Monday, December 15, 2025
46.0°F

Groups commemorate explorer's journey

Conor CHRISTOFFERSON<br | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 16 years, 5 months AGO
by Conor CHRISTOFFERSON<br
| June 26, 2009 9:00 PM

CLARK FORK — It was 200 years ago this summer that renowned explorer David Thompson arrived in eastern Bonner County, where he and his 16-person crew gathered at a local encampment of Flathead, Coeur d’Alene, Kootenai and Kalispel Indians.

 To celebrate the landmark event, more than 200 teachers, students and historians have come together on the same land to temporarily recreate the camp.

Part of the David Thompson Bicentennial conference, the four-day Kalispel Encampment began on Wednesday and ends today.

The event, which is sponsored by the Kalispel Tribe and the U.S. David Thompson Bicentennial Committee, features workshops and symposiums on topics such as beading, meat drying, fish-hook making, traditional plant use and Kalispel tribal history.

Francis Cullooya, a Kalispel tribe elder who helped organize the event, said it is important for attendees to receive first-hand experience in Native American culture and tradition.

“I want them to have a better understanding of who we are, rather than just reading about us in books or newspapers,” Cullooya said.

Social studies teacher Kerry Seyfert traveled all the way from Stevensville, Mont. to attend the conference. She said she has always been enamored by native American culture and wanted to learn more.

After attending courses in language, history and basket weaving, Seyfert said she is ready to pass her newfound knowledge on to her students.

“I’ve enjoyed all of it,” she said. “I’m going to take all of it back to my students and I’m so excited about it.”

Artist Wendy Ostlie of the Shoshone Tribe, who led a Friday class on basket weaving, said the techniques she uses were passed down to her through generations of tribal elders. Without sharing these traditional skills with others, she said native American cultural practices will eventually fade away.

“A lot of people say, ‘You have a talent. Don’t keep it to yourself. Teach it to others so it will carry on.’ We need these things to carry on,” she said. “Francis (Cullooya) said, ‘You’re here for a reason,’ and I think that’s true for everybody.”

The conference also features classes and historic reenactments from the Friends of Spokane House, who set up an authentic fur trading encampment on the site.

Pete Sheeran of Cheney, Wash., who portrayed a Spokane House mechanic at the encampment, said there are countless lessons to be learned from early American history, from both the Native American and settler perspectives.

“It’s about having respect for your environment, the food you eat, the animals you hunt and an attention to life in general,” he said.

ARTICLES BY CONOR CHRISTOFFERSON<BR

July 16, 2008 9 p.m.

ITD: Ruling only delays construction of bypass

SANDPOINT — The future of the Sand Creek Byway may be in jeopardy after the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an emergency injunction Wednesday that halts construction on the polarizing project.

Local residents celebrate inauguration
January 20, 2009 8 p.m.

Local residents celebrate inauguration

SANDPOINT — On one of the nation’s most historic days, hundreds of area residents gathered to celebrate the inauguration of Barack Obama as America’s 44th president.

September 10, 2009 9 p.m.

Group debating historic depot's future

Meeting set to discuss options

SANDPOINT — With reports of vandalism and hints that it will soon be abandoned, the future of Sandpoint’s train depot is uncertain at best. However, that hasn’t stopped a group of depot advocates from fighting to save the 93-year-old structure.