Vi Hilbert
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Vi Hilbert (née Anderson, Lushootseed name: Taqʷseblu, born July 24, 1918) is a Native American tribal elder of the Upper Skagit, a tribe of the greater Puget Salish in Washington State, whose ancestors occupied the banks along the Skagit River, and is a conservationist of the Lushootseed language and culture. She was named a Washington State Living Treasure in 1989, and received a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment of the Arts, presented by President Bill Clinton, in 1994. She has co-written Lushootseed grammars and dictionaries, and published books of stories, teachings, and place names related to her native region, the Puget Sound (also known as Whulge in anglicized Lushootseed).
[edit] Childhood
Vi was born to Charlie and Louise Anderson on July 24, 1918 near Lyman, Washington, on the Upper Skagit River. Her father was a fisherman, a logger, and a canoe maker, whose canoe the Question Mark is housed in the Smithsonian Museum Archive.
[edit] Sources
- http://www.historylink.org/ (The Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History)
- http://www.historylink.org/essays/output.cfm?file_id=7130