Patkanim variously spelled Pat ka nam or Pat Kanim was chief of the Snoqualmoo Snoqualmie tribe Snoqualmie and Snohomish tribe Snohomish tribe in what is now modern Washington U.S. state Washington State . During the 1850s, he lived at the largest village of his people located at Yelhw , a fishing village at the confluence of the Tolt River Tolt and Snoqualmie River Snoqualmie rivers today, Fall City, Washington in a complex containing sixteen longhouses. ref name palmer cite web url http 72.14.253.104 search?q cache eT47g70uahgJ www.ci.carnation.wa.us library carnation historical context.pdf patkanim&hl en&gl us&ct clnk&cd 8 title Historic Overview Carnation year 2006 accessdate November 14, 2006 author Palmer, Christine Savage publisher King County Parks, Planning and Resources Department ref He was the dominant power from Whidbey Island to Snoqualmie Pass , between what is today British Columbia and King County, Washington ref name accessgenealogy cite web url http www.accessgenealogy.com native tribes salish snoqualmiechiefs.htm title Snoqualmie Indian Chief publisher Access Genealogy Indian Tribal Records accessdate August 5, 2007 ref According to historian Bill Speidel , his was the major ... Nettle Creek Publishing Company location Seattle isbn 0 914890 02 6 ref In 1848, Patkanim arranged ..., Patkanim assisted U.S. Army Captain George B. McClellan George McClellan later a American Civil ... for a reservation near Tulalip, Washington . Patkanim maintained excellent relations with the founders ... on the head of raiders, 20 for ordinary Indians and 80 for a chief . Patkanim obligingly provided a great ... Patkanim s slaves from raids on other tribes. Legacy Chief Kanim public middle school in Fall City Washington is named after him. Reportedly, Patkanim had three daughters, Julia, Susie and Elizabeth ... loc&CISOPTR 1910&CISORESTMP &CISOVIEWTMP lib.washington.edu ref The descendants of Patkanim and the tribe ... American leaders Patkanim cs Patkanim ... more details
Patkanim of the Snoqualmie tribe, who are fighting with the whites, so the attack fails miserably. The chapter ... to pick up Swan. Meanwhile, Stevens and the Patkanim are looking for the Lake Washington Indian camp and instead find a boy fishing on the Green River. Patkanim scares the boy into telling him where the camp is then kills him anyways after. Stevens and Patkanim are ready to utilize their combined forces to successfully oppose Leschi. Patkanim, who has great geographical understanding of their surrounding ... gets himself nearly murdered by Patkanim in a frustrated dispute. Devin struggles with his life ... more details
Unreferenced date June 2007 The Snohomish are a Lushootseed language Lushootseed Native Americans in the United States Native American tribe who reside around the Puget Sound area of Washington U.S. state Washington , north of Seattle . They speak the Lushootseed language . The tribal spelling is Sdoh doh hohbsh, which means wet snow according to the last chief of the Snohomish tribe, Chief William Shelton Snohomish Indian William Shelton , though there is debate among historians as to the actual meaning. Some believe it means a style of union among them of the braves , while others believe it means Sleeping Waters , while still others believe that the actual spelling is Sdohobich. The area where the Snohomish tribe lived has become Snohomish County, Washington Snohomish County . Some of the last surviving members of the Snohomish tribe live on the Tulalip reservation, west of the city of Marysville, Washington , though most live elsewhere. The last surviving members are currently having a difficult time getting official status from the Federal Government of the United States United States Government , despite the terms of the Treaty of Point Elliott . Notable Snohomish Snah talc, or Bonaparte, Sub chief of Snohomish Chief Patkanim William Shelton Snohomish Indian William Shelton , last chief Category Native American tribes in Washington state Category Lushootseed language bg cs Snohomi ov de Snohomish es Snohomish tribu hr Snohomish ... more details
Infobox nrhp name Daniel R. Bigelow House nrhp type image 1866 Bigelow House.jpg caption location 918 Glass Ave. NE br Olympia, Washington nearest city lat degrees 47 lat minutes 2 lat seconds 59.56 lat direction N long degrees 122 long minutes 53 long seconds 27.44 long direction W area built 1850s architect architecture Carpenter Gothic added August 7, 1979 visitation num visitation year refnum 79002562 mpsub governing body The Bigelow House , also known as the Bigelow House Museum , is a historic house museum located at 918 Glass Avenue Northeast in the Bigelow Neighborhood of Olympia, Washington . Built by Daniel Bigelow in the 1850s, the house was designed in the Carpenter Gothic style. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979. ref http www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com WA Thurston state.html National Register of Historic Places unofficial website Washington Thurston County . Retrieved 6 21 07. ref History Harvard law school graduate Daniel Bigelow arrived in Olympia, Washington Olympia in 1851 after crossing the Oregon Trail . He took up a convert 160 acre km2 adj on Donation Land Claim just east of the new town and built a two room cabin near an artesian spring overlooking Budd Inlet in South Puget Sound . In 1854 Bigelow married Ann Elizabeth White, one of the first school teachers in the territory. They built the present house by 1860 where they raised eight children. The Bigelows were active in many political causes including temperance , women s suffrage and public education . Over the years many historical figures visited the Bigelows including Snoqualmie Tribe Snoqualmie headman Patkanim , Suffragette Susan B. Anthony and George Pickett when he was stationed in the territory prior to the American Civil War . The Bigelows were also a host family for some of the Mercer Girls when they arrived in 1866. The Bigelows lived in the house until their deaths Daniel in 1905 and Ann Elizabeth in 1926. The house remained in the Bigel ... more details
tribe Duwamish and the more powerful Snohomish tribe Snohomish , led by Chief Patkanim . As part ... the Battle of Seattle 1856 when both Sealth and Patkanim kept their fighters out of the battle. Maynard ... more details
A bounty from Latin bonit s , goodness is a payment or reward often offered by a group as an incentive for the accomplishment of a task by someone usually not associated with the group. Bounties are most commonly issued for the capture or retrieval of a person or object. They are typically in the form of money . Two modern examples of bounties are the bounty placed for the capture of Saddam Hussein and his sons by the United States ref cite news title Saddam bounty may go unclaimed publisher CNN.com date December 15, 2006 url http edition.cnn.com 2003 WORLD meast 12 15 sprj.nirq.saddam.reward index.html accessdate 2007 08 12 ref and Microsoft s bounty for computer virus creators. ref cite web title Cheat Sheet Microsoft s virus bounty work silicon.com url http software.silicon.com security 0,39024655,39120572,00.htm accessdate May 10, 2004 . ref Those who make a living by pursuing bounties are known as bounty hunter s. Examples Historical examples A bounty system was used in the American Civil War . It was an incentive to increase enlistments. Another bounty system was used in New South Wales to increase the number of immigrants from 1832. ref cite web title Immigration work geocities.com url http www.geocities.com Heartland Canyon 6387 immigration.html accessdate 7 April 2006 archiveurl http web.archive.org web 20050712065838 http www.geocities.com Heartland Canyon 6387 immigration.html archivedate 2005 07 12 ref Bounties were sometimes paid as rewards for killing Native Americans in the United States Native Americans . In 1862, a farmer received a 500 bounty for shooting Taoyateduta Little Crow . In 1856 Governor Isaac Stevens put a bounty on the head of Indians from Eastern Washington, 20 for ordinary Indians and 80 for a chief . A Western Washington Indian, Patkanim , chief of the Snohomish tribe Snohomish , obligingly provided a great many heads, until the Territorial Auditor put a stop to the practice due to the dubious origins of the deceased. Citation needed ... more details
of such rewards was Chief Seattle s sworn rival, Patkanim Chief Patkanim , a leader among the Snoqualmie tribe Snoqualmie and Snohomish tribe Snohomish . According to Speidel, Patkanim was not above ... from Patkanim, never actually refused the Governor s request, but instead maintained a successful ... more details
over to their cause. Despite the cordial hatred Snoqualmie chief Patkanim ref Phelps refers to him ... a much better defended town. Furthermore, Governor Stevens had convinced Patkanim and his men to take ... more details