For The Confederated Tribes of the G rand Ronde Community of Oregon - grandronde 2025

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Chinuk Wawa- the common language of the Grand Ronde reservation used by the native peoples to communicate with each other - at Grand Ronde it became a first language in the households of most tribal members - the language was developed previously by Native people along the Columbia River, to communicate with traders,
Willamette Falls represents home the home of our ancestors from the Charcowah village of the Clowewalla (Willamette band of Tumwaters) and the Kosh-huk-shix Village of Clackamas people.
The diseases brought in by the settlers were far more lethal than any shootouts. Smallpox, cholera, measles and other illnesses for which the Indians had no immunity wiped out up to 90 percent of some tribes during the 20 years of the Oregon Trail.
The Reservation Era was also problematic in terms of Tribes self-determination. While living on reservations, tribal members were policed by federal officers referred to as Indian agents. Congress also interfered in tribal sovereignty with the passage of the Major Crimes Act in 1885.
The Grand Ronde Community Today With approximately 5,400 enrolled tribal members, the Tribe is governed by a nine-member Tribal Council that is elected by the Tribes voting membership. The Tribes vision is to be a Tribal community known as a caring people, dedicated to the principles of honesty and integrity.
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The Termination Act terminated the Tribes federal recognition status, stripping their identity as a sovereign nation. The tribe lost all its treaty rights and land. The Termination Act removed all obligations that had been negotiated through treaties between the United States Government and the Tribes of Grand Ronde.
Between 1954 and 1983, Grand Ronde tribal members were a landless people in their own land. The termination policy robbed the Tribe of its social, economic and political fabric, leaving a scattered population and poverty. In spite of this, Grand Ronde remained a community interconnected by families.

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