( Many environmentalists and
fans of American Indians act as if the supposed words of Chief
Seattle are some kind of "fifth gospel." In truth, the
man never spoke the words often attributed to him (for starters,
he didn't even speak English, and the speech was never translated
verbatim). The endless saccharin quotes of Seattle are annoying
to the extreme, especially when found in education materials attempting
to indoctrinate young people with ideas that American Indians
are a font of conventional environmental wisdom. You can find
the truth about this "speech" in many places, below
is a reasonable account. Lou, 2002 )
Below is a slightly condensed
article from Prologue, A Quarterly Publication of the U.S.
Nationnal Archives and Records Administration, Spring 1985, Vol.
18, No. 1 ( a U.S. Government public domain source). Rather than
linking to this article, it is placed here because of frequent
changes at the government website, resulting in broken links.
As of creation of this page, the complete article resides at:
http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/spring_1985_chief_seattle.html.
Thus Spoke Chief Seattle:
The Story of An Undocumented Speech
By Jerry L. Clark.
The following oration, supposedly spoken by an Indian chieftain
in 1855, has surfaced in today's world and has been used to justify
and fortify current attitudes regarding the treatment of the first
Americans and the natural environment in the United States. 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.
The oration below was allegedly spoken by Chief Seattle,(1) patriarch
of the Duwamish and Suquamish Indians of Puget Sound, to Isaac
Ingalls Stevens, governor of the Washington Territory, in the
year 1854 or 1855, at the site of the present metropolis of Seattle:
"Yonder sky that has wept tears of compassion upon our fathers
for centuries untold. . . . The son of the White Chief says his
father sends us greetings of friendship and good will. This is
kind of him, for we know he has little need of our friendship
in return because his people are many. They are like the grass
that covers the vast prairies, while my people are few: they resemble
the scattering trees of a storm-swept plain. . . . There was a
time when our people covered the whole land as the waves of a
wind-ruffled sea covers its shell-paved floor, but that time has
long since passed away with the greatness of tribes almost forgotten.
. . . When the last Red Man shall have perished, and the memory
of my tribe shall have become a myth among the white man, these
shores will swarm with the invisible dead of my tribe, and when
your childrens' children think themselves alone in the field,
the store, the shop, or in the silence of the pathless woods,
they will not be alone. . . . The White Men will never be alone.
Let him be just and deal kindly with my people, for the dead are
not powerlessDeadI say? There is no death. Only a
change of worlds." (2)
In addition, Chief Seattle allegedly wrote the following letter
to President Franklin Pierce in 1855:
"The Great Chief in Washington sends word that he wishes
to buy our land. . . . But we will consider your offer, for we
know if we do not . . . the white man may come with guns and take
our lands. . . . How can you buy or sell the skythe warmth
of the land? The idea is strange to us. Yet we do not own the
freshness of the air or the sparkle of the water. . . . Every
part of this earth is sacred to my people. . . . When the buffaloes
are all slaughtered, the wild horses all tamed, the secret corners
of the forest heavy with the scent of many men, and the views
of the ripe hills blotted by talking wires, where is the thicket?
Gone. Where is the eagle? Gone. "3
Noble words from a noble savage. But were these words actually
articulated by an otherwise obscure Indian more than a century
ago? Old Seattle's sonorous and evocative phrases still reverberate
today. This is in interim report on a search for their origins.
The sentiments expressed in the speech attributed to the old
chieftain are consonant with those held by persons disturbed by
the destruction of the Indian world by the development of the
American frontier. The attitudes reflected in the letter ascribed
to Seattle are in harmony with those professed by individuals
upset at the damage to the natural environment perpetrated by
our industrial society. The words of this Indian spokesman have
been frequently quoted to a wide audience via the newspaper and
television media. 4 The Smithsonian's "Nation of Nations"
exhibit includes a portion of Seattle's supposed speech for the
benefit of the thousands of tourists who visit our nation's capital
each year. Despite its popularity, this affirmation of Indian
eloquence may not be founded in historical reality.
The National Archives, the Smithsonian Institution, and the Library
of Congress each year receive numerous requests for the original
text of the statements attributed to the old chief. The United
States Information Agency has received similar inquiries from
persons and institutions in many foreign lands. Unfortunately,
no one has been able to locate either the letter or a reliable
text of the speech.
The purported letter by Chief Seattle to President Pierce is
very likely spurious. Among other charges, it denounces the White
Man's propensity for shooting buffaloes from the windows of the
"Iron Horse"a remarkable observation by Seattle,
who never in his lifetime left the land west of the Cascade Mountains
and thus never saw a railroad and may never have seen a buffalo,
either. A letter from an Indian in 1855 concerning Indian policy
and directed to the President would have required the usual nineteenth-century
red tape. It would have to pass through the hands of the local
Indian agent, Col. M. T. Simmons; to the superintendent of Indian
affairs, Gov. Isaac Stevens, to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs;
to the Office of the Secretary of the Interior; and eventually
to the President.
A search of the records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs and of
the Office of the Secretary of the Interior in the National Archives
and the presidential papers of Franklin Pierce in the Library
of Congress has not uncovered even a trace of such a letter. It
has not been found among the private papers of Pierce in the New
Hampshire Historical Society. It is known that Seattle was non-literate,5
so yet another person must have written the alleged messageyet
no source for the text of the 1855 letter has ever been discovered.
Thus this widely-distributed document can safely be considered
an unhistorical artifact of someone's fertile literary imagination.
The historical Chief Seattle was the head man of the Duwamish
and several other related small bands of Indians inhabiting the
shores of Puget Sound. In 1852, a tiny American settlement was
established near Alki Point ("By and By" in the Duwamish
language), and the settlers named their village Seattle after
its Indian patriarch.(6) In March of 1853 the territory of Washington
was carved out of the Oregon country, but it was not until October
of that year that the new territorial governor, thirty-five year
old Isaac Ingalls Stevens, arrived in Olympia, the capital city.
Stevens was anxious to survey a northern route for the proposed
transcontinental railroad through the trackless wilderness of
his new domain. He also had instructions to negotiate land cessions
from the numerous Indian tribes. Therefore, Governor Stevens spent
much of his time in explorations and in attending treaty councils
throughout the Pacific northwest area.7 A knowledge of his travels
is required in order to determine the occasion at which Seattle's
alleged discourse might have been given.
The text of Chief Seattle's monologue has frequently appeared
in anthologies of American Indian literature and oratory, but
most do not identify its source. The main source for the speech
is, apparently, a 1932 pamphlet by John M. Rich, copies of which
are at the Seattle Historical Society and at the Library of Congress.8
Mr. Rich, in turn, cites an article in a Seattle newspaper from
1887 in which a Dr. Henry A. Smith reconstructed a speech by the
Duwamish Chief on the occasion "When Governor Stevens first
arrived in Seattle and told the natives that he had been appointed
Commissioner of Indian Affairs for Washington Territory,"
an event dated by Rich as December 1854. (9)
According to several local historians of Seattle, Dr. Smith was
fluent in the Duwamish tongue and thus was able to transcribe
Seattle's words verbatim. Dr. Smith came from Ohio and homesteaded
in "Smith's Cove" near Seattle early in 1853. He served
as the superintendent of the local schools and in the territorial
legislature. A biographer proclaimed him an "able medicine
man and a poet of no ordinary talent, a rare scholar and a good
writer." (10) This man with his bilingual talents would surely
have proven most useful to Governor Stevens in his dealings with
the Indians, of Puget Sound.
There apparently were only three occasions between 1853 and 1856
when Isaac Stevens visited the Seattle area and could have witnessed
the speech of Seattle reported by Dr. Smith. Nothing much is known
about Stevens's initial visit in January 1854; it is listed, as
a brief stop during a sailing tour of Puget Sound.11 Two months
later, Stevens rushed to the area at the head of a detachment
of troops in search of Indians who had murdered a settler. During
a tense meeting with Seattle and Chief Patkanan of the Snoqualmies,
Stevens introduced himself and explained the purpose of his visit.
Surveyor George Gibbs later recalled that "Seattle made a
great speech declaring his good disposition toward the whites."12
Was this the oration recorded by Dr. Smith? Apparently not, because
another local citizen, Luther Collins, served as a translator
into Chinook, the trade language of the Puget Sound tribes, and
an Indian in turn translated into the local tongue. Obviously,
Dr. Smith and his language skills could not have been available
to Stevens during this important confrontation. In fact, Dr. Smith
is not listed among those present at this council.13
In March of 1854, Governor Stevens departed for an extended sojourn
to Washington, D.C., where he became embroiled in a dispute with
Secretary of War Jefferson Davis over the route of the proposed
transcontinental railroad. The governor did not return to Olympia
and Washington Territory until early December of 1854. He addressed
the legislative assembly and attended a treaty council at Medicine
Creek with the Nisqually and Puyallup Indians, December 2527,
1854.14
He arrived at Muleteo, or Point Elliott, just south of Seattle,
on January 21, 1855, to meet the assembled Duwamish, Snoqualmies,
and Skagit tribes. Many books which cite Dr. Smith's version place
the oration of Seattle at the Point Elliott treaty council, although
Smith's 1887 report does not specifically give a date for it,
Smith does state Seattle's reaction to a proposed agreement involving
a reservation for the Duwamish tribe (which was part of the proposed
Point Elliott treaty).(15)
The "Record of Proceedings" of this council is among
the records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in the National Archives.
It contains the following statements by Chief Seattle:
"I look upon you as my father, I and the rest regard you
as such. All of the Indians have the same good feeling toward
you and will send it on paper to the Great Father. All of the
men, old men, women and children rejoice that he has sent you
to take care of them. My mind is like yours, I don't want to say
more. My heart is very good towards Dr. Maynard [a physician who
was present]. I want always to get medicine from him."
"Now by this we make friends and put away all bad feelings
if we ever had any. We are the friends of the Americans. All the
Indians are of the same mind. We look upon you as our Father. We
will never change our minds, but since you have been to see us we
will be always the same. Now! Now, do you send this paper."
(16 )
Above are the only words of Chief Seattle recorded in the official
record.
The name of Dr. Smith does not appear among those listed as witnessing
the Point Elliott discussions. The widow of Dr. David S. Maynard
[the doctor mentioned by Seattle] did not recall anything like
Smith's version when interviewed by a biographer of Chief Seattle
in 1903.17 The official interpreter, Col. B. F. Shaw, also survived
into the twentieth century and failed to mention the remarkable
oration.18 Another witness was Hazard Stevens, son of the governor,
but he was only twelve years old in 1855. In addition, an old
Indian later recalled that during the preceding treaty council
at Medicine Creek, he and Hazard Stevens "were having a good
time eating black strap and playing Jews-harps while the men were
talking. We didn't know what they were talking about."19
Ezra Meeker, a severe critic of Governor Stevens's Indian policies,
accused Stevens of being drunk at the councils and of having suppressed
a speech of opposition by Chief Leschi of the Nisqually Indians
in the official record. Surely Meeker, himself an early pioneer
of Washington Territory, would have used the polemic words attributed
to Seattle against Stevens if they had been known to him. Meeker
interviewed Colonel Shaw, the interpreter at the Point Elliott
council, so he should have been aware of the speech if it actually
occurred.20
The absence of any contemporary evidence (the territorial newspaper
at Olympia is silent about any dramatic statement by Chief Seattle
in 1855), the lack of a Duwimish-language text of the speech,
the absence of notes bv Dr. Smith, the silence on the part of
persons known to have been present during meetings between Stevens
and Seattle, and the failure of the speech to appear in the official
treaty proceedings create grave doubts about the accuracy of the
reminiscences of Dr. Smith in 1887, some thirty-two years after
the alleged episode. Thus it is impossible (unless new evidence
is forthcoming) to either confirm or deny the validity of this
powerful and persuasive message placed in the mouth of an Indian
sachem. As of now, the verdict must be that of the ancient Scottish
jurisprudence: "Not proven."
Perhaps Dr. Smith mistranslated Seattle's phrases; perhaps he
mis-remembered the events of 1855; perhaps he combined several
speakers' efforts into a coherent form and added the Victorian
rhetorical flourishes; or perhaps it was the invention of his
own literary muse. Perhaps Clio, the muse of history, cannot now
challenge the "Funeral Oration of the Great Indian Race,"21
for it may already have become transmuted into a mythical realm
beyond the reach of the skeptical historian.
Does it really make any difference today whether the oration
in question actually originated with Chief Seattle in 1855 or
with Dr. Smith in 1887? Of course it matters, because this memorable
statement loses its moral force and validity if it is the literary
creation of a frontier physician rather than the thinking of an
articulate and wise Indian leader. Noble thoughts based on a lie
lose their nobility. The dubious and murky origins of Chief Seattle's
alleged "Unanswered Challenge" renders it useless as
supporting evidence. The historical record suggests that the compliant
and passive individual named Seattle is not recognizable in the
image of the defiant and angry man whose words reverberate in
our time.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jerry L. Clark is on the staff of the National Archives and Records
Administration.
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Notes
1. Properly spelled Sealth, but he was better known by the spelling
used by his namesake city, Seattle. Frederick Webb Hodge, ed.,
"Seattle," Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico
(1913).
2. Quoted in T. C. McLuhan, Touch The Earth, A Self Portrait
of Indian Existence (1971). There are also versions, with variant
texts, in Virginia I. Armstrong, I Have Spoken (1971), and W.
C. Vanderwerth, Indian Oratory (1971). None of these anthologies
provide a documented source for the speech.
3. Quoted in "Letters to the Editors," Washington Star
and Daily News (May 28, 1973). A version of Seattle's letter inspired
a future justice of the U.S. Supreme Court to a life-long crusade
for environmental causes (William O. Douglas, Go East, Young Man
[1983]).
4. There are versions of Seattle's "talk" quoted in
the Wildlife Omnibus (Nov. 15, 1973), which took it from the Environmental
Action (Nov. 11, 1972), which obtained it from the Seattle Friends
of the Earth, who saw it in the Seattle Public Library, who now
know nothing of such a document. A television documentary film
used a "translation" by a noted Latinist, William Arrowsmith,
who now admits only to polishing the literary style of a nineteenth-century
source. These versions were traced by Janice Drammayr, "
'The Earth is Our Mother,' Who Really Said That?" Seattle
Sunday Times (Jan. 5, 1975).
5. Clarence B. Bagley, "Chief Seattle and Angeline,"
The Washington Historical Quarterly, 22 (Oct. 1931): 251, Angeline
was a daughter of the chief.
6. Hodge, Handbook of American Indians, p. 493. The chief levied
a small annual tribute from the settlers of his namesake town
for the privilege of using his name.
7. Hazard Stevens, Life of Isaac Stevens (1900), 455-465.
8. John M. Rich, Chief Seattle's Unanswered Challenge (1932).
9. Ibid., p.31. Dr. Smith's article was in the Seattle Sunday
Star (Oct. 20, 1887).
10. Frederick James Grant, ed., "Dr. Henry A. Smith,"
(1891). History of Seattle, Washington (1891). See also Archie
Binns, Northwest Gateway, The Story of the Port of Seattle (1941).
11. Stevens, Isaac Stevens, pp. 317-417.
12. Records of the Washington Superintencency, 1853-74, NARA
Microfilm Publication M5, roll 23.
13. Ibid.
14. Stevens, Isaac Stevens,, p. 417.
15. Dr. Henry A. Smith, Seattle Sunday Times (1887). On his deathbed,
Smith reaffirmed the speech's authenticity to Vivian M. Carkeek,
who, on his deathbed, told Clark B. Belknap, who in turn told
John M. Rich. Rich, Seattle's Unanswered Challenge, p. 45.
16. Documents Relating to the Negotiation of Ratified and Unratified
Treaties With Various Indian Tribes, 1801-69, NARA Microfilm Publication
T495, roll 5.
17. Frank Carlson, "Chief Seattle," Bulletin of the
University of Washington, Vol. 3 (1909)
18. Ezra Meeker, Frontier Reminiscences of the Puget Sound (1905).
19. Ibid, p. 240.
20 Ibid, p. 234.
21. Rich, Seattle's Unanswered Challenge, p. 12. Rich is apparently
the author of the memorable closing phrase of the speech: "DeadI
Say? There is no death. Only a change of worlds." These words
do not appear in Dr. Smith's 1887 account.
See http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/ejournal/newsweek.htm
for another article about the Chief Seattle speech. |