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词条 Pioneer Square totem pole
释义

  1. History

      Tlingit origin    Seattle Post-Intelligencer expedition    Installation in Pioneer Square    Destruction and commission of replica  

  2. Appearance

  3. Modern-day controversy

  4. See also

  5. Notes

  6. References

  7. Bibliography

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2019}}{{short description|Historic totem pole in Seattle, Washington}}{{Infobox monument|name=Pioneer Square totem pole
|native_name=
|image=Pioneer Square totem pole with the Olympic Block in the background, Seattle, ca 1911 (WARNER 629) (cropped).jpeg
|caption=The original totem pole, circa 1911
|location=
|designer=
|type=Totem pole
|material=Red cedar{{Sfn|Childress|2013}}
|length=
|width=4.5 feet{{Sfn|Childress|2013}}
|height=50 feet{{Sfn|Childress|2013}}
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|complete={{circa|1790}} (original)
1940 (replica)
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|map_relief=|coordinates={{coord|47|36|7.5|N|122|20|2.6|W|display=inline,title}}
|website=|extra={{Infobox NRHP
| name = Pioneer Building, Pergola and Totem Pole
| embed = yes
| nrhp_type = nhl
| nrhp_type2 = cp | nocat = yes
| refnum = 77001340
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| designated_nrhp_type= May 5, 1977
| added = May 5, 1977
| governing_body = Private
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| designated_nrhp_type2 = June 22, 1970
| partof = Pioneer Square–Skid Road District
| partof_refnum = 70000086

The Pioneer Square totem pole, also referred to as the Seattle totem pole and historically as the Chief-of-All-Women pole,{{Sfn|Moore|2018|p=110}} is a Tlingit totem pole located in Pioneer Square in downtown Seattle, Washington.

The totem pole was originally carved in 1790{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} and raised in the Tlingit village on Tongass Island to honor the Tlingit woman Chief-of-All-Women.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} The totem pole was later stolen by Seattle businessmen on an expedition to Alaska and subsequently gifted to the City of Seattle in 1899,{{Sfn|Halvorsen|2013|p=}} where it was raised in Pioneer Square and became a source of civic pride for the city.{{Sfn|Sundquist|2010|p=11}}{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=5}} The totem pole was later damaged by arson and a replica was commissioned and installed in its place in 1940,{{Sfn|Clio||p=}} which is now designated a National Historic Landmark.{{Sfn|National Park Service||p=}}{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=6}}

History

Tlingit origin

The totem pole was initially carved around the year 1790 and belonged to the Kinninook family, which was a Tlingit lineage of the Raven clan.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} It was carved to honor Chief-of-All-Women, who was a Tlingit woman who drowned in the Nass River while traveling to visit an ill sister.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}}{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} Her family hired a totem pole carver and gathered to tell him stories they wanted represented on her totem pole.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} When the totem pole was complete, they organized a potlatch and raised the totem pole in her honor{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} in the Tlingit village on Tongass Island.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=3}} It was one of the few totem poles dedicated to a woman.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}}

Seattle Post-Intelligencer expedition

In 1899, the Seattle Post-Intelligencer sponsored an expedition of "leading Seattle citizens"{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} to the District of Alaska.{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}} The expedition was meant to be a "goodwill tour," with a mixture of business and pleasure,{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}} and the goal of investigating increased trade and investment in Alaska.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=3}} However, even as the Klondike Gold Rush came to an end, civic leaders also wanted to solidify Seattle as the "Gateway to Alaska"{{Sfn|Wright|2015|p=}} and the Seattle Chamber of Commerce included a committee of prominent businessmen on the expedition.{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}}

On August 17, 1899, the expedition set sail on the steamship City of Seattle{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} with a total of 165 men and women.{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}} The expedition included stops at Vancouver, Mary Island, New Metlakahtla, Ketckikan, Wrangel, Juneau, the Treadwell Mines, Skagway, Lake Bennett, Dyea, Pyramid Harbor, Glacier Bay, Muir Glacier, Killisnoo, Sitka and Victoria.{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}}

On the morning of August 28, 1899,{{Sfn|New Emblem for Seattle|1899|p=}} the City of Seattle stopped at the Tlingit village at Fort Tongass{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=3}} when members of the Chamber of Commerce committee spotted multiple totem poles.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} The village appeared to be deserted and they decided to take a totem pole as a souvenir.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} Third mate R. D. McGillvery and other members of the expedition went ashore and McGillvery later described the events as:

The Indians were all away fishing, except for one who stayed in his house and looked scared to death. We picked out the best looking totem pole... I took a couple of sailors ashore and we chopped it down—just like you'd chop down a tree. It was too big to roll down the beach, so we sawed it in two.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}}
During the process, McGillvery and the other sailors broke many protrusions off the totem pole,{{Sfn|Childress|2013}} including the beak on the bottom figure which was later incorrectly reconstructed.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} A carving of a seal, about {{convert|8|ft}} in length, was also taken from the Tlingit village.{{Sfn|Alaska Totem Pole|1899|p=}} After the totem pole was floated back to the ship, the Chamber of Commerce committee collectively paid McGillvery $2.50 for his labor.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} The expedition returned to Seattle on August 30, 1899, and the Chamber of Commerce committee subsequently presented the totem pole to the Seattle City Council as a gift to the city.{{Sfn|Wright|2015|p=}}

Installation in Pioneer Square

The totem pole was repaired, repainted, and stored at the Denny Hotel in Denny Hill under watch of three members of the Chamber of Commerce committee. On October 18, 1899, the totem pole was raised in Pioneer Square in downtown Seattle{{Sfn|Wright|2015|p=}}{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=4}} and was "greeted by cheers of a multitude of people."{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} At the ceremony, city officials praised the Chamber of Commerce committee for their gift and assured the gathered crowd that no one had owned the totem pole and that the expedition saved it from its certain destruction.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=4}}

The Tlingit however, with the exception of the elderly and small children,{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=9}} had simply been away for the fishing and cannery season when the City of Seattle arrived at Fort Tongass{{Sfn|Wright|2015|p=}} and they were shocked to discover the totem pole gone when they returned. David E. Kinninook, who was a descendant of Chief-of-All-Women, and Tlingit witnesses of the theft contacted the governor of the District of Alaska John Green Brady and demanded legal action and $20,000 for the totem pole.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|pp=4–5}} The Kinninook family also sent a delegation to Seattle in an unsuccessful attempt to retrieve the totem pole.{{Sfn|Kramer|2012|p=}}

Nonetheless, a federal grand jury in Alaska indicted eight of the men on the Chamber of Commerce committee for theft of government property.{{efn|The Tlingit village was located at Fort Tongass, a United States Army base}}{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} Attorney William H. Thompson, who was also on the expedition,{{Sfn|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899|p=}} defended the indicted men and stated that:

The village has long since been deserted ... Here the totem will voice the natives' deeds with surer speech than if lying prone on moss and fern on the shore of Tongass Island.{{Sfn|Clio||p=}}

The suit was dismissed after a U.S. District Court Judge stopped in Seattle on the way to his new Alaska posting and was entertained at the private Rainier Club.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} The City of Seattle was allowed to keep the totem pole and the Chamber of Commerce committee was charged a nominal fine of $500,{{Sfn|Halvorsen|2013|p=}} which the Seattle Post-Intelligencer paid on their behalf.{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}}

In the interim, the totem pole had become a source of civic pride for Seattle{{Sfn|Sundquist|2010|p=11}}{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=5}} and was featured on post cards and brochures. In 1909, Seattle hosted the Alaska–Yukon–Pacific Exposition, which in part celebrated the transformation of Seattle from a small town to a booming city, and the totem pole was featured on the official brochure.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=5}} The totem pole had lost all association with the Tlingit owners{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=5}} and a 1910 article described it as the "totem pole that made Seattle famous."{{Sfn|Seattle Department of Neighborhoods||p=}}

Destruction and commission of replica

In October 1938, the totem pole was damaged by an arsonist{{Sfn|Halvorsen|2013|p=}}{{Sfn|Clio||p=}} and was found to be too damaged by dry rot for repair; the Seattle City Council and Park Board sought to have a replica commissioned.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=12}} The United States Forest Service was directing a totem pole restoration project in southeastern Alaska and offered to employ Civilian Conservation Corps Tlingit carvers to craft a replica.{{Sfn|Halvorsen|2013|p=}}{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=6}}{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=12}}

The damaged totem pole was shipped to Saxman, Alaska, where Tlingit carver Charles Brown directed a team of carvers which included members of the Kinninook family.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=6}}{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=13}} The replica was completed after three months of work, and because the red cedar used to carve the totem pole had come from Forest Service land and the carvers were paid by the government, a special act of Congress was passed to allow transfer of ownership of the totem pole from the Forest Service to the City of Seattle.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=|pp=15–16}} The completed replica was dedicated with tribal blessings{{Sfn|Halvorsen|2013|p=}} and shipped to Seattle in April 1940 and then raised in Pioneer Square in a ceremony on July 25, 1940.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=6}}

In 1972, Tsimshian carver John C. Hudson, Jr. restored and repainted the totem pole.{{Sfn|Seattle Department of Neighborhoods||p=}} In 1977, the totem pole—along with the Pioneer Building and pergola in Pioneer Square—was designated a National Historic Landmark.{{Sfn|National Park Service||p=}}

Appearance

The original Chief-of-All-Women pole was originally reported to be {{convert|49|ft|8|in}} tall,{{Sfn|New Emblem for Seattle|1899|p=}} although it has also since been reported as {{convert|60|ft}} tall.{{Sfn|Jonaitis|2017|p=3}}{{Sfn|Wright|2015|p=}} The replica stands {{convert|50|ft}} tall and was carved from a {{convert|70|ft|adj=on}} red cedar from Kina Cove—an arm of Kasaan Bay near Kasaan, Alaska—which was donated by a Haida man.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=13}}

The original totem pole had been repainted with successive coats of non-Tlingit colors in an attempt to preserve the pole.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=15}} The replica, however, used the native Tlingit colors of black, red and blue-green.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=15}}

The topmost figure on the totem pole is the Raven, which in Tlingit mythology "did everything, knew everything, and seemed to be everywhere at once."{{Sfn|Wilma|2000|p=}} The other figures, in descending order on the totem pole, are: a woman holding her frog child, the woman's frog husband, Mink, Raven and Whale with a seal in his mouth.{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=17}} At the bottom of the totem pole is Raven-at-the-Head-of-Nass, who is also called Grandfather of Raven.{{Sfn|Seattle Department of Neighborhoods||p=}}{{Sfn|Garfield|1996|p=17}}

Modern-day controversy

The Coast Salish, who are native to Seattle and the Pacific Northwest Coast, did not traditionally carve totem poles and the Pioneer Square totem pole was the first totem pole in Seattle.{{Sfn|Sundquist|2010|p=12}} Totem poles have since become a symbol of Seattle and are used in tourism campaigns, while native Salish art has not been featured as prominently.{{Sfn|Sullivan|2018|p=}} Seattle City Councilmember Debora Juarez, a member of the Blackfeet Nation, called for a review of all the totem poles in the city for cultural sensitivity, which was granted by the city council in November 2018.{{Sfn|The Washington Times|2018|p=}}

See also

  • List of public art in Seattle

Notes

{{notes}}

References

Bibliography

Books
  • {{Cite book|url=https://archive.org/details/B-001-001-161|title=Seattle's Totem Poles|last=Garfield|first=Viola E.|publisher=Thistle Press|year=1996|isbn=978-0-9621935-4-5|location=|pages=|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gqkpDAAAQBAJ&pg=PA3#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=Discovering Totem Poles: A Traveler's Guide|last=Jonaitis|first=Aldona|date=2017|publisher=University of Washington Press|isbn=9780295806884|location=|pages=|language=en|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5LbCCQAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=Alaska's Totem Poles|last=Kramer|first=Pat|date=2012|publisher=Graphic Arts Books|isbn=9780882409016|location=|pages=|language=en|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=CfKBDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA109#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=Proud Raven, Panting Wolf: Carving Alaska's New Deal Totem Parks|last=Moore|first=Emily L.|publisher=University of Washington Press|year=2018|isbn=9780295743943|location=|pages=|language=en|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UN1zl-xP_WYC&pg=PA11#v=onepage&q&f=false|title=Seattle|last=Sundquist|first=Mark|date=2010|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|isbn=9780738580081|location=|pages=|language=en|ref=harv}}
News articles
  • {{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/333659847/|title=Alaska Totem Pole Brought From Port Tongass by the P.-I. Excursion to be Set Up in Pioneer Square|last=|first=|date=September 3, 1899|newspaper=Seattle Post-Intelligencer|access-date=January 11, 2019|page=18|language=en|ref={{sfnref|Alaska Totem Pole|1899}}|via=Newspapers.com}}
  • {{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/333659183/|title=New Emblem for Seattle|last=|first=|date=August 31, 1899|newspaper=Seattle Post-Intelligencer|access-date=January 11, 2019|page=7|language=en|ref={{sfnref|New Emblem for Seattle|1899}}|via=Newspapers.com}}
  • {{Cite news|url=http://komonews.com/news/local/seattle-to-take-closer-look-at-public-art-to-make-sure-its-culturally-appropriate|title=Seattle to take closer look at public art to make sure it's culturally appropriate|last=Sullivan|first=Jennifer|date=November 7, 2018|access-date=January 13, 2019|publisher=KOMO|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite news|url=https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2018/nov/8/seattle-to-review-totem-poles-for-cultural-sensiti/|title=Seattle to review totem poles for cultural sensitivity|last=|first=|date=November 8, 2018|work=The Washington Times|access-date=January 13, 2019|agency=Associated Press|language=en-US|ref={{sfnref|The Washington Times|2018}}}}
  • {{Cite news|url=https://www.newspapers.com/image/333655288/|title=The Business Men's Excursion Departs: Post-Intelligencer Alaska Expedition En Voyage to the Famous Northland|last=|first=|date=August 18, 1899|newspaper=Seattle Post-Intelligencer|access-date=January 8, 2019|page=1|language=en|ref={{sfnref|The Business Men's Excursion Departs|1899}}|via=Newspapers.com}}
Websites
  • {{Cite web|url=http://artbeat.seattle.gov/2013/04/04/weekly-art-hit-seattle-totem-pole/|title=Weekly Art Hit: 'Seattle Totem Pole'|last=Childress|first=Tamara|date=April 4, 2013|website=artbeat.seattle.gov|access-date=January 8, 2019|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite web|url=https://livingnewdeal.org/projects/pioneer-square-totem-pole-seattle-wa/|title=Pioneer Square Totem Pole – Seattle WA|last=Halvorsen|first=Doug|date=April 23, 2013|website=Living New Deal|language=en-US|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 8, 2019|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite web|url=https://npgallery.nps.gov/AssetDetail/NRIS/77001340|title=Pioneer Building, Pergola, and Totem Pole|last=|first=|date=|website=NPGallery Digital Asset Management System|publisher=National Park Service|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 12, 2019|ref={{sfnref|National Park Service|}}}}
  • {{Cite web|url=https://www.theclio.com/web/entry?id=19441|title=Pioneer Square Totem Pole, Pioneer Building, and Pergola|website=Clio|access-date=January 8, 2019|ref={{sfnref|Clio|}}}}
  • {{Cite web|url=https://web6.seattle.gov/DPD/HistoricalSite/QueryResult.aspx?ID=719131529|title=Seattle Historical Sites Search Result – Department of Neighborhoods (DON)|last=Seattle Department of Neighborhoods|date=|website=web6.seattle.gov|archive-url=|archive-date=|dead-url=|access-date=January 10, 2019|ref={{sfnref|Seattle Department of Neighborhoods|}}}}
  • {{Cite web|url=http://historylink.org/File/2076|title=Stolen totem pole unveiled in Seattle|publisher=HistoryLink|last=Wilma|first=David|date=January 1, 2000|access-date=January 8, 2019|ref=harv}}
  • {{Cite web|url=http://www.burkemuseum.org/blog/how-did-totem-poles-become-symbol-seattle|title=How did totem poles become a symbol of Seattle?|last=Wright|first=Robin K.|date=November 19, 2015|publisher=Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture|language=en|access-date=January 8, 2019|ref=harv}}

10 : 1899 establishments in Washington (state)|Historic district contributing properties in Washington (state)|Landmarks in Seattle|National Historic Landmarks in Washington (state)|National Register of Historic Places in Seattle|Outdoor sculptures in Seattle|Pioneer Square, Seattle|Stolen works of art|Tlingit|Totem poles in the United States

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