Daily Press

Navy ship will take name of prominent tribal rights leader

Frank served in Marines, fought for fishing rights in Pacific Northwest

- By Alexandra Yoon-Hendricks

SEATTLE — Billy Frank Jr. was arrested over 50 times trying to preserve his and his tribe’s treaty right to fish in their ancestral waters.

Now, the legendary Nisqually elder who was a central figure in the fight for tribal fishing rights and environmen­tal protection­s in the Pacific Northwest will have a Navy ship named after him.

A future Navy Navajo-class towing, salvage and rescue ship — TATS-11 — will be named the USNS Billy Frank Jr., officials announced this month.

“This is truly an honor for the Frank family, Wa-he-lut School and the Nisqually Nation,” said Willie Frank III, son of Billy Frank Jr. and chair of the Nisqually Indian Tribe, in a statement.

Starting in 2019, the Navy began naming a new class of ships after prominent Native Americans or Native American tribes in honor of their contributi­ons to the armed forces — American Indians and Alaska Natives serve in the U.S. military at a higher rate than any other ethnic group in the country. Frank served in the Marine Corps for two years.

The USNS Billy Frank Jr., the sixth ship in the class, is the first to be named after an individual.

“We have a chance to tell our story and educate a whole new audience about the Nisqually Tribe, Billy Frank Jr., and the 29 tribes in the state of Washington,” said Willie Frank III.

William “Billy” Frank Jr. was born in 1931 as a member of the Nisqually tribe in Washington, and grew up fishing on his tribal land.

He began his long career as an activist in 1945, when he was arrested for catching steelhead and chum with his net in the Nisqually River. Over the years, he would become the face of a defining civil rights movement in the Pacific Northwest.

After serving as a military policeman in the Marine Corps during the Korean War, Frank returned to Washington, where he continued to fight for the right to fish Chinook and other salmon in his tribe’s historical waters.

Despite 19th-century treaties guaranteei­ng Northwest tribes access to historical waters, commercial and sport fishing had led to a drop in stocks at local salmon fisheries. In response, state game agents began harassing and targeting tribal fishermen, including Frank and his father.

Over the years, Frank and others staged “fish-ins” at the Washington state Capitol, protesting the arrests and raids against Indigenous fishermen blamed for the decline.

That organizing culminated in a landmark decision in 1974, when U.S. District Judge George Boldt affirmed the tribes’ right to half of the fish harvest — as well as the country’s obligation to honor treaties. That ruling was extended to the harvest of shellfish in 1993.

“He’ll stand with all the great Indian names of the past two centuries in the Pacific Northwest and across the nation,” his longtime friend Hank Adams said in 2014. “His is a name that will stand out in the future for all he’s given to Indians and the world.”

Frank would go on to serve as chair of the Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission for over three decades and receive numerous accolades. In the later half of his life, Frank turned his activism toward protecting forests and salmon streams from excessive timber harvest and developmen­t.

He was 83 when he died in 2014. A statue of Frank is set to be placed in the Statuary Hall in the U.S. Capitol, a revered civic space where each state is represente­d by two figures deserving of national commemorat­ion.

Navajo-class ships provide “ocean-going tug, salvage and rescue capabiliti­es to support Fleet operations,” according to U.S. Navy officials. They can tow other Navy vessels and have 6,000 square feet of deck space.

Other ships in the class have been named in honor of the Cherokee Nation, the Saginaw Chippewa Indian Tribe of Michigan, the Lenape Nation of Pennsylvan­ia and the Muscogee (Creek) Nation.

“My father served this beautiful country as a United States Marine. He was proud to serve his country,” said Willie Frank III in a statement. “As Chairman of the Nisqually Tribe, we want to thank the United States Navy for recognizin­g and honoring our Nisqually veteran, father and uncle.”

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Billy Frank Jr., Nisqually tribal chairman, served as a military policeman in the Marine Corps during the Korean War. He died in 2014.
FILE PHOTO Billy Frank Jr., Nisqually tribal chairman, served as a military policeman in the Marine Corps during the Korean War. He died in 2014.

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