LLyn De Danaan: Katie Gale: A Coast Salish Woman’s Life On Oyster Bay

When:
October 10, 2019 @ 7:00 pm
2019-10-10T19:00:00-07:00
2019-10-10T19:15:00-07:00
Where:
Browsers Bookshop
107 Capitol Way N
Cost:
Free
Contact:
Andrea Griffith
3605614929

Join us for a book talk and discussion with Llyn De Danaan, Professor Emerita at The Evergreen State College, on her book Katie Gale: A Coast Salish Woman’s Life on Oyster Bay, now in paperback. There will be time for questions and a book signing afterwards.

ABOUT THE BOOK:
A gravestone, a mention in local archives, stories still handed down around Oyster Bay: the outline of a woman begins to emerge and with her the world she inhabited, so rich in tradition and shaken by violent change. Katie Kettle Gale was born into a Salish community in Puget Sound in the 1850s, just as settlers were migrating into what would become Washington State. With her people forced out of their traditional hunting and fishing grounds into ill-provisioned island camps and reservations, Katie Gale sought her fortune in Oyster Bay. In that early outpost of multiculturalism—where Native Americans and immigrants from the eastern United States, Europe, and Asia vied for economic, social, political, and legal power—a woman like Gale could make her way.

As LLyn De Danaan mines the historical record, we begin to see Gale, a strong-willed Native woman who cofounded a successful oyster business, then won the legal rights from her Euro-American husband, a man with whom she had raised children but who ultimately made her life unbearable. Steeped in sadness—with a lost home and a broken marriage, children dying in their teens, and tuberculosis claiming her at forty-three—Katie Gale’s story is also one of remarkable pluck, a tale of hard work and ingenuity, gritty initiative and bad luck that is, ultimately, essentially American.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
LLyn De Danaan is a writer and an anthropologist. She contributed to the book Vashon Island Archaeology: A View from Burton Acres Shell Midden, and her articles have appeared in Women’s Studies Quarterly, Columbia: The Magazine of Northwest History, and Oregon Historical Quarterly. She is Professor Emerita at The Evergreen State College.