Prior to the onslaught of the Europeans, the Puget Sound area was one of
the most heavily populated regions north of Mexico City. The Native
Americans who lived there enjoyed a bounty of seafood, waterfowl, and
berries, which they expertly collected and preserved. Detailing the
associated culture, technologies, and techniques, Vine Deloria Jr.
explains in depth this veritable paradise and its ultimate demise.
Raising the possibility that the utopian lifestyle enjoyed by the
Indians of the Pacific Northwest might have continued in perpetuity had
Europeans not sought a Northwest Passage. Deloria describes in
devastating detail the ramifications of the Europeans' migration into
the territory. With more than two thousand American settlers in the
Pacific Northwest by 1852, and with many more to come, the outbreak of
disease and the encroachment of land speculators, railroad capitalists,
and logging and mining interests forced the Native Americans to give up
their ancestral lands and move to reservations.
Deloria speaks with a measure of sadness, outrage, and hope, writing a
moving account of the Pacific Northwest Indians' struggle that began
with the arrival of the white settlers and continues today.