The Salish People: Volume II Front Cover

Paperback / softback
ISBN: 9780889221499
Pages: 176
Pub. Date: January 1 1978
Dimensions: 8.5" x 5.5" x 0.5"
Rights: Available: WORLD
Categories
Non-Fiction / HIS006050

  • BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Cultural, Ethnic & Regional / Indigenous
  • HISTORY / Indigenous Peoples in the Americas
  • SOCIAL SCIENCE / Indigenous Studies
  • SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social
  • HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / British Columbia (BC)

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The Salish People: Volume II
The Squamish and the Lillooet
By Charles Hill-Tout
Edited by Ralph Maud

Charles Hill-Tout was born in England in 1858 and came to British Columbia in 1891. A pioneer settler at Abbotsford in the Fraser Valley, he devoted many years studying the Salish and publishing in the scholarly periodicals of the day. He was honoured as president of the Anthropological Section of the Royal Society of Canada and as a fellow of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain. In The Salish People, his field reports are collected for the first time.

In The Salish People each volums serves as a useful guide to a specific geographic area, bringing the past to the present. The four volumes, rich in stories and factual details about the old customs of the Coast and Interior Salish, are each edited with an introduction by Ralph Maud, who lives in the Fraser Valley and who teaches a course on the B.C. Indian Oral Tradition at Simon Fraser University.

Volume II of The Salish People deals with the people of the Squamish and the Lillooet, including the Origin Myth as told by a 100-year-old storyteller whose mother saw Captain Cook sail into Howe Sound in 1792. The “asides” Hill-Tout provides throughout the text are highly informative. In one, where fine snow is described, he says: “In this point of the recital the old man was exceedingly interesting and graphic in his description, the very tones of his voice lending themselves to his story, and I gathered, long before the interpreter took up the story, that he had told of something that was very small and had penetrated everywhere.” And again, where the Squamish dead are described: “Here the old man’s voice was hushed to a plaintive wail, and the faces of his audience were an eloquent index of the tragic interest of his story of their ancestors’ misfortunes.”