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Author Topic: Ishi, The Last Native American  (Read 189 times)
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Bart
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« on: April 02, 2007, 04:43:56 AM »

Ishi, The Last Native American

   (c. 1860 ? March 25, 1916) was the name given to the last member of the Yahi, in turn the last surviving group of the Yana people of California. Ishi is believed to be the last Native American in Northern California to have lived the bulk of his life completely outside the European American culture. He emerged from the wild near Oroville, California, after leaving his ancestral homeland in the foothills near Lassen Peak.

   Ishi means man in the Yahi dialect; his real name was never known because it was taboo in Yahi society to say one's own name. Since he was the last member of his tribe, his real name died with him.
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/4/47/Ishi.jpg/250px-Ishi.jp   Ishi (right), last known member of the Yahi tribe, with anthropologist Alfred L. Kroeber (1911).

Biography

   Prior to European contact, the Yana population numbered approximately 3,000. In 1865, Ishi and his family were victims of the Three Knolls Massacre from which approximately 30 Yahi survived. The remaining Yahi escaped but went into hiding for the next 40 years after cattlemen killed about half of the survivors. Eventually Ishi's mother and other companions died, and he was discovered by a group of butchers in their corral at Oroville on August 29, 1911.

   After being noticed by townspeople, Ishi was taken into custody by a local sheriff for his own protection. He was then moved to the Museum of Anthropology at the University of California, San Francisco where he lived the remainder of his life in evident contentment, until his death from tuberculosis in 1916. While at the Museum Ishi was studied closely by the anthropologists Alfred L. Kroeber and Thomas Talbot Waterman, helping them reconstruct Yahi culture by identifying material items and showing how they were made. He also provided information on his native Yana language which was recorded and studied by Edward Sapir, who had previously done work on the northern dialects.

   His story was popularized in a book by Theodora Kroeber, wife of Alfred Kroeber, who worked with her husband's notes and comments to create the story of a man she had never met. The book, Ishi in Two Worlds (ISBN 0-520-22940-1), was published in 1961 after Alfred Kroeber's death. A shorter, more fictionalised version appeared in 1964 under the title Ishi: Last of His Tribe. Additional scholarly materials, edited by R.F. Heizer and T. Kroeber, appeared in a 1981 volume, Ishi the Last Yahi: A Documentary History (ISBN 0520043669). In 2000, Lawrence Holcomb published a novel titled The Last Yahi: A Novel About Ishi (ISBN 0595127665).

   In 2003, anthropologists Clifton and Karl Kroeber, sons of Alfred L. Kroeber, edited Ishi in Three Centuries (ISBN 0-8032-2757-4), the first scholarly book on Ishi to contain essays by Indians, although native writers such as Gerald Vizenor had been commenting on the case since the late 1970s.

   Ishi's story was updated by Duke University anthropologist Orin Starn in his book, Ishi's Brain: In Search of America's Last "Wild" Indian, published in 2004 (ISBN 0-393-05133-1). Ishi's Brain follows Starn's quest for the remains of the last of the Yahi and seeks to understand what he meant to Americans then and modern Indians today.

   Ishi's story has been filmed twice for TV. First as Ishi: the Last of His Tribe with Eloy Casados in the title role, telecast on NBC December 20, 1978. Then as The Last of His Tribe (1992), with Graham Greene as Ishi. Ishi is also depicted in Jed Riffe's award-winning documentary film Ishi: The Last Yahi (1992).

   Thanks to a campaign by Gerald Vizenor, the the courtyard in Dwinelle Hall at the University of California, Berkeley was renamed "Ishi Court."

Ishi's arrowheads

   A recent study by Steven Shackley, of the University of California, Berkeley [1], indicates that Ishi may have actually been only half Yahi. This conclusion was based on a comparative study of Ishi's arrowheads, and indicates that he may have learned this skill from a male relative from the Wintu or Nomalki tribes that lived in close proxmity to the Yahi lands, though they were traditionally enemies.

   If Ishi descended from both of these tribes it would help to explain his extraordinary adaptive abilities, as it would indicate that his circumstances were, essentially from birth, different from the cultural norm of his people. The debate on this has not been definitively settled, however, and the circumstances of his birth probably died with him.

Ishi and archery

    Ishi, like other California Indians of his time, was an excellent archer. Among his closest friends at the university was Dr. Saxton Pope, a physician called in to care for him. Pope was particularly fascinated by the bows and arrows Ishi made, and by the practice of archery. Ishi taught Pope how to make the equipment and the two hunted together in the mountains of California. After Ishi's death, Pope continued with the archery that Ishi had taught him and went on to write the book Hunting with the Bow and Arrow, which became influential in the development of modern-day archery and archery hunting.

External links

 Ishi's Brain: In Search of America's Last 'Wild' Indian Starn, Orin, New York: W.W. Norton, 2004. (ISBN 0-393-05133-1)

 A Compromise between Science and Sentiment: A Report on Ishi's Treatment at the University of California, 1911-1916

UC Berkeley Press release concerning Ishi being from two tribes

Ishi: The Last Yahi (1992) documentary

Ishi: The Last Yahi on Imdb

Synopsis of Ishi's Life by Richard Burrill

Books on Ishi by Richard Burrill

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishi" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishi
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« Reply #1 on: April 02, 2007, 05:32:36 AM »

An examination of the mythology and reality of the Yahi Indian known as Ishi, who spent the last years of his life, from 1911 to 1916, in the museum's building in San Francisco under study by Berkeley anthropologists.

   ISHI WAS FOUND NEARLY STARVED IN A RURAL AREA NEAR OROVILLE, CALIFORNIA IN 1911.

HE IS SAID TO BE THE LAST SURVIVOR OF HIS TRIBE FOLLOWING A PROGRAM OF GENOCIDE INITIATED BY EUROPEAN SETTLERS IN NATIVE AMERICAN LANDS

   Ishi, In tattered clothing, starving, and in shock, confined in a mental ward, on the day of his discovery in 1911

    Ishi chewing sinew during the process of attaching a point to an arrow shaft (lying at his feet)

    Yana style house built by Ishi behind the museum in San Francisco. Sign in foreground says: "Door 33 inches high." Ishi appears to be flintknapping in the doorway.

    Ishi is pressure flaking a biface here, possibly made from obsidian along Deer Creek in 1914. The tool is a metal tipped pressure flaker used by him throughout his life. This toolmaking style was eventually copied by archaeologists learning to replicate stone tools later in the century.

    Ishi is joined by Saxton Pope and family at a dedication of a monument to Native Americans.

Producing a bow on Deer Creek, 1914

Stone tool production tool kit found by D.B. Lyon in 1889 in the Mill/Deer Creek region in Yahi territory. These tools, including metal tipped pressure flakers and porcelain and glass raw material are identical to those crafted and used by Ishi between 1911 and 1915 in the museum.

Excellent books about Ishi

Ishi in Two Worlds; A Biography of the Last Wild Indian in North America  by Theodora Kroeber
 
Ishi, Last of His Tribe  by Theodora Kroeber, Ruth Robbins (Illustrator)

Ishi the Last Yahi : A Documentary History  by Robert Fleming Heizer (Editor), Theodora Kroeber (Editor)

Ishi's Journey : From the Center to the Edge of the World  by James A. Freeman, Ron Ellison (Illustrator), Keven Brown (Editor)

http://www.gilanet.com/amerabo/ishipage.htm
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