Coast Salish kin carry on the legacy of the woolly dog
Debra qasen Sparrow recalls talking and learning about Coast Salish woolly dogs with her grandfather, Ed Sparrow, in her early days as a weaver. Born in 1898, Ed remembered seeing the now-extinct canines around their village, and watching the women weaving with the companion animal’s woolly hairs.
The Musqueam Indian Band artist’s grandfather told her that “every village had wool dogs, that they were like gold because, of course, their fibers were mixed with the mountain goat and then rove ‘made into a roving for spinning’ and spun,” she shared.
Known in some Coast Salish languages as “pa7pa7á¸in,” “sqwema:y,” “kimia,” and “sqwbaý,” these wool-bearing dogs were carefully bred for thousands of years for their distinctive thick undercoat.
Once a beloved companion to the Musqueam and related nations, the last woolly dog disappeared more than 100 years ago. Coast Salish communities have been collectively mourning and remembering these canines from the Salish Sea to Sto:lÅ for decades. Some even call for their return, including jokes about a Jurassic Park reboot.
But despite its extinction in the physical realm, “it stands imaginary beside me all the time,” said Sparrow. The dogs live on through longstanding oral histories and artwork from the past and present, and Coast Salish people continue to learn from these adored ancestral pets – which Sparrow lovingly refers to as “little beings” or “woolly guys.”
To re-establish her ancestors’ practice, the esteemed weaver plans to recreate a dog wool blanket this year, with funding from the Canada Council for the Arts. By weaving modern dog hair – maybe husky or samoyed – with mountain goat wool, diatomaceous earth and stinging nettle, and dying the fibres with mushrooms and lichen, she hopes to show that, while the woolly dog is extinct, the practice of weaving with dog hair doesn’t have to be.
She’s currently experimenting with different kinds of dog hair and has been offered bags from as far as New Zealand, but it will be a trial process to see what works.
For now, Sparrow is working on creating a stuffed animal of a woolly dog that will be brought into stores, including Eighth Generation at Pike Place Market, so that people can hold him and get to know him.
“We’ve been reconnected with the blankets now. This final journey is reconnecting with the little being and returning that gift,” she said.
“Just because we can’t see it doesn’t mean it doesn’t exist. It always did.”
Sparrow’s project to reconnect with the ancient weaving practice – and physical representation of the beloved companion animal – also comes at a time of broader illumination about the history of the woolly dog.
Recently, she was part of a group of Coast Salish community members who had an opportunity to virtually reconnect with a 160-year-old woolly dog pelt – the only known remains of any woolly dog in existence.
In December, the results from the analysis involving academics and co-authors, including Coast Salish Elders, Youth, weavers and other knowledge-keepers, were released in the journal Science, illuminating this historic animal’s ancestry, genetics and cultural details.
For the study, seven interviews were conducted with Coast Salish weavers, Knowledge Keepers, Elders, and Youth about their knowledge of these dogs, including their memories and concerns about how the history of these dogs has been presented.
The interviewees include Xweliqwiya Rena Point Bolton (Sto:lÅ), Danielle Morsette (Suquamish and Shxwha:y), Susan sa’hLa mitSa Pavel (Skokomish), Michael Pavel (Skokomish), Senaqwila Wyss (Sá¸wx̱wu7mesh Ãxwumixw), Eliot White-Hill (Snuneymuxw), and Sparrow.
The questions revolved around the role and value of these dogs, the use of dog wool in blankets, diet and husbandry (the care, cultivation, and breeding of crops and animals), companionship, processing, spinning and weaving the wool, colonial practices/policies that impacted them, and their thoughts on how the knowledge gathered from this project should be shared.
Senaqwila Wyss’s work publically sharing stories of the pa7pa7iá¸n, which translates to “fluffy-haired dog” in the Squamish language, has been instrumental in bringing these dogs’ stories to light for years.
“If there were an emergency, a woman would grab her woolly dog and her child,” Wyss shared in an interview with IndigiNews, recounting a passage from Chief Louis Miranda and other Sá¸wx̱wu7mesh Elders.
Wyss, an ethnobotanist and member of the Sá¸wx̱wu7mesh Nation, described being on Zoom calls with relatives as part of this study, closely looking over the pelt. They would ask the researchers to describe its scent and slowly study the textures of the under and overcoat, wanting to take in all of the small details.
Many of the Coast Salish people interviewed shared similar sentiments about colonization and how the impacts of the smallpox epidemic highlighted the loss of people within the community (90 per cent of Indigenous people in some villages across “B.C.”), leading to the loss of people to care for their animals.
Others talked about how Indian agents, priests and police would take the dogs away or kill them, similar to how the bison were slaughtered to control Indigenous communities in the prairies.
Most colonial accounts of these dogs’ disappearance were attributed to the introduction of Hudson Bay Company point blankets, which have become symbolic of representing genocide and contributing to the colonial narrative that these dogs disappeared due to convenience, but Salish communities disagree.
Eliot White-Hill, Kwulasultun, a Snuneymuxw artist and storyteller, was one of the interviewees involved in the ethnographic interviews of the study.
“That it would have been more convenient doesn’t align with my understanding of our practices and culture,” he said.
“I think about when we’re preparing cedar boughs for ceremony. It’s really critical that you harvest them before sunrise. You could harvest them anytime around the day, but to us, it’s imperative that you do this work in a really specific way and that protocol is followed.”
Further, White-Hill explained how the dogs have a significant value to communities beyond the blankets and other objects made from their hair.
“The socioeconomic significance of these woolly dogs is rooted in not only the value of the blankets but the value of the dogs themselves,” he shared.
“They were so cherished and so loved,” he added. “They were owned and passed down, mother to daughter, matrilineally. The stories about the dogs and the history show that they had a special place in the hearts of our ancestors. They embodied what it meant to be wealthy and high-ranking in a traditional sense.”
White-Hill discussed how Hul’qumi’num has different pronouns for referring to humans, objects, and living things and that the woolly dogs were referred to in the same way they would family members.
“It starts to unravel, in a way, people’s understanding of us as a hunter-gatherer society,” White-Hill said in a quote from the ethnographic interviews in the journal’s supplemental materials.
“Our relationship with the woolly dogs, our relationship with the camas patches and the clam beds, the way that we tended the land and tended the forests – these all show the systems in place that are far more complex than what people take for granted about Coast Salish culture.”
With support from the First Peoples’ Cultural Council, White-Hill is currently writing and illustrating a children’s storybook based on a story shared by Elder Gary Manson about how a raven, the chief of the wilderness, tricked these dogs using Salish art and storytelling.
As for Wyss, she continues to highlight Salish perspectives and demystify colonial narratives on the history of these woolly dogs through language, archival photos, and memes. She’s glad that the bodies of these institutions are supporting them but hopes they remember that the Elders, knowledge keepers, and master weavers are supporting their work simultaneously.
“In many ways, I want our Elders and community members to be heard, but at the same time, that’s challenging. Two-eyed seeing may be helpful, but it’s almost a double-edged sword. It’s sort of condescending to say, ‘Yeah, what you’ve said all along was true.”’
For now, Sparrow, Wyss, and White-Hill are all waiting for the precious woolly dog pelt to visit the West Coast for ceremony.” Everybody will be waiting and anticipating when and how that will happen,” shared Sparrow.
The pelt utilized in the study belonged to the Salish woolly dog Mutton, who spent his days in or near “Chilliwack” living with naturalist and ethnographer George Gibbs before he died in 1859.
After his death, Mutton’s pelt and lower leg bones made their way to the Smithsonian Natural Museum of Natural History. They lay forgotten in a drawer nearly 3,000 kilometres from his home territories until they were rediscovered in the early 2000s.
Mutton, a name not claimed by the Coast Salish, was given his name by Gibbs, and some members of local nations feel this is “insulting” and “Eurocentric” as the definition of Mutton means “flesh of sheep, used as food.”
Candace Wellman, an independent historian from Whatcom County, came across correspondence from the Smithsonian regarding details about Mutton’s pelt. Wellman contacted the Smithsonian, and the museum curators invited her to measure and take photos of the pelt. Mutton’s pelt was still tagged with Gibb’s original label, which read “Indian Dog ‘Mutton,”’ when they opened the drawer that housed his pelt in 2002.
His pelt, described as a “long, very dense double coat with a dense undercoat and long, fine guard hairs,” was pristine when they rediscovered it. It isn’t purely white but has slightly yellow undertones with a copperish-red discolouration in its curly tail.
It is thought that they treated it with “arsenic powder or arsenic mixed with water and alcohol” or that it was “salted down in casks” and thoroughly dried before being packed away, as suggested in directions from Spencer Baird (circa 1848) – the first curator of the Smithsonian Institution – for collecting Natural History specimens and objects, according to the supplemental materials for the journal.
The genes responsible for the dogs’ woolliness were examined in the journal titled “The History of Coast Salish ‘Woolly Dogs’ Revealed by Ancient Genomics and Indigenous Knowledge.” The authors hoped to glean information on the breeding practices and genetic modifications that underlie the hairy dog phenotype.