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Coos people

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Coos people are an indigenous people of the Northwest Plateau , living in Oregon . They live on the southwest Oregon Pacific coast . Today, Coos people are enrolled in the following federally recognized tribes :

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7-466: The Coosan language family consists of two languages: Hanis (also known as Coos) and Miluk . Both are extinct. The Confederated Tribes of Coos, Lower Umpqua and Siuslaw has a language program to revitalize them. Their neighbors were Siuslauan, Kalapuyan, and the Umpqua Indians. The total population of Hanis and Miluk Coos in 1780 has been estimated to be around 2,000. On February 8, 1806

14-500: Is that it is derived from a southwestern Oregon Athabaskan word ku·s meaning 'bay'. Frachtenburg was the first major ethnolinguist to address the relatedness of these languages, saying that Hanis and Miluk were dialects of the same "Kusan" language. Melville Jacobs also said that they were two dialects of the same languages; though he did note that Mrs. Annie Miner Peterson said they were in fact distinct languages and that Miluk had two dialects. In 1916 Edward Sapir suggested that

21-649: The Coos people were first mentioned by Euro-Americans. William Clark, wintering at Fort Clatsop near the Columbia with Meriwether Lewis and the Corp of Discovery, reported the existence of the "Cook-koo-oose nation". His journal entry stated: "I saw several prisoners from this nation with the Clatsops and Kilamox, they are much fairer than the common Indians of this quarter, and do not flatten their heads." The Coos joined with

28-504: The Coos tribes (they lived around the Coos bay and North Bend area). Most of them were hunters, fishermen, and gatherers. For entertainment, they held foot races, canoe races, dice (bone or stick) games, target practice, and also shinny ( field hockey ). Several Oregon landmarks are named after the tribe, including Coos Bay , the city of Coos Bay, Oregon , and Coos County . Coosan languages The Coosan (also Coos or Kusan ) language family consists of two languages spoken along

35-620: The Siletz Reservation, which created a major disruption among the tribal members. By 1937, their population had dwindled to 55. In 1972, Hanis and Miluk Coos, along with members of the Kuitsh and Siuslaw tribes, incorporated as the Coos Tribe of Indians. In subsequent years, they began providing food assistance for low-income families and established job placement and drug and alcohol abuse programs. There were 40–50 villages in

42-690: The Umpqua and Siuslaw tribes and became a confederation with the signing of a Treaty in August 1855. In 1857, the U.S. Government removed the Coos Indians to Port Umpqua. Four years later, they were again transferred to the Alsea Sub-agency at Yachats Reservation where they remained until 1876. In 1876, the sub-agency was handed over to white settlement and the Indians were assigned to relocate to

49-480: The southern Oregon coast. Both languages are now extinct . Melville Jacobs (1939) says that the languages are as close as Dutch and German . They share more than half of their vocabulary, though this is not always obvious, and grammatical differences cause the two languages to look quite different. The origin of the name Coos is uncertain: one idea is that it is derived from a Hanis stem gus- meaning 'south' as in gusimídži·č 'southward'; another idea

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