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  2. Slavery was historically practiced by Coast Salish peoples, and, like many of his contemporaries, Seattle owned slaves whom he had captured during his raids, further increasing his prestige. By 1833, he had become known to the staff of Fort Nisqually as Le Gros, 'the big guy'. He was seen as an intelligent and formidable leader, owing to his ...

    • Sholeetsa (mother), Shweabe (father)
    • Namesake of Seattle, Washington, and his speech on the land treaty
  3. Jan 18, 2003 · Known for a City and a Speech. By the time Euro-American settlers began arriving in the area, Seattle had been accepted as headman or chief by most of the Native Americans from the Cedar River and Shilshole Bay to Bainbridge Island and Port Madison.

  4. Sep 25, 2019 · Even though he was raised at a different village downriver called Stuk, Seattle’s supposedly tainted lineage bedeviled him. As late as the 1950s, George Adams, a state legislator and member of the Skokomish tribe near Shelton, derided him as “…an ex-slave who lived at Fleaburg.”

  5. Feb 20, 2018 · In an 1854 speech given at a meeting between local tribal leaders and Washington’s first territorial governor in what is now Pioneer Square, Chief Seattle of the Duwamish and Suquamish reportedly talked about the displacement of his people by the tide of white settlers flowing in, and the power of the dead to bear witness: “At night, when the st...

  6. Apr 8, 2024 · Seattle was the chief of the Duwamish, Suquamish, and other Puget Sound tribes who befriended white settlers of the region. Seattle came under the influence of French missionaries, was converted to Roman Catholicism, and instituted morning and evening services among his people—a practice maintained.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  7. Jan 25, 2024 · Since these words have been used for propagandistic and polemic purposes, a closer examination of the historical and literary origins of old Chief Seattle's catechism of woes and wrongs done to the American Indian and his world is in order.

  8. Until the 1970s, the story of Chief Seattle belonged to the city that bears his name. Then, with the environmental movement in full swing, the speech Sealth made to Governor Stevens in 1854 was resurrected into the consciousness of Americans.

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