Only 6 Northwest Indian tribes produced totem poles. The Tlingit tribe, the Haida tribe, the Bella Coola tribe, the Kwakiutl tribe, the Tsimshian tribe, and the West Coast tribe.
The Cherokee.
They made totem poles, they held potlatch
they tell a story about the tribe who made it
totem poles
No they did not make totem poles.
None of the north-eastern tribes made totem poles - they are a feature of tribes of the north-west coast.
no
Totem poles are and were made from large tree trunks.
the miccosukee tribe
Depending on what you mean, the haida used paint and cedar to make totem poles and they used copper to make the chiefs masks and all the important people if the tribe had things made out of copper...
No and yes. Traditional totem poles were made by various Northwest Coast tribes in what are now Alaska and British Columbia. However, after the totem pole became famous among Anglo-Americans, many non-Northwest Coast tribes made totem poles that appeared at tourist attractions all over Canada and the United States. So, while totem poles were not part of the Seneca Tribe's traditional material culture, there may have been instances where members of the Seneca Tribe produced "roadside" totem poles for the purpose of attracting tourists.
Totem poles were not invented by any one Native American tribe. They were widely used by only six different tribes. The name of the tribes responsible for producing the totem pole are the Tlingit Tribe, the Haida Tribe, the Bella Coola Tribe, the Kwakiutl Tribe, the Tsimshian Tribe, and the West Coast Tribe.
The totem poles were made to tell stories of the past