Celilo Village, Oregon
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Celilo Village, Oregon is an unincorporated Native American community on the Columbia River in northeastern Wasco County, Oregon near the site of Celilo Falls, just south of the community of Wishram, Washington, across the Columbia River. In 2003 there were about 100 permanent residents living in 14 dwellings, a far cry from its previous incarnation as a major cultural and trading center before Celilo Falls was inundated by The Dalles Dam in 1957. The 2000 census reported a total resident population of 44 persons living on a land area of 0.4132 km² (102.11 acres). The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers provided funding for construction of a new tribal long house in 2006.
Most residents of Celilo are members of either the Yakama Nation or Confederated Tribes of the Warm Springs Reservation. Some may be members of the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, or the Nez Perce Tribe. Many residents are fishers engaging in ceremonial, subsistence, and commercial fisheries for salmon, steelhead, and sturgeon in the Columbia River. While the historic fishing site at Celilo Falls is gone, there is an "in lieu" fishing site provided by the Army Corps of Engineers that provides access for tribal members to the river. Most tribal fishing is done currently with gillnets or from platforms built along the river.
[edit] References
- Celilo Village, Oregon United States Census Bureau
[edit] External links
- Celilo Falls: Gone but not forgotten by Jean Johnson, Indian Country Today, 8/24/2004
- Columbia River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission