Oroville Mercury-Register

Seattle returns ancient artifacts to Upper Skagit tribe

- David Gutman

MARBLEMOUN­T, WASH. » Until Seattle City Light built a company-town dining hall a century ago, until the building was renovated a decade ago and until they were dug up during that renovation, the 270 stone artifacts likely sat undisturbe­d for millennia upon millennia.

The objects, found on the shores of the Skagit River, represent the remains of an ancient village of the Upper Skagit Indian Tribe.

When Seattle built three dams on the Skagit River in the early 20th century to provide the city with electricit­y, the city also built a company town for its workers. The town, Newhalem, was built on the site of, and named after, the Upper Skagit village of Da?áylib.

Found during Seattle City Light’s renovation of the Gorge Inn, Newhalem’s dining hall, the artifacts include tools, hammerston­es, scrapers, a club and a projectile point, likely the tip of a spear or an arrow used to kill a mountain goat.

The objects would have been used for forming and sharpening tools, cutting, scraping, chopping, splitting wood.

Now, thousands of years after they were formed, 100 years after they were first disturbed and nine years after they were discovered, Seattle is set to return the artifacts to the Upper Skagit tribe. The return comes after years of research to officially determine the provenance of the ancient objects.

The artifacts are currently stored at a curation facility at the North Cascades National Park ranger station in Marblemoun­t.

Scott Schuyler, policy representa­tive for the Upper Skagit tribe, held one of the tools, an oblong granite club, about a foot long, that was likely used for killing fish. The Upper Skagit tribe had hunting and fishing villages along the Skagit River from Mount Vernon to Newhalem for thousands of years before Westerners arrived.

While it’s hard to pin an exact date on the artifacts, many of them are likely around 4,000 to 9,000 years old, archaeolog­ists involved with the project said. The tribe’s first contact with Westerners was only around 170 years ago.

“It’s always powerful to me as a tribal member to hold these artifacts,” Schuyler said. “I could just, you know, feel their presence.

“And it’s just a deep inner meaning to me personally to be involved in working with the tribe and to handle these artifacts that our ancestors made,” Schuyler said. “We all think of the context of the last few hundred years of history of the United States, but that’s just a blink of an eye in the history of our occupation here in the Skagit Valley.”

Schuyler said he’s occasional­ly found artifacts in the Skagit Valley over the years. When he does, he reburies them further, as the tribe would rather they remain in place.

In this case, given the long-ago constructi­on and the more-recent renovation, that was impossible, so repatriati­on was the best option.

The Seattle City Council voted 8-0 last week to return the artifacts to the Upper Skagit tribe. Once Mayor Bruce Harrell signs the legislatio­n, which a spokespers­on said he will do this week, the transfer of ownership will begin. It’s been a long time coming.

Seattle City Light began renovation of the Gorge Inn in 2013, replacing decaying beams and boards and digging a new foundation and utility trenches under the historic building.

The location wasn’t a documented archaeolog­ical site, but the city was aware of the broader history of Newhalem as a historical and culturally important site. So the city hired an archaeolog­ical firm to oversee the renovation.

As work began, the firm would sift soil through screens, checking for historical artifacts. They found forks and spoons and antique mustard jars and all sorts of relics of decades of communal dining.

“The soil was very mixed, kind of like you’d expect at a constructi­on site,” said Andrea Weiser staff archaeolog­ist for Seattle City Light.

In the same soil, they also found much older objects. They found rocks whose unnatural shearing could only have come from human action, from striking, pounding, cutting.

The objects were “primarily discovered from a highly disturbed context,” the archaeolog­ical consultant wrote, likely the result of less careful constructi­on work when the Gorge Inn was built in 1925.

 ?? STEVE RINGMAN — THE SEATTLE TIMES-TNS ?? Scott Schuyler, Policy Representa­tive for the Upper Skagit Tribe for natural and cultural resources holds a precontact fish club that is part of the artifacts discovered near Ross Lake being turned over to the tribe. Andrea Weiser, senior archaeolog­ist for Seattle City Light at left.
STEVE RINGMAN — THE SEATTLE TIMES-TNS Scott Schuyler, Policy Representa­tive for the Upper Skagit Tribe for natural and cultural resources holds a precontact fish club that is part of the artifacts discovered near Ross Lake being turned over to the tribe. Andrea Weiser, senior archaeolog­ist for Seattle City Light at left.

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