Indian
Shakers
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Oregon Reservations All Shook Up
The Indians of Oregon
first became acquainted with the Shaker religion through the inter
mediation
of a clairvoyant Kelso Shaker known as Aiyel, and his associates in
that
area. The time was probably 1893. The known details are few, but
according
to available information, knowledge of the new religion was carried to
the Warm Springs tribes
in
North Central Oregon by a Wasco named Hunaitca. With some companions
from
the Oregon reservation, he was picking berries during the summer in the
vicinity of Hood River when he saw a Shaker performance by the Longview
people. From here, at an uncertain date, it is said that word of the
cult
spread to the Klamath, on the reservation in Southern
Oregon.
It was not until sometime later, however, that the record became clear.
In 1914 a Klamath man got sick, and word was sent to the Yakima Shakers
requesting them to pay him a visit to try to cure him. About 15 of them
decided to answer the call. There were already some Shakers among the
Klamath,
but they had no church. Their first meetings were therefore in a
temporary
structure on a campground. Later on, a new convert turned a dance hall
that he owned over to them. Several converts were made upon the
occasion
of this meeting, which lasted for a week or two, and another community
was added to the growing list of Shaker congregations. The church which
is at Chiloquin has flourished and developed into a key element in the
Oregon-California sector.
The Umatilla, near
Pendleton,
heard about the wonderful powers of Kelso Shaker Aiyel soon after he
had
converted the Yakima. About 1906, a Umatilla man had some property
stolen
from him, and he decided to apply to the Shakers for assistance in
recovering
it. The Presbyterians and Catholics were strongly entrenched on
the
Umatilla Reservation and Aiyel was fearful of a trap, so he took Alex
Terio,
the Yakima elder, and several other followers with him. As in another
case,
Aiyel's hands led him, under power, to the hidden place of the stolen
goods
and the thief's house. Some of the Umatilla were interested, and later
a few came to the Yakima meetings and were converted. The Yakima
attribute
this failure to the vigorous oppositions of the local Christian
churches.
In 1912, Yakima Shaker
Enoch Abraham was asked to come to Pendleton by a Umatilla delegation.
He supposed that they wanted him to explain the Shaker faith to them
and
to offer advice to potential converts. Instead, he found that he had
been
summoned to an inquisition by the red-skinned Presbyterians elders. (Indian
Shakers, Southern Illinois University press 1957, pp. 82, 83)



(Center)
Eddie Charley, Jip Washington, Paul Washington, Eddie Frye,
Skinner
Williams standing on Siletz Bridge in the early 1900s.
From The
Singing Priest Of Siletz, Guadeloupe Translations, 1997
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Shaker Church Established At Siletz 1923
The next
church
to be opened was at Siletz in 1923. Reports of the religion had
reached
this reservation long before this date directly from the north, but it
was slow in developing a foothold. Several of the Yakima had relatives
at Siletz whom they visited even before the opening of the 20th
century.
In fact the wife of one Yakima Shaker, Homer Hoffer, came from Siletz,
as did one of his daughters-in-law. In 1892, Hoffer's wife was sick,
and
a Yakima Shaker volunteered to make her well. She agreed to give him a
chance, and she regained her health. (Indian Shakers: A
Messianic
Cult of the Pacific Northwest, Southern Illinois Press 1957, p. 70)
When the first wife of his son, Andrew, died, the latter married a
Siletz
woman and moved to that reservation to live with her. He was a Shaker
before
1923, as were some others who had been in contact with the Klamath
congregation.
But in that year members from elsewhere were invited to dedicate a new
church building and to hold a revival meeting. Shaker leaders among the
Yakima and Klamath arrived in several automobiles and there was an
immediate
response to the appeals for converts. A large number of the Siletz
Indians
joined in the next few years; so many, in fact that their desertion
from
the other churches alarmed the missionaries. In 1928, Father Charles
Raymond
was appointed to undertake a preaching mission at Siletz because of
"the
deplorable fact that the Catholic Siletz Indians have joined the
Shakers..."
Jimmy Jack, whose home
was in the town of Klamath, near the Yurok village of Requa,
California,
was living at Siletz at the time of the great excitement over the new
religion.
He had voluntarily exiled himself to this locality in 1919 because of
trouble
with his family over his infatuation for a Siletz woman whom they did
not
like. Although he was impressed with the Shaker performances that he
saw,
he was not converted until early in 1926.
At one of the Siletz meetings that
Jack attended as a spectator a young man under power approached him and
allowed his shaking hands to play over Jack's chest. Afterward the
young
man announced that he had seen blood clots there, and that Jack "was in
danger." The latter was amused at his diagnosis, for he had been
suffering
from a disorder of the lungs that caused him to spit blood occasionally
for 17 years. The young man did not say specifically that he had done
anything
about the blood clots that he saw, but Jack never afterwards had any
trouble
with his chest. (Indian Shakers, Southern Illinois Press 1957,
p.
188)
There were many
instances
of Shakers healing an individual through the restoration of his soul.
Ghosts
might be the cause of the misfortune; but this idea was not well
understood
by the Siletz Shakers. (Indian Shakers, Southern Illinois Press
1957, p. 189)


Soon after
Shakerism
was accepted at Siletz a Shaker Church was erected on Swan Street.
Large
numbers of Athabasban attended this church. (Grace Castle Interview
With Indian Shaker Ida Bensell, 1970)
On the reservation where
many Athabascan and some local Salish had already joined Christian
missions,
the missionaries saw, by 1923, that orthodox churches were loosing
ground
to faiths more comfortable to the demonstrative Indians. (Innovation:
The Basis for Cultural Change, McGraw Hill Cook Company 1953, p.
75)
European religious standards were too severe. Indian Shaker beliefs
were
intuitive, emotional--comparable to aboriginal myths and legends.
In spite of superficial
renunciation of ancient beliefs which gave an appearance of relying
heavily
on Christianity, Indians kept a belief in spirit-power and the
mysteries
intact for a long time. The beliefs were as firmly attached to their
lives
as tattoo marks on the chins of their elder women.
It is significant that
the Rogue Rivers of Siletz saw no conflict of loyalties by adhering to
traditional symbols on their basketry
while they practiced their new faith. If anything might have
altered
their design it would have been the force of religion, and obviously
the
Shaker religion was not powerful enough to effect a change. However, it
is known that cross and crescent symbolic designs were used by Shakers
among Southwestern Apache (Athabascan) in the 1920s and it can be
assumed
that the Rogue Rivers knew that they were to be included in the four
sacred
articles (candles, bells, crosses and prayer tables) required in Indian
Shaker households. These sacred articles were never displayed in
public.
(North American Indian 1907-1930, Vol. I, Johnson Reprint
Corporation,
pp. 20, 21) So, although the cross and crescent were seen on
southwestern
coiled basketry they were seldom seen on twined baskets and no design
changes
appeared on twined work which was sold. (Siletz: Survival Of An
Artifact,
Dallas Itemizer-Observer 1977, 22. 27, 28)
Indian Shaker Leaders John
Slocum
& Louis Yowaluck
Courtesy Smithsonian Institution
National Archives 3021
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Yurok Unshaken By Jimmy Jack
Following the healing experience, Jimmy Jack resolved to reorder his
life,
return to Requa, and preach the gospel among the Yurok. He commenced
his
mission in earnest, first asking the forgiveness of his mother, whom he
had treated inconsiderately, then going from house to house pleading
for
a hearing. He praised the newly revealed religion, enumerating its
benefits
and declaring that the acceptance of Jesus Christ had wrought a
glorious
revolution in his life. He called upon the sick and volunteered his
services
to prove the divine power of shaking. Realizing the disadvantage of his
illiteracy he approached Robert Spott, an outstanding member of the
community,
with a plan to make him lieutenant because he could read and write.
In spite of his sincere
effort Jack was received with skepticism or indifference by almost
everyone.
Toward the end of the summer he announced a meeting would be held in
his
house and that all were welcome, especially those who were suffering
prolonged
illnesses. Those who attended Jack's meeting talked it over; some
soberly
and quietly rejected jack's religion, others laughed openly at him.
He did, however, receive
some support from his relatives. Toward the end of the year he
prevailed
upon his two young female cousins and the husband of one to accompany
him
to Siletz in order to attend the meetings of the Shaker church on Swan
Street. The women succumbed to the shaking soon after their arrival,
and
one of them had visions condemning the Yurok opponents of the cult. Her
husband was also converted. Encouraged by these favorable results, Jack
invited the Siletz Shakers to a big meeting at Klamath. The Chiloquin
Shakers
were also notified and asked to lend their support by uniting with an
eager
group from Siletz. The combined parties arrived at Klamath inseveral
automobiles
led by Elder Jackson of the Siletz church.
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The Shaker Meeting At Klamath
A meeting of
two
weeks duration was announced. The salmon cannery at Requa was in
operation
at the time, and a large number of Indians from other places were
collected
in the vicinity for the work that it offered. Many of them were
attracted
to the meetings by the prospect of their novelty, as were the resident
Indians who were scattered along the coast near the mouth of Klamath
River.
(Indian Shakers, Southern Illinois University Press 1957, pp.
74-77)
Martha Case was one
of the Siletz Shakers who helped to introduce the religion to the Yurok
in 1927. During one of the meetings upon that occasion she had a vision
of death. After she had recovered from shaking she announced that
someone
would die before three o'clock in the morning two days hence. It did
happen
that a non-indian man drowned sometime during the night that she had
designated.
The excitement among the Shakers was in consequence so alarming that
Elder
Jackson felt obliged to dampen their enthusiasm. At the next meeting he
warned the Yurok novices against the excesses into which their ardor
was
likely to lead them. He cautioned that Case's revelation was an unusual
manifestation of power. Not everyone should expect it to act that way
nor
even try to bring it to bear upon such things. (Indian Shakers,
Southern Illinois University Press 1957, p. 200)
Leonard Whitlow II,
who teaches U. S. History at Grant High School in Portland, vividly
recalls
childhood memories of the Shakers at Siletz:
"When I was a child
you
could hear the ringing of the bells and the chanting clearly anywhere
in
Siletz. Joe and Sofia Simmons were an Indian family that lived one
house
off Gaither (Main) Street on Metcalf. They often treated sick people by
"shaking" over them. My best friend, Darrell Bailer, lived in the house
directly on Gaither. (next to the locker plant).
They had venetian blinds
on their windows, and when they were shaking we would sneak up on the
front
porch and peek "down" the slats inside. The "sick" was dressed in white
and laying on the floor. The dancing chanters circled the body and rang
their school bells. An Indian later told me that in some of these cures
might go on for days, and as dancers fatigued, others stepped into
their
places and carried on.
I also once went down
to the Shaker Church to ask the grandmother of Robert Felix III if he
could
go to the movies with my family. His grandmother and another lady were
"shaking" for someone in front of the altar. The altar was a
pseudo-candleabra
of crucifixes with lots of candles. Bobby and I sat on the benches that
lined the outside walls and waited until they were through.
The various Shaker
Indians
I knew as an adult always invited me to their services, with only the
requirement
that I not laugh at their ceremonies. Several times I traveled
down
to the church (usually at night) when I heard the bells and chanting. I
would get right up to the door and could not bring myself to go in.
Ithink
that I felt that I would really be imposing."
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Siletz Shakers Sissy And Jakie Johnson
Other
influential
Siletz Shakers were Sissy (1859-1931) and Jakie Johnson (1859-1933),
Shaker
missionaries and ministers living in the northern part of the country.
Johnson post office, named for the couple, was at the Parmele place
about
half a mile up Drift Creek from the mouth of the stream on the east
side
of Siletz Bay, and about two miles north of Kernville. The office was
established
March 11, 1899, with George S. Parmele (1853-1930), and what business
there
was turned over to Kernville. The office was named in compliment of the
Johnsons, who were favorably known.
Jakie is said to have
been a Siletz Indian, and Sissy, a Shasta from Northern
California,
bore the tribal markings of three double lines tattooed on her chin.
Among
the Southern Oregon tribes Indian women tattooed their chins with three
vertical stripes and were dubbed the "one-eleven girls" by non-indians.
The ancient Shasta had tattooed the entire chin, and while the Yakonan
did not use markings they tattooed dots on the wrists of their women
for
strength. (Contributions To Alsea Ethnology, Vol. 35-36,
University
of California Press 1934, pp. 88, 96) Indians of the Willamette Valley
(the closest to the Siletz on the east) did not use tattoos. (Kalapuya
Texts, University of Washington Press 1945, p. 196) A very
light-skinned
people, comparatively speaking, the Southern Oregon Chastacosta
women
wore chin tattoos. (The Siletz Reservation 1855-1900, Portland
State
University 1973, p. 50) This is not unlike the chin tattooing tradition
of the ancient Libyans, who according to Harvard professor Barry Fell,
"...retained their ancient customs practiced [of] chin tattooing of the
women, who did not wear the veil even though they are now Moslems. The
men on the other hand cover their head and faces with a scarf like
cloth,
showing only the eyes to strangers." (Saga America, Times Books
1980, p. 244)
Indian women of Sissy
Johnson's
period imitated non-indian dress habits and were especially fond of
hats,
shoes and colorful shirts. P. Ritz, a newspaper reporter said, "The
Indian
women from Siletz made an admirable appearance in their Sunday best."
(Portland
Oregonian
1869) He watched the two cultures collide "head on" as it were,
however,
when blue facial tattoos appeared atop 19th century urban fashions. A
more
graceful blend resulted when Indian women completed their costumes with
their own beautiful basketry hand bags.
A friendly and outgoing
individual, Sissy Johnson taught local people how to cook mussels and
how
to mix ashes and salt to make a cement to patch cracks and drafts in
wood
burning stoves.
The Johnson held land
by patent and part of the town of Taft is on property owned by the
pair.
Sissy and Jakie Johnson were influential Siletz Shaker missionaries and
ministers. The Johnsons, who were both buried at Paul Washington
Cemetery
on Government Hill in Siletz, were well and favorably known. Jakie's
mother,
Susan Johnson, died March 13, 1910, and is buried at Taft Cemetery.
The Johnsons operated
a general store, once owned by George Parmele, for Nelson & Ray of
Cloverdale, who built their ocean-going boat, Della. They built
their large, two-story home on the hill east of the store at a location
near the present US-101 and Clover Avenue. The couple rented rooms and
served meals to travelers as there were no other accommodations
available.
Their estate included many farm buildings.
Later, in 1910, the
Mercer family built a home on the bluff facing the ocean just above the
store, and operated it as a hotel. In 1974, a new home replaced this
landmark.
In 1904, John W. Bones
(1884-1890), homesteaded a claim on the bay front adjoining the Johnson
estate. A merchant and postmaster of the Taft office, Bones sold his
business
in 1910 to William Dodson, who built a new general merchandise store a
little farther back from the waterfront. (History of Siletz Bay Area,
Lincoln County Extension Service 1975, pp.13-16)
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M.
Constance
Guardino
III
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March 10,
2006
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