WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Among the An-ko-me-nums, or Flathead Tribes of Indians of the Pacific Coast cover

Among the An-ko-me-nums, or Flathead Tribes of Indians of the Pacific Coast

Chapter 3: ILLUSTRATIONS.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A long-term missionary presents a combined travel narrative and ethnographic account of encounters with Salish-speaking communities on the Pacific Coast, documenting language, customs, domestic life, and religious practices. The text recounts efforts to establish schools, churches, and an Indian institute, and describes struggles with alcoholism, witchcraft, intertribal feuds, and specific cultural practices such as cranial flattening. It includes vivid episodes of hazardous canoe travel, revival meetings, camp gatherings, and individual conversions, alongside practical discussion of foods, marriage customs, and mission administration. The account mixes reportage, personal reminiscence, and moral reflection on the challenges and results of the missionary endeavor.

ILLUSTRATIONS.

PAGE
Portrait of AuthorFrontispiece
Flathead Woman and Child8
Early Native Types18
Indian Church and Mission House at Nanaimo42
Indian Houses, with Group of Heathen Natives48
“I could see two wild, savage-looking men,” etc.74
“The great big fellow danced up and down,” etc.78
Two Flathead Centenarians86
“One day I slipped in and found the old fellow rattling over him”122
Witch Doctor and his Wife—“Coal Tyee”—Crosby teaching Indian Chief128
“We were bailing out as hard as we could”146
First Protestant Church in the Chilliwack Valley172
Coqualeetza Indian Institute192
Group of Students, Coqualeetza Institute198
Amos Cushan—Sarah Shee-at-ston—David Sallosalton—Captain John Su-a-lis208
Skowkale Church—Skowkale Mission People232
The Transformed Bar-room, Victoria236

FLATHEAD WOMAN AND CHILD
(Showing method in use among these Indians for flattening the heads of the infant children.)