Native American Nations / Chinookan Peoples / The Wascos and Wishrams

The Wascos and Wishrams

By Barbara Fifer

Controlling the great mart at The Dalles were the Wishrams on the north shore and the Wascos on the south side of the Columbia.

The Dalles in 1805 and 1806

At The Dalles lived Upper Chinookan people, the Wishrams on the Columbia’s north (Washington) side—and their allies the Wascos on the south (Oregon) side—who were the main masters of the regional trading center. The Lewis and Clark Expedition encamped on the north side, in Wishram territory, when they passed through The Dalles in both 1805 and 1806. The captains believed that the people called themselves “Echelutes,” which modern linguists say actually was i-c-xl˙it, identifying the speaker as a resident of Nixluidix, the Wishram’s main village and trading spot.[3]By regional custom, native people identified themselves by their villages rather than tribes; tribal names came later, mostly bestowed by whites. Chinookan Peoples identified themselves by villages rather than tribes.

The expedition camped by Nixluidix on 24 October 1805, without learning its name, at the head of the Long Narrows; Clark’s advance trading party returned 16 April 1806, with Lewis and the main command arriving on the 19th; the united Corps portaged the Long Narrows and left the village the following day.

The Wishrams and other Chinookans, the captains complained, helped themselves to tomahawks, knives, spoons, and other items left out. Historian James P. Ronda explains these acts as the Indians’ way of delivering a two-part message. First, the Corps obviously had more things than they needed and could well pay for services rendered, such as advice and demonstrations of how to run the rapids and where the portages lay. Second, the Wishram expected the takings to result in a meeting, a council in the captains’ terms, where the latter could “offer respect and attention to the trading lords of the Columbia.”[4]James P. Ronda, Lewis and Clark Among the Indians (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984), 171-72. Notably, when Clark pushed to purchase horses (still in relatively short supply here, see Indian Horses in the PNW) for three days in the spring of 1806, many portable items disappeared from camp. This pattern, however, was common during visits to many other Chinookan villages beyond Nixluidix.

Masters of the Mart

It had been only two decades since whites had found their way into the lower Columbia and inserted themselves into the regional trading network, purchasing furs there with muskets, ammunition, beads, and metal tools and ornaments. The news had arrived in an alarming manner when Lower Chinookans, including Chief Concomly,[5]A chief of the Chinook proper on the Columbia estuary’s Baker Bay, Concomly, also known as Comcomly, visited Lewis and some of his men at Point Ellice and Station Camp on 17 November 1805. canoed to upstream villages (defended solely by bows and arrows), demanded cut-rate prices, and then fired their new muskets to reject unacceptable deals. But no previous whites had come in to trade at The Dalles, challenging the Wishrams’ supremacy face to face. Guns were still scarce, as were horses that were being traded into the area from the Nez Perce and other tribes to the southeast.

The trade in goods would continue comfortably until 1813. In 1825, the Hudson’s Bay Company of Great Britain opened Fort Vancouver. It sat across the Columbia and a bit upstream from the mouth of the Willamette River, precursor to the city of Vancouver, Washington. Agriculturally self-supporting, the fort was administrative headquarters for Hudson’s Bay trappers from the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific coast. Its proximity was the beginning of the end for The Dalles’ trading mart.

For Lack of an Interpreter

The Lewis and Clark Expedition, with no Chinookan speakers in their company, managed only minimal communication with the Wishrams. At Fort Clatsop on 1 March 1806, Lewis noted that the Tillamooks held slaves, which were adopted into families and treated like relatives. He did not learn that Chinookan custom allowed killing slaves to accompany their late master into the afterlife, or that slaves could also own slaves. While they noted Chinookan head flattening, they did not learn that only the upper of three or four castes were privileged to perform this beautifying practice and that it was forbidden to slaves. Many slaves were sold at The Dalles, where Chinookan people favored those captured a long distance away, likely in northern California, which made them less liable to try an escape.

The captains also never traded with women or learned that such was possible, or discovered that among some Chinookans women could be selected as chiefs, in a culture where each chief had a specific sphere of responsibility. They did comment that work duties were more evenly distributed between the genders around Fort Clatsop than what they had seen on the Great Plains.

 

Treaty and Reservation

After fur trading posts run by British and American companies multiplied throughout the greater “Oregon country,” with free traders also circulating among Indian settlements, Christian missionaries followed, bringing a new religion, classroom education, and a different form of medical care.

White farm families began homesteading central Washington lands in the early 1850s, moving east from the Willamette Valley. In 1855, two years after Washington Territory was created, its governor Isaac I. Stevens negotiated the Treaty of Yakima, which consolidated the Wishrams and thirteen other tribes and bands, including Chinookan, Sahaptian, and Salishan speakers. The Wishrams resisted the U.S. government’s plan for them to move onto the Yakima Indian Reservation, which is headquartered at Toppenish, Washington. When finally they did move there, they were assimilated into the consolidated tribes, which include the Yakamas and Palouses. The government’s final act in the generations-long campaign to eliminate native life-ways was the flooding of nearly all of the traditional Wishram fishing sites on the Columbia with the completion of The Dalles Dam in 1957.

 

Selected Pages and Encounters

Notes

Notes
1 Edward S. Curtis, The North American Indian, 20 vols. (Norwood, Massachusetts: Plimpton Press, 1911), 8:145-46.
2 Ibid., 46n.
3 By regional custom, native people identified themselves by their villages rather than tribes; tribal names came later, mostly bestowed by whites.
4 James P. Ronda, Lewis and Clark Among the Indians (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1984), 171-72.
5 A chief of the Chinook proper on the Columbia estuary’s Baker Bay, Concomly, also known as Comcomly, visited Lewis and some of his men at Point Ellice and Station Camp on 17 November 1805.

Experience the Lewis and Clark Trail

The Lewis and Clark Trail Experience—our sister site at lewisandclark.travel—connects the world to people and places on the Lewis and Clark Trail.

Logo: Lewis and Clark.travel

Discover More

  • The Lewis and Clark Expedition: Day by Day by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2018). The story in prose, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals: An American Epic of Discovery (abridged) by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 2003). Selected journal excerpts, 14 May 1804–23 September 1806.
  • The Lewis and Clark Journals. by Gary E. Moulton (University of Nebraska Press, 1983–2001). The complete story in 13 volumes.