Archaeological Notes On Western Washington And Adjacent British Columbia

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THE OZETTE-MAKAH REGION. The Makah (Klas-set or Kwe-net-sat h) Indians, a branch of the Nootka family, occupy the Cape Flattery region. When first visited by white men, they claimed all the country from Flattery Rocks and the Ozette Indian vil lage on the Pacific front around Cape Flattery and Tatoosh Island to the mouth of the Hoko River on the Strait of Juan de Fuca, the distance down the coast each way from the cape being about 18 miles. By the Makah treaty of 1855, known as the Treaty of Ne...ah Bay, which was effected by Governor Isaac I. Stevens, Superintendent of Indian Affairs and Gov ernor of Washington Territory, this territory was reduced to a distance about six miles down the coast on each side of the cape. Tatoosh Island was also thrown out of the Indian lands. The portion reserved includes a low flat area and meadow land partly covered with a dense forest and partly open marsh at the south extending from Neah Bay to the Pacific, a distance of about four miles. This low area is bordered by abrupt and almost precipitous hills on each side throughout its entire length.

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