Daybreak Star Cultural Center

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Daybreak Star Cultural Center
Daybreak Star Cultural Center
Early evening rainbow during 2007 Seafair Indian Days Pow Wow on the Center's grounds.
Early evening rainbow during 2007 Seafair Indian Days Pow Wow on the Center's grounds.
Dancers in ceremonial costume during formal opening of the 2007 Seafair Indian Days Pow Wow.
Dancers in ceremonial costume during formal opening of the 2007 Seafair Indian Days Pow Wow.

The Daybreak Star Cultural Center is a Native American cultural center in Seattle, Washington, described by its parent organization United Indians of All Tribes as "an urban base for Native Americans in the Seattle area." Located on 20 acres (81,000 m²) in Seattle's Discovery Park in the Magnolia neighborhood, the center owes its existence to Bernie Whitebear and other Native Americans, who staged a generally successful self-styled "invasion" and occupation of the land in 1970 after most of the Fort Lawton military base was declared surplus by the U.S. Department of Defense. "The claim [Whitebear and others made] to Fort Lawton was based on rights under 1865 U.S.-Indian treaties promising reversion of surplus military lands to their original owners."[1]

The existing building, an impressive piece of modern architecture incorporating many elements of traditional Northwest Native architecture, dates from 1977. In 2004, plans were approved to supplement it with a complex of three more related buildings, to be known as the People's Lodge, which was Bernie Whitebear's final dream project before he died of cancer in 2000[2] However, in 2006, after agreements had been reached between the tribes, the city and nearby residents to reduce the originally-planned size to one all parties agreed to, a decision was made to postpone construction indefinitely for lack of funds.

Daybreak Star, a major nucleus of Native American cultural activity in its region, functions as a conference center, a location for pow wows, the location for a Head Start school program, and an art gallery. The center's permanent art collection includes a variety of large art works by and about Native Americans, notably "Blue Jay", a 30 foot (9 m) wide, 12 foot (3.7 m) high sculpture by Bernie Whitebear's brother Lawney Reyes, which came to the Center in 2004 after hanging prominently for over 30 years at the Bank of California building in downtown Seattle. (The Bank of California merged with Union Bank in 1996 to form Union Bank of California.) Also included in that donation was a major oil painting by Guy Anderson based on a traditional Northwest Native representation of a whale.

The Center has wireless Internet access ("UIATF-A").

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Patrick McRoberts and Kit Oldham, Fort Lawton military police clash with Native American and other protesters in the future Discovery Park on March 8, 1970., HistoryLink.org Essay 5513, August 15, 2003. Accessed 25 October 2007.
  2. ^ Alex Tizon, Facing The End, Activist Reflects On Life's Victories, Seattle Times, December 2, 1997. Accessed 25 October 2007.

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