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mission at Lax Kw'alaams. Dudoward had no (matrilineal) heirs and so adopted his own son and a niece into the house. The son inherited the name
Sgagweet after Dudoward's death in 1914 or 1915. He was holding the chief's position and title when Garfield was writing in 1938. He had designated the
105:
After that, the chieftainship was held in trust by the sons of Alfred
Dudoward. The youngest, Charles Dudoward (Chief Wiishakes), gave the responsibility to his first cousin's son, Libby Kelly. From Libby the names were passed to his nephews Mitch and Fred Dudoward. But, the name
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and migration decimated the population of the
Gitanndo and most tribes of the Tsimshian. In the early 21st century, some six families occupy four houses of the Gitando: i) House of Sgagweet ii) House of Gilasgamgan & Gistaaku iii)House of Geyshluk (from Gamayaam)
85:
marble headstone representing one of his most prominent crests, the "Standing
Feeding Beaver." The totem pole still stands in the village of Lax Kw'alaams in the 21st century. Paul Sgagweet bequeathed the name to his first cousin or sister's son,
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niece's son as his successor. But this son, named
Clarence Watson, moved to Southern British Columbia and accepted the Canadian franchise, which at the time required him to surrender his
66:
The
Tsimshian have a matrilineal kinship system, with property and inheritance passed through the maternal line. The chieftainship of the Gitando resides with the hereditary name-title
152:, described several poles belonging to various Gitando Laxsgiik houses which had stood in Lax Kw'alaams. One, a Sgagweet pole depicting a Standing Beaver, stood until at least 1947.
99:
213:
47:
137:
George Kelly was a member of the House of
Sgagweet. He was adopted into the Gispaxlo'ots in order to perpetuate the House of
50:, a tributary of the Skeena River. Since 1834, the Gitando have been based at Lax Kw'alaams, following establishment of a
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reported that the title name was derived from chief Paul
Sgagweet, who died in 1887 and was commemorated by a 15-foot
28:, Canada. It is one of the nine of those tribes making up the "Nine Tribes" First Nation of the lower
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218:
The
Heavens Are Changing: Nineteenth-Century Protestant Missions and Tsimshian Christianity.
8:
240:
176:
34:
25:
87:
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203:
145:
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134:(Eagle) (2 house-groups, including the House of Sgagweet, with 5 members).
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149:
123:
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recorded that
Gitando people in Lax Kw'alaams included 14 members of the
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179:
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21:
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In addition to the House of Sgagweet, other Gitando houses include:
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71:
127:
138:
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There were ten houses in total in the early 20th century. But
58:, another of the Nine Tribes, who have an adjacent territory.
46:. Their traditional territory includes the watershed of the
74:(Eagle clan) house-group (or extended matrilineal family).
43:
20:
are the youngest (or last to form) of the 14 tribes of the
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has never been assigned to anyone since Alfred Dudoward.
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the holder of which is chief of the House of Sgagweet, a
208:
University of Washington Publications in Anthropology,
126:(Killerwhale clan) (1 house-group), 17 members of the
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trading fort there. They are closely related to the
38:(a.k.a. Port Simpson), British Columbia. The name
232:
130:(Raven) (1 house-group), and 25 members of the
93:Dudoward was instrumental in establishing a
220:Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press.
61:
225:Oral Interviews of Lax Kw'alaams Elders.
198:National Museum of Canada Bulletin 119.
141:, a house closely related to Sgagweet.
233:
206:(1939) "Tsimshian Clan and Society."
227:Lax Kw'alaams, and Prince Rupert, BC.
200:) Ottawa: National Museum of Canada.
113:
13:
196:2 vols. (Anthropology Series 30,
165:Gamayaam—Gispwudwada (Killerwhale)
14:
252:
159:Gilasgamgan—Laxsgiik (Eagle clan)
210:vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 167–340.
77:In 1938 American anthropologist
1:
7:
10:
257:
186:
223:Reece, Scott (1997-2002)
171:'Nluulax—Laxsgiik (Eagle)
168:Niisxłoo—Laxsgiik (Eagle)
162:Gistaaku—Laxsgiik (Eagle)
192:Barbeau, Marius (1950)
62:History and government
52:Hudson's Bay Company
42:means the people of
144:The anthropologist
204:Garfield, Viola E.
177:infectious disease
148:, in a survey of
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114:Houses and clans
26:British Columbia
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88:Alfred Dudoward
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146:Marius Barbeau
120:William Beynon
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79:Viola Garfield
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214:Neylan, Susan
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100:Native Status
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35:Lax Kw'alaams
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194:Totem Poles.
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56:Gispaxlo'ots
48:Exstew River
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32:resident at
30:Skeena River
17:
15:
150:totem poles
124:Gispwudwada
83:totem pole
24:people in
241:Tsimshian
180:epidemics
95:Methodist
68:Sgagweet,
22:Tsimshian
235:Category
132:Laxsgiik
118:In 1935
108:Sgagweet
72:Laxsgiik
216:(2003)
187:Sources
128:Ganhada
40:Gitando
18:Gitando
139:Ligeex
44:weirs
16:The
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