Tulalip

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"Tulalip Tribes" painting

Tulalip is a group of Native American peoples from western Washington state in the United States. The Tulalip people settled onto reservation lands after signing the Point Elliott Treaty with the former Washington Territory on January 22, 1855. The reservation is the western half of the Marysville Tulalip community. Marysville is an incorporated city and lies east of Interstate 5. Tulalip is a reservation and it lies west of Interstate 5. The Marysville School District serves both the reservation and the city.

The reservation has developed Quil Ceda Village as a business park and municipality to provide jobs and tax income for the reservation.

The modern Tulalip is a mixture of several older indigenous peoples: the Snohomish, Snoqualmie, Skagit, Sauk-Suiattle, Samish and Stillaguamish; all these groups spoke a Salishan language called Lushootseed ( dxwləšúcid ); the Lushootseed spelling of "Tulalip" is "dxwlilap". Like many Northwest Coast natives, the Tulalip relied on fishing from local rivers for food and built plank houses (longhouses) to protect themselves from the harsh, wet winters west of the Cascade Mountains.

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[edit] History

Tulalip logger and family, 1916

A Tulalip family in front of their home on the reservation in 1916.

[edit] Tulalip Indian Reservation

The Tulalip Indian Reservation lies on Port Susan Bay in western Snohomish County, adjacent to the western border of the city of Marysville. It has a land area of 91.325 km² (35.261 sq mi) and a 2000 census population of 9,246 persons residing within its boundaries. Its largest community is Tulalip Bay.

[edit] Communities

[edit] References

[edit] External links

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