California's
Native Americans
- resource collection developed by Mrs. Cary Stolpestad, Nov. 2004
ACHUMAWI
Achumawi means "River People" who live near the Pit River. There are
eleven bands of the Achumawi tribe, who have traditionally occupied lands along
the Pit River in the far northeastern part of California. This region, from
Mount Shasta and Lassen Peak to the Warner Range, has a tremendous ecological
diversity yielding a huge variety of foods, medicines, and raw materials. They
depended on fish and other river resources to survive, as well as on acorns
and other vegetables naturally growing in the river valleys. In the 1800s
around 3,000 Achumawi lived in California. There were about nine tribelets.
Today there are around 1,800 tribal members still living in their tribal area.
http://www.siskiyous.edu/shasta/nat/ach.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/Achumawi.htm
http://www4.hmc.edu:8001/humanities/indian/lassen/Lassen5.htm
CAHUILLA (also known as Agua Caliente)
The Cahuilla Indians historically occupied an area around the modern day city
of Palm Springs. With abundant water supply, plant and animal life, the Cahuilla
Indians thrived. They grew crops of melons, squash, beans, and corn, gathered
plants and seeds for food, medicines and basket weaving, and hunted animals.
They created painted rock art, had homes with pits-like foundations, and engineered
and built irrigation ditches, dams, and reservoirs. The Cahuilla Agua Caliente
Indians were industrious and creative with a reputation for independence, integrity,
and peace.
http://www.aguacaliente.org/cultural.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/cahuilla.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/food.htm
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
http://www.xeri.com/Moapa/cahuilla.htm
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_005300_cahuilla.htm
CHUMASH INDIANS
These Indian people originally occupied lands in southern California in the
area of present-day Ventura, Santa Barbara, and San Luis Obispo counties. The
Coastal Chumash were living in their traditional territory by approximately
1000 A.D. Traditionally, they lived in villages along the Pacific coast from
San Luis Obispo to Malibu Canyon and inland as far as the western edge of the
San Joaquin Valley. Their traditional language is no longer spoken (the last
native speaker of a Chumash language died in 1965), but was one of five closely
related Hokan languages. Those along the coast obtained their food mainly from
the sea, for which they developed sea-going canoes. They were the only California
tribe to depend largely on ocean fishing for subsistence. The Chumash are known
for their technological skill in constructing ocean-going canoes. They hunted
on and around the Channel Islands as well as along the coast. The Chumash Tribe
is also known for its aesthetic contributions in the form of baskets and shell
and steatite objects. The Chumash population was as high as 22,000, yet due
to diseases brought by the Spanish in the 1700s reduced their population
to 2,788.
http://www.sbnature.org/research/anthro/chumash/index.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/chumash.htm
http://www.santaynez.org/history.html
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
COSTANOAN (also known as Ohlone)
Costanoan is Spanish for "coast people. This term denotes a language
family as well as a tribe. The Costanoan people called themselves the Ohlone
in their language. There are eight Ohlone groups, all culturally similar, but
with eight different languages. There were around 10,000 Costanoans in the 1700s
living in their traditional territory around San Francisco and Monterey Bays
There were about 50 tribelets of Costanoans with an average of about 200 people
in each tribelet, although some had up to 500 people. A chief and a council
of elders headed each tribelet.
The Costanoans were aggressive and engaged in warfare with other Indian tribes,
using the bow and arrow. They took few men captives, but did take women as captives.
By 1830, there were only about 2,500 Costanoans left, mainly due to deadly diseases,
such as influenza, smallpox, and measles brought in by Europeans.
http://www.indiancanyon.org/homeframe2000.html
http://www.costanoanrumsen.org/photos.html
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
GABRIELINO (Tongva)
The Gabrielinos once inhabited all of Los Angeles County and northern parts
of Orange County. There were an estimated 5,000 Gabrielinos in this region in
the 1700s. There are 31 known village sites and each had as many as 400
to 500 huts. A chief ruled over each village.
Gabrielinos held religious ceremonies in a circular structure within the village.
The structure could only be entered by select males of status in the community
and close relatives in the event of funerary ceremonies. Female singers were
also allowed.
Gabrielinos rarely had wars with other tribes and robbery or murder was rare
as well.
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/Gabrielinos.htm
http://www.runajambi.net/tongva/
http://www.sinay.com/rockart/rock/rock-9.htm
http://www.palosverdes.com/eco/gabrielino.html
http://cogweb.ucla.edu/Chumash/Tongva.html
HUPA
The Hupa tribe traditionally occupied lands in the far northwestern corner of
California, along the lower Trinity River and in the Hoopa Valley. Their self-designation
was Natinook-wa, "People of the Place Where the Trails Return. Hupa
is from the Yurok language for the Hoopa Valley. The Hupa were culturally related
to the Yurok and the Karuk tribes to the north. Their diet and way of life centered
around the semiannual king salmon runs that occur on the Trinity River in the
heart of their tribal territory. Being fairly isolated, the Hupa had little
contact with non-Indians until the mid-1800s.
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/hupa.htm
http://www.beloit.edu/~museum/logan/catalog/namerica/california/hupa/
http://sorrel.humboldt.edu/~rwj1/hup.html
http://bss.sfsu.edu/calstudies/NativeWebPages/hupa.html
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_016100_hupa.htm
MIWOK
The Miwok lived in over 100 villages along the San Joaquin and Sacramento Rivers.
The Miwok traditional territory was in the Sierra Nevada foothills of the central
part of California. Their food supplies included salmon fishing. They all also
ate acorns and game. In the 1700s there were around 22,000 Miwok. There
are about 3,500 Miwok people today.
http://mariposa.yosemite.net/woodland/miwok.htm
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_022900_miwok.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/miwok.htm
http://mariposa.yosemite.net/woodland/games.htm
http://www.sierrafoothillmagazine.com/natives.html
http://readmeabook.com/cubs/miwok1.htm
MOJAVE (MOHAVE)
This group of Indians traditionally occupied about 200 miles of land along the
Colorado River from present-day Hoover Dam down to the city of Blythe, as well
as a large inland region to the west of the river. The Mojave survived as desert
farmers, using the floodwaters of the Colorado River. They depended on fishing,
hunting, and trapping, and on the mesquite bean for food. Today there are around
3,000 Mojave people still alive.
http://www.nps.gov/moja/mojahtm2.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/food.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/colriv.htm
http://www.ctaz.com/~mocohist/museum/mohave1.htm
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_023000_mohave.htm
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_044300_yuma.htm
PAIUTE
Paiute Indians inhabited the Mono Lake region and the areas south to present
day Bishop, Big Pine, and Lone Pine. They were called the Kutzadika'a People.
They made their living by hunting and gathering. Today there are around 2,200
Paiutes living in the traditional tribal areas.
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/owens.htm
http://www.monolake.org/naturalhistory/kutzadikaa.htm#mono
The Paiutes and Mono Lake http://www.livinglakes.org/mono/#human
http://itcn.org/language/paiute.html
http://www.pwizardry.com/rock.html
http://www.crystalinks.com/paiute.html
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_027300_paiutenorthe.htm
POMO
The Pomo people are from northwestern California, where many still occupy their
ancestral lands. Pomo-speaking people have traditionally occupied land about
50 miles north of San Francisco Bay, on the coast and inland, especially around
Clear Lake and the Russian River, in what is now Mendocino , Sonoma, and Lake
counties. Along the Pacific coast they fished and gathered shellfish, and also
relied on acorns and game for food. Along the rivers they caught king salmon.
In the early 1800s there were roughly 15,000 Pomo. Today there are approximately
5,000 Pomo people.
http://www.robinsonrancheria.org/Pomocode/Main/mainmenu2.html
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/pomo.htm
http://www.big-valley.net/history.htm
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
http://www.kstrom.net/isk/art/basket/pomohist.html
http://sorrel.humboldt.edu/~rwj1/POM/pom2g.html
http://sorrel.humboldt.edu/~rwj1/POM/pom4g.html
http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_030100_pomo.htm
SALINAN
These people traditionally lived along the south-central California coast, inland
to the mountains. In the late 1700s there were approximately 3,000 Salinan
Indians, with several hundred descendants alive today. The religion of the Salinan
involved offering prayers to the golden eagle, the sun, and the moon. Shamans
controlled the weather. The Salinan were governed by the Aak'letse, or village
headwoman.
http://www.pelicannetwork.net/salinan.htm
http://www.santarita.losaltos.k12.ca.us/classes/gr4/benedict/Mission/SalinanIndians.html
SHASTA
The Indians called the Shasta people traditionally lived in the northernmost
part of California (Siskyou County) and southern Oregon (Jackson and Klamath
Counties). The Shasta were one of four Shastan tribes, the others being Konomihu,
Okwanuchu, and New River Shasta. For food, they depended on the semiannual king
salmon runs along the major rivers of their territory, as well as on acorns
and game. In the 1700s there were around 3,000 Shastas. Today there are
around 100 Shasta people living on the Quartz Valley Reservation in Siskyou
County, and some in Yreka, California.
http://www.siskiyous.edu/shasta/nat/sha.htm
http://www.siskiyous.edu/shasta/nat/sha/mat.htm
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/shasta.htm
http://users.sisqtel.net/rbley/shasta&ashcreek.htm
NOTE: SCROLL DOWN PAGE FOR SHASTA TRIBE INFORMATION
http://www.californiabaskets.com/pages/shastahome.html
http://www.murrieta.k12.ca.us/alta/dfuller/2002/20v/tribe.html
YOKUTS
The Yokuts people traditionally occupied the San Joaquin Valley and foothills
in the central part of California. Their diets consisted of king salmon along
the major rivers, along with eating fish, acorns, and game. In the foothills,
acorns were the principal food source, with other plant foods and game playing
a secondary role. In the 1700s there were between 18,000 and 50,000 Yokuts,
one of the highest regional population of Indians in North America. Today there
are about 2,000 Yokuts still.
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/yokuts.htm
http://www.southernsierrabsa.org/yokuts_food.html
http://www.southernsierrabsa.org/yokuts_food.html
http://www4.hmc.edu:8001/humanities/indian/ca/ch12.htm
http://www.indianterritory.com/pages/yokuts_baskets.htm
http://www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/cultural/northamerica/yokuts.html
YUROK
The Yurok Indian people traditionally lived in the far northwestern corner of
California, along the lower Klamath River and on the Pacific Coast near its
mouth. The Yurok survived in a variety of ways, from coastal-tideland gathering
of fish and shellfish, to salmon fishing along the major rivers in the area,
to the gathering of plants and killing of game. The Yurok population was roughly
3,000 in the early the 1700s.
http://www.californiahistory.net/2_natives/yurok.htm
http://www.virtualguidebooks.com/NorthCalif/RedwoodPark/PatricksPoint/YurokHouseInteriorL.html
http://www.virtualguidebooks.com/NorthCalif/RedwoodPark/PatricksPoint/YurokVillageSumegL.html
http://ceres.ca.gov/ceres/calweb/native.html
FOR ALL CALIFORNIA TRIBES - TRIBAL PHOTO ARCHIVES
http://memory.loc.gov/award/iencurt/ct14/ct14toc.html
Text Source:
http://infodome.sdsu.edu/research/guides/calindians/calinddict.shtml
http://cogweb.ucla.edu/Chumash/Tongva.html