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  1. Sep 28, 2016 · Princess Angeline: When the settlers arrived, the eldest daughter of “Chief Seattle” refused to leave her land and became a legend. Sep 28, 2016 Alex A. In 1895, Edward S Curtis, the prolific American photographer, took his first portrait of a Native American subject, a wrinkled old woman with a red handkerchief, paying her a dollar for the ...

  2. May 22, 2000 · On May 31, 1896, Princess Angeline or Kikisoblu (1820?-1896), was the eldest daughter of siʔał (178?-1866), a member of the Suquamish tribefor whom Seattle is named, and a Duwamish woman named Ladalia, whose Lushootseed name is not recorded, dies in her shack located in Seattle on Western Avenue between Pike and Pine streets.

  3. Stevens was unconvinced of the validity of the rumored attack and quickly left. But less than an hour after having sailed away from Seattle, new information came to light about an imminent Indian threat. The source of this information has been credited to Princess Angeline, her father, Chief Si’ahl and Chief Sucquardle.

  4. Mar 2, 2014 · Email. Share. Tweet. Kikisoblu, the daughter of Chief Seattle was a friend to early Seattle pioneers. One of the pioneer women, Catherine Maynard, thought Kikisoblu should have a name that would let everyone know that she was the daughter of a great chief -- so she renamed her "Princess Angeline."

  5. Jul 13, 2001 · Named Princess Angeline by early settlers, Chief Seattle's eldest daughter was, for many years, the visible link connecting Natives and newcomers. Now, for the first time in almost 100 years,...

  6. Oct 24, 2022 · Nicknamed "Princess Angeline" by European-Americans, the daughter of Chief Seattle lived out her old age in the city named after her father. A young portrait photographer, Edward S. Curtis, often saw her on the streets of downtown Seattle or digging clams near the shack where she lived on Puget Sound.

  7. Oct 22, 2017 · Angeline, many of our readers will know, was the daughter of our city’s namesake Chief Seattle. Born around 1820, she was in her prime by the time Euro-American settler-interlopers first arrived here to stay in the early 1850s. The princess got on well with the city’s founders, and it was one of them, Catherine Maynard, who gave her the royal name.

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