Calera Creek, and Lishumsha for the resident garter snake. As we restore the habitat of the San Francisco garter snake and other wildlife, let us remember the first people who lived here and their descendents.
Sidebar
TEXT: One Remarkable Family: Utchus and Muchiáte are the Timigtac couple whose descendants make up the only known surviving lineage from the original 1400 native people of the San Francisco Peninsula. The story of their family embodies native survival at the heart of this tragic chapter in California history. Their daughter, Xilaite, was born a year before the Spanish Portola expedition reached San Francisco in 1769. She married Jose Ramos, the mission blacksmith from New Spain, in a rare pairing of native and colonial individuals. One of the very few to survive the harmful effects of mission life, Xilaite lived long enough to see the birth of her granddaughter in 1811. By that time nearly 95% of the Aramai had died, but Xilaite's descendants endured. They intermarried with other tribes, with others of Mexican heritage, and with European Americans, and they continue to flourish today. One of those descendants is Dr. Jonathan Cordero, Professor of Sociology at California Lutheran University. He is Xialaite's 9th generation grandson, and, like other Bay Area Ohlone's, he continues to honor his ancestors by writing about their past with the hope of inspiring interest in their future.
DESCRIPTION OF IMAGE #5: Located at the bottom of the sidebar. Colored portrait photograph of a middle-aged looking man with tanned skin and dark hair. He is shown from the chest up, wearing a white button-up shirt and a light brown, multi-colored tie.