Land Acknowledgement

Honoring Indigenous Peoples

We recognize that Native communities were forcibly removed from the land where we now reside. These Tribes were displaced during rapid Euro-American colonization, the Gold Rush, and armed conflicts between 1851 and 1856.

In the 1850s, the discovery of gold and settlement brought thousands of Euro-Americans to these lands, leading to warfare, epidemics, starvation, and villages being burned.

In 1853 the first of several treaties were signed, confederating these Tribes and others together – referred to as the Rogue River Tribe. These treaties ceded most of their homelands to the United States, and in return, they were guaranteed a permanent homeland reserved for them.

At the end of the Rogue River Wars in 1856, these Tribes and many others from western Oregon were removed to the Siletz and the Grand Ronde Reservations. Today, the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians are living descendants of the Takelma, Shasta, and Latgawa peoples of this area.

We present this acknowledgment as a way to show our respect to indigenous peoples. And to recognize and honor the truth.

We offer gratitude for the land in this state called Oregon, for those who have cared for it throughout generations. We are grateful for the opportunity to grow, learn, work, and create community on this land.

We respectfully acknowledge and honor all Indigenous communities throughout time and into the future. We are grateful for their presence, their knowledge, their ways of life, and their respect for the land and ecosystems.

We honor and acknowledge Oregon’s nine federally recognized tribes:

And we would like to recognize all the other indigenous communities that have not been federally recognized.