02.02.2013 Views

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

The Gortons and Slades - Washington Secretary of State

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

14 | <strong>The</strong> Jolt from Boldt<br />

MoRning dAwned gRAy, As usuAL, along the <strong>Washington</strong> coast<br />

on September 11, 1971. Joe DeLaCruz, the 34-year-old business<br />

manager for the Quinault Indian Nation, crouched defiantly on<br />

the Chow Chow Bridge, which was blocked by an old pickup truck. A sign<br />

next to him said too many hillsides <strong>and</strong> creeks had “died for your stumpage.”<br />

<strong>The</strong> tribe’s logging units were now closed. <strong>The</strong> Quinaults had had<br />

enough <strong>of</strong> the incompetent paternalism <strong>of</strong> the Bureau <strong>of</strong> Indian Affairs<br />

<strong>and</strong> the sweetheart deals <strong>of</strong>fered by the state Department <strong>of</strong> Natural Resources.<br />

<strong>The</strong> agencies had allowed logging companies to pay below-market<br />

rates for Indian timber <strong>and</strong> clog rivers <strong>and</strong> streams with debris.<br />

A charismatic leader with piercing eyes <strong>and</strong> a mane <strong>of</strong> swept-back hair,<br />

DeLaCruz posed for photos before talking with reporters. He said his<br />

people were taking back the l<strong>and</strong> where their ancestors had lived for the<br />

thous<strong>and</strong>s <strong>of</strong> years before the white man floated in with his beads <strong>and</strong><br />

disease. <strong>The</strong> timber companies had driven pilings into stream beds without<br />

permission from the tribe, eroding spawning beds <strong>and</strong> polluting waterways.<br />

<strong>The</strong> 190,000-acre reservation was the most savagely logged area<br />

in the state. “<strong>The</strong> damage to our fisheries is as bad as the big stump<br />

farm” they’ve created, he said, <strong>and</strong> the broader issue could be summed up<br />

with one word: “Sovereignty.” 1<br />

DeLaCruz <strong>and</strong> Gorton, tough, resourceful politicians from different<br />

worlds, were destined to collide repeatedly. DeLaCruz went on to lead the<br />

National Congress <strong>of</strong> American Indians <strong>and</strong> World Council <strong>of</strong> Indigenous<br />

Peoples. One <strong>of</strong> the last things he did before he died was order a<br />

batch <strong>of</strong> “Dump Slade” buttons.<br />

noRthwest indiAns’ push for treaty rights hit the front page in 1964<br />

when Marlon Br<strong>and</strong>o, the acclaimed actor, joined a fish-in on the Puyallup<br />

River near Tacoma <strong>and</strong> was promptly arrested by state Fisheries Department<br />

<strong>of</strong>ficers. For the Indians, fisheries regulation in <strong>Washington</strong><br />

<strong>State</strong> was a bifurcated quagmire. <strong>The</strong> Fisheries Department regulated<br />

120

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!