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The Tribe has reacquired land lost during the allotment era, and "the Tribe and Tribal members now own more than half of the land on the reservation for the first time in recent history". [9] Major acquisitions include White Horse Golf Club in 2010, placed into trust in March 2014; and 200 acres known as the Place of the Bear, in the Cowling ...
The Suquamish Indian Tribe of the Port Madison Reservation is a federally recognized tribe and Indian reservation in the U.S. state of Washington.. The tribe includes Suquamish, Duwamish, and Sammamish peoples, all Lushootseed-speaking Indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest, and was a signatory to the Treaty of Point Elliott of 1855.
Port Gamble Indian Reservation: 1,234 1,301 Port Gamble Bay in Kitsap County: Port Madison Reservation (Suquamish Indian Reservation) 507? 7,486 Western and northern shores of Port Madison, northern Kitsap County: Puyallup Indian Reservation: 4,000 18,061 Primarily northern Pierce County: Quileute Indian Reservation: 371 1,003.4
The Suquamish Tribe's Port Madison Enterprises is building a Clearwater Market in Poulsbo, which is the first business venture outside of the tribe's Port Madison Reservation.
The Suquamish Tribe's primary care clinic, located in the Healing House building close to the tribe's government center and museum, is growing.
Suquamish is a census-designated place (CDP) in Kitsap County, Washington, United States. The population was 4,266 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] Comprising the Port Madison Indian Reservation , it is the burial site of Chief Seattle and was the site of the Suquamish tribe winter longhouse known as the Old Man House .
Tribes in Washington state have a lot at stake with the initiative on November's ballot that would undo the Climate Commitment Act. Opinion: Historic duty to care for environment calls for 'no' on ...
The House of Awakened Culture (Lushootseed: sgwәdzadad qәɫ ʔaltxw) is a community house in Suquamish, Washington State, on the Port Madison Indian Reservation.Built by the Suquamish tribe in 2008, it acts as a spiritual successor to the historic Old Man House, which was burnt by the local Indian agent in 1870 in an attempt to disperse the tribe.