[Congressional Record (Bound Edition), Volume 153 (2007), Part 6]
[House]
[Pages 9004-9007]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office, www.gpo.gov]




  EXPRESSING THE SENSE OF THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES CONCERNING THE 
            50TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FLOODING OF CELILO FALLS

  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I move to suspend the rules and agree to 
the resolution (H. Res. 217) expressing the sense of the House of 
Representatives concerning the 50th anniversary of the flooding of 
Celilo Falls.
  The Clerk read the title of the resolution.
  The text of the resolution is as follows:

                              H. Res. 217

       Whereas Celilo Falls, located near The Dalles, Oregon, was 
     a great fishing and trading location for Indian tribes and 
     has been called the ``Wall Street of the West'' by 
     historians;
       Whereas artifacts suggest tribes as far as Alaska, the 
     Great Plains and the Southwest United States came to trade 
     and fish at Celilo for over 10,000 years;
       Whereas the Umatilla, Nez Perce, Yakama and Warm Springs 
     tribes reserved their fishing rights at their usual and 
     accustomed places, including Celilo, when they signed 
     treaties with the United States;
       Whereas on March 10, 1957, to provide hydroelectricity and 
     irrigation, The Dalles Dam was constructed;
       Whereas the completion of the dam inundated Celilo in six 
     hours, quickly changing the way of life for tribes that 
     fished at Celilo; and
       Whereas tribes still live and fish along the river, 
     exercising their treaty rights agreed with the Congress of 
     the United States: Now, therefore, be it
       Resolved,  That the House of Representatives recognizes the 
     50th anniversary of the flooding of Celilo Falls and the 
     change of life it imposed upon tribal peoples.

  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Pursuant to the rule, the gentleman from 
Arizona (Mr. Grijalva) and the gentleman from New Mexico (Mr. Pearce) 
each will control 20 minutes.
  The Chair recognizes the gentleman from Arizona.


                             General Leave

  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I ask unanimous consent that all Members 
have 5 days to revise and extend their remarks and include extraneous 
material on the bill under consideration.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. Is there objection to the request of the 
gentleman from Arizona?
  There was no objection.
  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
  The purpose of House Resolution 217, introduced by our colleague from 
Oregon, Mr. David Wu, is to express the sense of the House of 
Representatives concerning the 50th anniversary of the

[[Page 9005]]

flooding of Celilo Falls. Celilo Falls was a unique natural feature 
formed as the Columbia River carved a path through the hard volcanic 
rock east of the Cascade Mountains. On March 10, 1957, the Dalles Dam 
was completed, flooding the historic fishing and trading area around 
Celilo Falls.
  For over 10,000 years, the falls had been an area of intense trading 
and commerce for Indian tribes from as far away as Alaska, the Great 
Plains, and the Southwest. The falls were also noted as an extremely 
abundant fishery, where tons of Columbia River salmon were caught, 
dried, and traded.
  Mr. Speaker, this resolution simply seeks to recognize the 50th 
anniversary of the flooding of the falls, and to remember Celilo Falls 
as an important area of fishing and trading for many tribal peoples.
  I urge my colleagues to join me in supporting House Resolution 217, 
and I offer my congratulations to Congressman Wu for his leadership on 
this resolution.
  Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. PEARCE. Mr. Speaker, I yield myself such time as I may consume.
  H. Res. 217 recognizes the flooding of Celilo Falls in Oregon. In 
1957, the U.S. Corps of Engineers constructed the multipurpose Dalles 
Dam to provide much needed hydropower and irrigation for the Pacific 
Northwest. As a result of the dam, the falls were inundated, changing 
the way four tribes fished at the location.
  This resolution recognizes the 50th anniversary of that change.
  It is my understanding that this resolution will not be used for 
future litigation claims and legislative purposes, so we have no 
objection.
  Mr. Speaker, I reserve the balance of my time.
  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I yield as much time as he may consume to 
the sponsor of this resolution, the gentleman from Oregon (Mr. Wu).
  Mr. WU. I thank the gentleman from Arizona.
  Mr. Speaker, for thousands of years, a village stood at Celilo Falls 
on the Columbia River, which today is the boundary between the States 
of Oregon and Washington.
  Celilo Falls was known to Native Americans as a center for gathering 
and trade in the Pacific Northwest. It was so important that some have 
even called Celilo Falls the Wall Street of the West. Lewis and Clark 
described it as a great emporium where ``the neighboring nations 
assemble.''
  Artifacts suggest that tribes as far away as Alaska, the Great 
Plains, and the Southwest of the United States came to trade at the 
falls for salmon and other goods. The trade was so extensive and the 
number of tribes who came to Celilo was so extensive that the number of 
languages spoken developed into a trade jargon known as Chinookan, and 
it was used among the people conducting business at Celilo.
  Celilo Falls was also known as a great salmon fishery. Salmon were 
both sacred to and provided economic wealth for the tribes who fished 
in the area. Thousands gathered to fish and trade along the river.
  Fifty years ago, Celilo Falls changed forever. In 1957, the Dalles 
Dam was completed a few miles downriver from Celilo. Once the dam was 
completed and the flood gates closed, Celilo Falls was inundated in 
just 6 hours.
  The Dalles Dam was constructed to provide hydroelectricity, 
irrigation, and to enable navigation. The dams along the Columbia and 
other rivers created numerous benefits for the Pacific Northwest. The 
slack water created by the dams provided easy and safe river navigation 
upriver to deliver goods to the inland Northwest. Today, barges can 
travel as far as Lewiston, Idaho, because of the navigable waters 
created by the dams.
  However, the benefits created by the dams changed a way of life for 
the tribal peoples who were the first inhabitants of the Columbia River 
Basin. While some may not remember Celilo Falls before the Dalles Dam 
was completed, its effects remain fresh in the minds of many of the 
tribes of the Pacific Northwest. Recently, the 50th anniversary of the 
flooding of the falls was acknowledged by these tribes. This event both 
mourned what was lost and celebrated what remains today, tribal stories 
and culture, a way of life. Attendees included tribal officials and 
tribal members throughout the Pacific Northwest, nontribal members, and 
various Federal, State, and local governmental officials. The attendees 
reflect the relationship of the various groups who now work together to 
manage the river for all those who live in and visit the region today.
  This resolution seeks to acknowledge and commemorate the flooding of 
Celilo Falls. I urge my colleagues to support the resolution.
  Mr. PEARCE. Mr. Speaker, will the gentleman yield?
  Mr. WU. I yield to the gentleman from New Mexico.
  Mr. PEARCE. I would appreciate engaging in a brief colloquy regarding 
H. Res. 217.
  Is it the understanding of the gentleman from Oregon that the 
enactment of this resolution will not be used for litigation or 
legislative purposes?
  Mr. WU. The gentleman is correct. The purpose of the resolution is 
commemorative, and limited to an expression of the sense of the House 
of Representatives.
  Mr. PEARCE. I thank the gentleman for that clarification.
  Mr. WU. I thank the gentleman.
  Mr. PEARCE. Mr. Speaker, I would yield such time as he may consume to 
the gentleman from Oregon (Mr. Walden).
  Mr. WALDEN of Oregon. Mr. Speaker, colleagues, today we memorialize 
and remember the events of more than 50 years ago when the gates closed 
for the first time on the Dalles Dam, and within 6 hours another wild 
and noisy stretch of the mighty Columbia River fell silent and serene 
in the name of progress.
  Celilo Falls was also known as Wyam, which means echo of falling 
water, or sound of water upon the rocks. And, indeed, what a sound it 
must have been to hear the fourth largest river in America as it 
crashed over basalt rocks and cliffs. Lewis and Clark's journals refer 
to the falls as a place where ``the river turned on edge.''
  This photograph here to my left is actually one my father took as a 
colorized slide before the falls was inundated. It shows the tribal 
members fishing from these wooden platforms, roped to the edge with 
ropes around their waist. They would spread sand out on the platforms 
because all the water made the platforms so slick, and then they would 
engage with the dip nets to hoist 40-pound, 50-pound, 60-pound salmon 
out of the river. The trick was not to get more than two fish in your 
net because that might be more than you weighed, and you ran the risk 
of being dragged into the river. Indeed, there was a young man who fell 
in the river, and later was rescued and saved because he ended up in a 
net and was able to be pulled out.
  What a river it was and what a river it is. As the Columbia River 
passed over these falls, the sound could be heard from miles away. 
During periods of high water, nearly 1 million cubic feet of water per 
second would pass over these falls. Now, let me put that in comparison: 
Niagara Falls in New York, 200,000 cubic feet of water passes over 
those falls.

                              {time}  1245

  A million would have passed over these. But it wasn't just these 
falls, because you see the basalt rapids continued on toward the Dalles 
for 11 miles. So not only were there these falls, but there were other 
rapids and falls along the way. And it was more than just a roaring 
falls or an historic and bountiful fishing area. It was, as some 
historians noted, ``the Wall Street of the West.''
  In his book, ``The Columbia River Salmon and Steelhead Trout, Their 
Fight for Survival,'' author Anthony Netboy described the scene this 
way:
  ``Here came Indians from the interior who had no fishing grounds of 
their own or whose fishing was poor, to trade for dried salmon, 
offering peltries from Montana, jade axes from the Fraser River area, 
horn of mountain sheep, baskets, rabbit or bearskins. The Klamath and 
Modoc peoples from

[[Page 9006]]

Klamath Lake brought slaves and dentalia shells, their medium of 
exchange. Trade connections with the Dalles, says the anthropologist 
Philip Drucker, in `Cultures of the North Pacific Coast,' stretched 
across the Rockies and into the Great Plains.''
  This was one of the most significant fisheries of the Columbia River. 
In ``Recalling Celilo,'' author Elizabeth Woody writes:
  ``Historically, the Wyampum lived at Wyam for over 12,000 years. 
Estimates vary, but Wyam is among the longest continuously inhabited 
communities in North America. The elders tell us we have been here from 
time immemorial.
  ``Today we know Celilo Falls as a lost landmark. It was a place as 
revered as one's own mother.''
  Woody goes on to write:
  ``What happened at Wyam was more significant than entertainment. 
During the day, women cleaned large amounts of finely cut fish and hung 
the parts to dry in the heat of the arid landscape. So abundant were 
the fish passing Wyam on their upriver journey that the fish caught 
there could feed a whole family through the winter. Many families had 
enough salmon to trade with other tribes or individuals for specialty 
items.
  ``No one would starve if they could work. Even those incapable of 
physical work could share other talents. It was a dignified 
existence.''
  The tribes called themselves ``salmon people.'' And it is easy to 
understand why. In 1805, Lewis and Clark estimated seeing five tons of 
dried salmon stacked in a single village near the Dalles.
  The dawn of the 20th century brought change to the area with the 
construction in 1913 of the Dalles-Celilo Canal, providing the first 
safe passage around the falls. Then in the 1930s and 1940s, more 
pressures built as down-river communities suffered from floods, river 
traffic increased, and a Nation at war needed more electricity to power 
its industry.
  In 1950, Congress authorized the construction of the Dalles Dam, and 
on March 10, 1957, the gates of this river-blocker closed and within 
hours, silence overtook Celilo Falls, Wyam and the way of life known 
for centuries.
  Now, plans for construction of the dam were battled by Chief Tommy 
Thompson as he and the tribal members knew that the end of the falls 
would mean the end of life as they had known it. But they could not 
stop the effort. Their village was relocated. The government paid 
tribal members in one-time sums of nearly $4,000, and promised 
sustained fisheries and access to new fishing sites.
  Layfee Foster, of the Dalles, took this famous photograph of Chief 
Tommy Thompson and his wife, Flora, and their granddaughter, Linda 
George, whom I met at the ceremony at Celilo Falls last month.
  I would like to read from Mr. Netboy's book again, as he eloquently 
states the last of the first salmon rites that were held in April of 
1956. He writes:
  ``On Sunday, April 20, 1956, when the Dalles Dam was about to be 
enclosed and the Celilo fishery, dating back to a long forgotten time 
would be inundated, I witnessed the last of the first salmon rites at 
Celilo village. The day was warm and sunny, and hundreds of tribesmen 
gathered for this sad occasion on the banks of the Columbia, the women 
wearing multi-colored flowing dresses and scarves, and the men awkward-
fitting store clothes. Emissaries of Tommy Thompson, chief of the host 
band, the Wyams, said to be over 100 years old, had to seek elsewhere 
than the Columbia for salmon because an early spring thaw in the 
mountains made it impossible to use the historic site to catch enough 
fish for the festival. They bought 400 pounds of salmon in Portland, 
and members of Warm Springs Reservation who had fishing rights at 
Celilo helped out with donations of venison and roots for the occasion.
  ``The stolid, bronze-colored chief sat at the head table in the 
longhouse, surrounded by silent and respectful tribesmen squatting on 
mats on the earthen floor. Outside, slabs of salmon were being smoked 
over log fires tended by women, just as when Lewis and Clark camped 
here in 1805 and smoked a pipe of peace with the chief.
  ``Chief Thompson blessed the first fish caught a few days before and 
made a speech in his native language that was charged with emotion. 
Before it was over, the vigorous old man was weeping. Although I did 
not understand a word, I could imagine the feelings that inspired him 
as he saw the last bit of land held by the tribe about to go underwater 
and the ancient picturesque fishery disappear. He had seen the white 
settlers pour into the valley, and the baleful impact they made on the 
natives' culture. The churning river where he had fished as a youth, 
from rickety platforms, would become a placid lake. There were tears in 
the eyes of many who listened to him.
  ``When the First Salmon rites were concluded, the chief permitted 
newsmen to photograph him with his younger wife, Flora. Usually the 
festival lasted a few days, but this time it was confined to one. There 
were bone games in the afternoon and dances in the evening. The next 
morning the Portland Oregonian reported an interview with Henry 
Thompson, son of the chief, who said, and I quote, `When the dam is 
finished and there are no more fish at Celilo, my father will still 
live here and will die here. I too will die here. Both of us were born 
at Celilo, and here,' pointing to the Indian cemetery on a bluff of the 
village, `amid the rimrock, we will be buried.'
  ``Tommy Thompson died 3 years later, and without him, without the 
roaring falls, and with salmon caught elsewhere, the First Salmon 
ceremonies held occasionally at the new Celilo village built by the 
Corps of Engineers on the bluff lost their flavor and meaning and were 
eventually abandoned.''
  Today the Dalles Dam employs 150 people, generates enough electricity 
to power two cities the size of Portland, Oregon, helps control run-off 
in the spring. The power it produces makes no carbon emissions and is 
90 percent efficient.
  Today the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is rehabilitating the Celilo 
village, spending $13 million to build a new sewer plant, new houses, a 
playground, school and update the water and electrical system. A new 
longhouse was completed last year.
  Today we memorialize the situation at Celilo, the loss of that great 
falls and the work that remains ahead.
  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I would like to yield to the gentleman 
from Oregon (Mr. Blumenauer) as much time as he may consume.
  Mr. BLUMENAUER. Mr. Speaker, I appreciate the gentleman's courtesy, 
and I am pleased to join with my colleagues from Oregon in recognizing 
the importance of the anniversary of the flooding of Celilo Falls.
  Mr. Speaker, we have, in the Northwest, I think, in recent years, 
started to re-evaluate our relationship to native peoples and to the 
special sites that are holy for them.
  I remember in my youth Celilo Falls when it was a site of the native 
fishing, going by on a train, watching the dip netting, pulling these 
fish from the falls. It was something that I didn't properly appreciate 
at the time. People in my own family were talking about the great dam 
that was about to be constructed, and using it as a metaphor for 
progress in our community.
  Well, transforming the mighty Columbia River into a machine that has 
aided navigation and electric generation has had many positive aspects 
for the Pacific Northwest, but it has been devastating for the Native 
Americans.
  Sadly, our history, since the treaty of 1855, has been one where we 
have not always honored even the provisions in those treaties to Native 
Americans. And particularly the site at Celilo, where we are talking 
about over 10,000 years of history, strikes special significance. It is 
an unparalleled meeting point for people of native tribes that, slowly 
but surely, now we are starting to recognize, starting to appreciate, 
the Federal Government is starting to invest in working with them to 
restore the heritage. I hope that this recognition of the significance 
of the 50th anniversary of the flooding of the falls might be another 
signal that we are appreciating our responsibility in partnership with 
native people, the need to

[[Page 9007]]

work with them in terms of first foods, in terms of historic sites, in 
terms of restoring the spirit of partnership in those treaties too 
often that has not been observed.
  I appreciate my colleague, Congressman Wu, bringing this forward. I 
appreciate the Congress focusing attention on it today, but I hope it 
is the beginning of a more sustained effort to keep faith with our 
native people.
  Mr. PEARCE. Mr. Speaker, I cannot enhance or extend the word pictures 
given by my colleague from Oregon and would, therefore, reserve the 
balance of my time.
  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, let me, if I may, inquire of the gentleman 
from New Mexico (Mr. Pearce) if he has any additional speakers.
  Mr. PEARCE. Mr. Speaker, I do not have other speakers and would yield 
back the balance of my time.
  Mr. GRIJALVA. Mr. Speaker, I yield back the balance of my time.
  The SPEAKER pro tempore. The question is on the motion offered by the 
gentleman from Arizona (Mr. Grijalva) that the House suspend the rules 
and agree to the resolution, H. Res. 217.
  The question was taken; and (two-thirds being in the affirmative) the 
rules were suspended and the resolution was agreed to.
  A motion to reconsider was laid on the table.

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