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#9750771 04/11/15
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Quote
from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (lightly edited by Ken Howell)

Ishi —

Born — Ophir, California
Died — March 25, 1916 (University of California)
Nationality — American
Ethnicity — Yahi people of California
Title — "Man"

Ishi (died March 25, 1916) was the last member of the Yahi, a group of the Yana of the U.S. state of California. Widely acclaimed in his time as the "last wild Indian" in America, Ishi lived most of his life completely outside modern culture. At 50 years of age, in 1911, he emerged near the present-day foothills of Lassen Peak, also known as Wa ganu p'a.

Ishi means "man" in the Yana language. The anthropologist Alfred Kroeber gave this name to the man because in the Yahi culture, tradition demanded that he not speak of his name or anyone who was dead. When asked his name, he said: "I have none, because there were no people to name me," meaning that no Yahi had ever spoken his name. He was taken in by anthropologists at the University of California, who both studied him and hired him as a research assistant. He lived most of his remaining five years in a university building in San Francisco.

Early life
In 1865, Ishi and his family were attacked in the Three Knolls Massacre, in which 40 of their tribesmen were killed. Although 33 Yahi survived to escape, cattlemen killed about half of the survivors. The last survivors, including Ishi and his family, went into hiding for the next 44 years, and their tribe was popularly believed to be extinct.

Richard Burrill wrote, in Ishi Rediscovered: "In 1865, near the Yahi’s special place, Black Rock, the waters of Mill Creek turned red at the Three Knolls Massacre. 'Sixteen' or 'seventeen' Indian fighters killed about forty Yahi, as part of a retaliatory attack for two white women and a man killed at the Workman’s household on Lower Concow Creek near Oroville. Eleven of the Indian fighters that day were Robert A. Anderson, Hiram Good, Sim Moak, Hardy Thomasson, Jack Houser, Henry Curtis, his brother Frank Curtis, as well as Tom Gore, Bill Matthews, and William Merithew. W. J. Seagraves visited the site, too, but some time after the battle had been fought."

Burrill continued, "Robert Anderson wrote, 'Into the stream they leaped, but few got out alive. Instead many dead bodies floated down the rapid current.' One captive Indian woman named Mariah from Big Meadows (Lake Almanor today), was one of those who did escape. The Three Knolls battle is also described in Theodora Kroeber’s Ishi in Two Worlds, but more information has come to light. It is estimated that with this massacre, Ishi's entire cultural group, the Yana/Yahi, may have been reduced to about sixty individuals. From 1859 to 1911, Ishi's remote band became more and more infiltrated by non-Yahi Indian representatives, such as Wintun, Nomlaki and Pit River individuals. In 1879, the infamous Indian boarding schools started in California. The ranks of embittered reservation renegades who became the new 'boys in the hills', to quote Robert Anderson, became a direct function of what new attacks or removal campaigns that the volunteers and military troops elected to carry out against the northern California Indian tribes during that time."

In late 1908, a group of surveyors came across the camp inhabited by a man, a young girl, and an elderly native woman — Ishi, his younger sister, and his elderly mother, respectively. The former two fled while the latter hid herself in blankets to avoid detection, as she was sick and unable to flee. The surveyors ransacked the camp, and Ishi's mother died soon after his return.

Yahi population
Prior to the California Gold Rush of 1848–1855, the Yahi population numbered 404 in California, but the total Yana numbered 2,997. The gold rush brought tens of thousands of miners and settlers to northern California, putting pressure on native populations. Gold mining damaged water supplies and killed fish; the deer left the area. The settlers brought new diseases such as smallpox and measles. The northern Yana group became extinct, and the central and southern groups and Yahi populations dropped dramatically. Searching for food, they came into conflict with settlers, leading to bounties on the natives by the settlers. Prices included 50 cents per scalp and 5 dollars per head. In 1865, 17 men surrounded and massacred 50 Yahi Indians while the Yahi slept in bed.

Walking into the modern world
Ishi lived three years beyond the raid alone, the last of his tribe. Finally, starving and with nowhere to go, at around the age of 50 on August 29, 1911, Ishi walked out into the occidental world. He was captured attempting to forage for meat near Oroville, California, after forest fires in the area.

"After the native was noticed by townspeople, the local sheriff took the man into custody for his own protection". The "wild man" caught the imagination and attention of thousands of onlookers and curiosity seekers. Professors at the University of California, Berkeley, Museum of Anthropology — now the Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology (PAHMA) — read about him and brought him to their facility, then housed on the University of California, San Francisco campus in an old law-school building. Studied by the university, Ishi also worked with them as a research assistant and lived in an apartment at the museum for most of the remaining five years of his life. In June of 1915, he temporarily lived in Berkeley with the anthropologist Thomas Talbot Waterman and his family.

Ishi revealing Yahi culture
Waterman and Alfred L. Kroeber, director of the museum, studied Ishi closely over the years and interviewed him at length to help them reconstruct Yahi culture. He described family units, naming patterns, and the ceremonies that he knew, but much tradition had been lost because there were few older survivors in the group in which he was raised. He identified material items and showed the techniques by which they were made. Ishi provided valuable information on his native Yana language, which was recorded and studied by the linguist Edward Sapir, who had previously done work on the northern dialects.

Illness and death
Ishi, having come to live in San Francisco, and having no immunity to the 'diseases of civilization,' was often ill. He was treated by a Professor of Medicine at UCSF, Saxton T. Pope. Pope became close friends with Ishi, and learned from him how to make bows and arrows in the Yahi way. He and Ishi often hunted together.

Ishi died of tuberculosis on March 25, 1916. His friends at the university initially had tried to prevent an autopsy on Ishi's body since the body was to be kept intact according to Yahi tradition, but the doctors at the University of California medical school performed one before Waterman was able to stop it. Ishi's brain was preserved and the body cremated. Included alongside his remains were "one of his bows, five arrows, a basket of acorn meal, a boxful of shell bead money, a purse full of tobacco, three rings, and some obsidian flakes." Ishi's remains were interred at Mount Olivet Cemetery in Colma, near San Francisco, but his brain was put in a deerskin-wrapped Pueblo Indian pottery jar and sent to the Smithsonian Institution by Kroeber in 1917, where it remained until August 10, 2000, when descendants of the Redding Rancheria and Pit River tribes received the brain, according to both the letter and the spirit of the National Museum of the American Indian Act of 1989 (NMAI). According to Robert Fri, director of the National Museum of Natural History, "Contrary to commonly-held belief, Ishi was not the last of his kind. In carrying out the repatriation process we learned that as a Yahi-Yana Indian his closest living descendants are the Yana people of northern California." Once the brain and remains were returned, further information about them has remained private.

Possibly multiethnic
In 1994, M. Steven Shackley had heard a paper by Jerald Johnson, who noted morphological evidence that Ishi's facial features and height were more typical of the Wintu and Maidu. He theorized that under pressure of diminishing populations, members of groups that were once enemies may have intermarried to survive. To further support this, Johnson presented oral histories from the Wintu and Maidu that told of the tribes' intermarrying with the Yahi. The debate on this has not been definitively settled, however, and the possibility of establishing the circumstances of his birth probably died with him.

In 1996, Shackley of UC Berkeley announced work based on a study of Ishi's projectile points and those of the northern tribes. He had found that points made by Ishi were not typical of those recovered from historical Yahi sites. Because Ishi's production was more typical of points of the Nomlaki or Wintu tribes and markedly dissimilar to those of Yahi, Shackley suggested that Ishi may have been only half Yahi and of mixed ancestry, related to another of the tribes. He based his conclusion on a study of the points that Ishi had made compared to others held by the museum from the Yahi, Nomlaki and Wintu cultures. Among Ishi's techniques was the use of what is now known in flintknapping circles as an Ishi stick, used to run long pressure flakes. As it was a traditional technique of the Nomlaki and Wintu tribes, the finding suggests Ishi may have learned the skill directly from a male relative from one of those tribes. Also small groups, they lived close to the Yahi lands and were traditional competitors and enemies of the Yahi.

edited to add —
• to see photos of Ishi, go to
http://www.bing.com/images/search?q=ishi&qpvt=ishi&qpvt=ishi&FORM=IARRSM
• Saxton Pope, whom Ishi taught to hunt with a bow, is one of the guys who're memorialized in the Pope & Young trophy-rating system.

Last edited by Ken Howell; 04/11/15.
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Good book about him,...I re-read it recently.

I didn't realize that "Popey" was *that* Pope.


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I hadn't read anything about ol' Ishi in years.

Thanks Ken.

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Originally Posted by Bristoe
… I didn't realize that "Popey" was *that* Pope.

Yep!

Old books often surprise us later readers with
stuff that was merely incidental trivia then but
is a lot more interesting to us now.

E g — Fr Chiniquy's antique autobiographical Fifty
Years in the Church of Rome
mentions incidentally that
the guy who helped him shuck a bogus rap in the U S
was a young Illinois lawyer named Abraham Lincoln.

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Originally Posted by GuyM
I hadn't read anything about ol' Ishi in years.

Ishi's story thrilled and fascinated me when I first read it fifty, sixty years ago.

The first time I was in Oroville (1980), old memories
bubbled up, and my hosts were delighted when I asked
"Isn't this where Ishi was captured?"

They then showed me all the old significant locations —
one of the many special highlights of that visit.

IIRC, there was an old documentary titled something like
Ishi — The Last of His Tribe.
Haven't heard or read any mention of it in many years.


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Thanks Ken. Last time I read about Ishi I was a boy. Looking forward to a reread.

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I have never read it but did know some about his story. A couple of my older friends have both said its a fantastic read.


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Very good Ken, something this old man can read for the first time. Never heard of him before.


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For a good read check out Last of the Mill Creeks. Sim Moak, Hy Goode and R. A. Anderson were some tough hombres. I hunt the same deer herd all over Ishi's stomping grounds.


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Used to tell all our Boy Scouts the story of Ishi!

Thanks for bringing back the memories.


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"Come, shall we go and kill us venison?
And yet it irks me the poor dappled fools,
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Should in their own confines with forked heads
Have their round haunches gored."

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Hadn't read the book in years, but it was a good read for sure.


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“YOU STAY, I GO.” ISHI


Leo of the Land of Dyr

NRA FOR LIFE

I MISS SARAH

“In Trump We Trust.” Right????

SOMEBODY please tell TRH that Netanyahu NEVER said "Once we squeeze all we can out of the United States, it can dry up and blow away."












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“[Ishi] was a stoic, unafraid, and died in the faith of his people.
As an Indian should go, so we sent him on his long journey to the land of shadows.
By his side we placed his fire sticks, ten pieces of dentalia or Indian money, a small bag of acorn meal, a bit of dried venison, some tobacco, and his bow and arrows.
[…]
With him there was no word for good-by. He said: 'You stay, I go.'
He has gone and he hunts with his people.
We stay, and he has left us the heritage of the bow.”
Saxon Pope


Leo of the Land of Dyr

NRA FOR LIFE

I MISS SARAH

“In Trump We Trust.” Right????

SOMEBODY please tell TRH that Netanyahu NEVER said "Once we squeeze all we can out of the United States, it can dry up and blow away."












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Originally Posted by BOWSINGER
“ … he has left us the heritage of the bow.” Saxton Pope

Indeed so!

And the knapping of flint was a "lost art" until Ishi taught a few whities how to do it.

His tracks are still big and many — quite a heritage for only five years in modern society.

In his travels with Kroeber and Pope, Ishi was interviewed rather extensively by a well educated chief from another tribe. In an aside to Ishi's attending friend, that chief said something to the effect "That's a very high-class Indian." By all accounts and meaningful standards, Ishi was a very genuine gentleman — NOT a savage. Apparently, everyone who came to know him esteemed him highly.

Contrary to the reigning popular opinion of reservation Indians, there are many such fine ones around these parts — Apache, Navajo, Hopi, Zuñi, …

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FWIW.

Abe Books has a nice selection of various copies of this book.

I was able to purchase a near fine first edition hard copy with dust jacket for a very reasonable price.

Looking forward to reading this book one more time...

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Originally Posted by Ken Howell
Originally Posted by GuyM
v

.


" IIRC, there was an old documentary titled something like
Ishi — The Last of His Tribe.
Haven't heard or read any mention of it in many years.



I just saw that on the tube no more than 2 months ago. History Channel maybe?


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Most you guys are archers at heart and don't know it.
Shame, that. So easy a child could do it.
Missed out.

You stay.


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I actually picked up my copy on Catalina island during a day trip visiting my BIL many moons ago.

Good read.


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