4 JUNE 1,2006 Smoke Signals V i , , -v '.;'4 W., 4 I Tribal member David Lewis helps uncover and distribute hundreds of thousands of pages of Northwest Indian history so that new histories will come from the Tribal viewpoint. By Ron Karten An Indian, Peter Petit (an old spell ing) of the Grand Ronde Tribe, had lost his leg in the 1880s. A series of letters described how an Indian Agent at Grand Ronde, tried to get a prosthesis made for him and that they were successful in the effort. Another set of correspondence dealt with a petition. The first letter ap peared to be a petition from Indians of Grand Ronde seeking to end their status as Indians and sell all their land. The letter said they wanted to be treated fairly. A month later, the correspondence shows that the letter was a fake. The names falsely put on the petition were a creation of a real estate at torney from Dallas, Oregon. These are some of the gems to come out of the work of Tribal member David Lewis through the Southwest Oregon Research Project (SWORP). Today, he is in his final year of his University of Oregon Ph.D. program p ana is aiso 3 , if H port from many quarters, most re cently, $20,000 from the Coquelle Community Fund. "The purpose (of the grant) is to go "The Tribes can recover language and culture. They can do their own research into what occurred between the United States and the Tribes, (into) what conditions were like. David Lewis, Tribal member Manager and Director of SWORP. Since 1995, Lewis has been back to Washington, D.C. twice to comb through Indian archives and bring the fruits of his search back home. His work has drawn financial sup- back to archival collections." Lewis has already searched Washington, D.C.'s National Anthropological Archives and the National Archives of the Smithsonian Institution to collect written pages relating to the Northwest Indian experience. "We're looking at others for the future," he said. "We intend to look through American Philosophical Soci ety in Philadelphia, and we'd like to go through the Bancroft Library at Berkeley, and the University of Washington (state) Library, mainly be cause all of those li braries have the most extensive collections that deal with Oregon Indians." The "we" refers to scholars from the Coquelle, Siletz and Grand Ronde Tribes, who have participated in SWORP, started in 1998 by George Wasson, a Tribal Elder of the Co See LEWIS on page 5 Looking Wolf Headlines American Indian Week At Spirit Mountain Casino ) 'Sr ihin -m,. - .i mft i Mirm r niinmiMfc miriifrnfl v ivV:: ' 4 Hand Made Tribal member Jan Michael Reibach played the Native flute as part of American Indian Week held at Spirit Mountain Casino on the week of May 1 5-20.