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Siuslaw Map
Siuslaw may refer to: * Siuslaw people, Native American tribe and the Siuslaw language they spoke * Siuslaw River, a river named for the tribe * Siuslaw River Bridge, a bridge named for the river it spans * Siuslaw National Forest, a forest named for the river {{disambig ...
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Siuslaw People
The Siuslaw are an Indigenous people of the Pacific Northwest. Their autonym is sha’yuushtl’a. Today Siuslaw people are enrolled with the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians and the Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw Indians located on the southwest Oregon, on the Pacific Ocean, Pacific Coast. Territory Historically, the Siuslaw lived along the Siuslaw River in western Oregon. They had 34 distinct named villages in the 1880s. Language The Siuslaw are closely related to the Lower Umpqua people, Umpqua (or Kuitsh), and both group spoke dialects of Siuslaw language, a Coast Oregon Penutian languages, Coast Oregon Penutian language. The Siuslaw language is extinct language, extinct. History The Siuslaw people lived in their villages along the Siuslaw River for centuries until 1860, when they were forcibly removed to an Indian reservation in Yachats, Oregon. The Siuslaw, Coos people, Coos, and Lower Umpqua had signed the 1855 Empire Treaty; however, ...
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Siuslaw Language
Siuslaw was the language of the Siuslaw people and Lower Umpqua ( Kuitsh) people of Oregon. It is also known as ''Lower Umpqua''. The Siuslaw language had two dialects: Siuslaw proper (Šaayušƛa) and Lower Umpqua (Quuiič). Classification Siuslaw is currently considered to be a language isolate. It may be part of a Coast Oregon Penutian family together with Alsea and the Coosan languages, although the validity of this family is still controversial. Proponents of the disputed Penutian phylum usually include Siuslaw as part of it, together with the other Coast Oregon Penutian languages. Documentation Published sources are by Leo J. Frachtenberg who collected data from a non-English-speaking native speaker of the Lower Umpqua dialect and her Alsean husband (who spoke it as a second language) during three months of fieldwork in 1911, and by Dell Hymes who worked with four Siuslaw speakers in 1954.Hymes, Dell. (1966)Some points of Siuslaw phonology.''International Journal of ...
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Siuslaw River
The Siuslaw River ( ) is a river, about long, that flows to the Pacific Ocean coast of Oregon in the United States. It drains an area of about in the Central Oregon Coast Range southwest of the Willamette Valley and north of the watershed of the Umpqua River. It rises in the mountains of southwestern Lane County, about west of Cottage Grove. It flows generally west-northwest through the mountains, past Swisshome, entering the Pacific at Florence. The head of tide is upstream. It is part of the homeland of the Siuslaw people, after whom it is named. Citizens of the Siuslaw nation lived in villages along the river until 1860 when they were forcibly removed to an Indian reservation in Yachats whereupon their homes, farms, gardens and villages were destroyed and occupied by U.S. settler-colonists. The valley of the river has been one of the productive timber regions in Oregon. The lower course of the river passes through Siuslaw National Forest. The Coos Bay branch of ...
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Siuslaw River Bridge
The Siuslaw River Bridge is a bascule bridge that spans the Siuslaw River on U.S. Route 101 in Florence, Oregon. It was designed by Conde McCullough, built by the Mercer-Fraser Company of Eureka, California, and funded by the Federal Emergency Administration of Public Works (later renamed the Public Works Administration). It opened in 1936. The bridge's total length is . When open, the double-leaf bascule provides of horizontal clearance for boat traffic. The bascule section is flanked by two reinforced concrete tied arches, identical to those used in the original Alsea Bay Bridge. Four Art Deco-style obelisks house mechanical equipment as well as living quarters for the bridge operator. The total cost of the bridge was $527,000 (equivalent to $ million in ). The bridge was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 5, 2005. See also * * * * List of bridges documented by the Historic American Engineering Record in Oregon * List of bridges on the Nati ...
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