The salish Indians were from Washington state around the puget sound and seattle area.Edit: Salish is a language spoken my many tribes, so there are no Salish Indians unless you count the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation in Montana. Other than that tribes who speak Salishan languages live from the southwestern coast in British Columbia, south to northern Oregon, and west to about half of Montana. There are, of course, other language-speakers tribes there as well.Also, "The salish Indians were from Washington..." Native Americans, American Indians, First Peoples, whatever you want to call them are still here. They did not disappear, and therefore must not be spoken of in the past tense. They are not an anachronism.
The Blackfoot Indian tribe was officially moved to the reservation in the United States in the mid-19th century, with significant treaties occurring in the 1850s and 1870s. The Treaty of Fort Laramie in 1851 and the Treaty of Blackfoot in 1877 established their reservation lands. The Blackfoot people primarily reside in the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana today.
He moved to the South Dakota Indian reservation.
How do you say Happy Holiday in the Salish language?
Native Americans were moved to smaller and smaller reservation because colonists found gold in areas set aside for Native Americans
Salish and Kootenai are two different peoples and speak different languages. They share a reservation in Montana (the Flathead Indian Reservation). In Salish you mother's mother would be called you 'yai-ya' (spelled phonetically) and your father's mother would be your "Ken-aa". I don't know about Kootenai.
In Salish, one way to say "happy new year" is "aw q̓éł člóɫxʷ", which is from the Salish dialect spoken by the Kalispel people. Different Salish languages may have variations in how "happy new year" is expressed.
The Chinook people were never moved onto a reservation. Many were allotted land on the Quinault Reservation but few moved there.
they got moved to oklahoma
copenhagwa
The salish Indians were from Washington state around the puget sound and seattle area.Edit: Salish is a language spoken my many tribes, so there are no Salish Indians unless you count the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation in Montana. Other than that tribes who speak Salishan languages live from the southwestern coast in British Columbia, south to northern Oregon, and west to about half of Montana. There are, of course, other language-speakers tribes there as well.Also, "The salish Indians were from Washington..." Native Americans, American Indians, First Peoples, whatever you want to call them are still here. They did not disappear, and therefore must not be spoken of in the past tense. They are not an anachronism.
The Blackfoot Indian tribe was officially moved to the reservation in the United States in the mid-19th century, with significant treaties occurring in the 1850s and 1870s. The Treaty of Fort Laramie in 1851 and the Treaty of Blackfoot in 1877 established their reservation lands. The Blackfoot people primarily reside in the Blackfeet Reservation in Montana today.
In Salish, grandpa is "túckš."
He moved to the South Dakota Indian reservation.
In Salish, grandmother is translated to "qwm2ӝͽ".
The cast of By the Salish Sea - 2012 includes: Darragh Kennan as Voice of Salish Man Elaine Miles as Voice of Salish Woman
Salish Kootenai College was created in 1977.