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Dungeness

Page 27

by Polinsky, Karen;


  Lambert, Mary Ann.The Seven Brothers of the House of Ste-tee-thum. Port Orchard: Publishers Printing, 1972.

  LeWarne, Charles Pierce. Utopias on Puget Sound, 1885-1915. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1975.

  Liestman, Daniel. “Old Culture In A New Land,” Port Townsend Leader, December 7, 1994. D-1 sec.

  Liestman, Daniel. “Opium, Immigration Laws Target Chinese,” Port Townsend Leader, December 21, 1994. D-1.

  Macgregor, Sherry. Personal Interview. Sequim, WA. November 5, 2015. Unpublished.

  McClary, Daryl C. “HistoryLink Essay: Dungeness Massacre Occurs on September 21, 1868.” HistoryLink.org - the Free Online Encyclopedia of Washington State History. Web. 24 July 2010. http:www.historylink.org

  Miles, George A., and James G. Swan. James Swan, Cha-tic of the Northwest Coast: Drawings and Watercolors from the Franz & Kathryn Stenzel Collection of Western American Art. New Haven, Conn.: Beinecke Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Yale University, 2003.

  Miller, Bruce Granville. The Problem of Justice: Tradition and Law in the Coast Salish World. Lincoln: University of Nebraska, 2001.

  “Port Townsend’s Own Railroad Was Inspiration for Boom Era,” Port Townsend Leader, Summer 1969. 14 -16

  “A Queer Freak; Depravity Worthy of the Pen of a True Zola.” Port Townsend Leader, Jan. 28, 1892.

  “The Railroad Came to Port Townsend,” Port Townsend Leader, Summer 1978. 7-8.

  Rice, Randi F. “Chinese-Americans Share Hard Times.” Peninsula Daily News, September 12, 1993. A-.

  “The Rothschild Years,” Exhibit notes by the Jefferson County Historical Society. Port Townsend: Jefferson County Historical Society, 1999.

  Seagraves, Ann. Soiled Doves: Prostitution in the Early West. Hayden, Idaho: Wesanne Publicarions, 1994.

  “Street Cars, Logging Railroads Fuel dreams,” Port Townsend County Leader, Weds, Sept. 16m 1998. C-12.

  Strauss, Joseph H. The Jamestown S’Klallam Story: Rebuilding a Northwest Coast Indian Tribe. Sequim, WA: Jamestown S’Klallam, 2002.

  The Strong People: A History of the Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. Kingston, WA: Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe, 2012.

  Swan, James Gilchrist. Almost Out of the World: Scenes in Washington Territory- The Strait of Juan De Fuca, 1859-61. Seattle: Washington State Historical Society, 1971.

  Swan, James G. “Fatal Injury Inflicted by A Starfish.” Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission. Washington: 1887. Vol. 7: 33 – 48. http://archive.org/stream/analyticalsubjec00unitrich/analyticalsubjec00unitrich_djvu.txt Retrieved 20 Nov 2012.

  Swan, James Gilchrist. The Indians of Cape Flattery: At the Entrance to the Strait of Fuca, Washington Territory. Facsim. Reproduction 1964. ed. Seattle: Shorey Book Store, 1964.

  Swan, James G. The Northwest Coast; Or, Three Years’ Residence in Washington Territory. Fourth ed. Seattle: University of Washington Press, 1972.

  Taylor, Thomas. Personal Interview. Sequim, WA. November 5, 2015. Unpublished.

  “Three Chinamen in the Cooler,” Port Townsend Leader, March 4, 1893.

  Thrush, Coll-Peter, and Robert H. Keller. “ ‘I See What I Have Done’: The Life and Murder Trial of Xwelas, A S’Klallam Woman.” The Western Historical Quarterly 26.2, 1995: 168.

  Tong, Benson. The Chinese Americans. 2nd Edition. Boulder: University of Colorado Press, 2003. 19 – 66.

  “Townsend Again Visited By Fire,” Port Townsend Leader, September 2, 1900.

  Tunmer, Mary S. Bureau of Pensions Deposition, 869; 251, April 24, 1908. Jefferson County Historical Society Archives.

  “Tumner Murder Remains Impenetrable Mystery” Port Townsend Weekly Leader, Jan. 6, 1909. Jefferson County Archives.

  Vancouver, George, and John Vancouver. A Voyage of Discovery to the North Pacific Ocean and Round the World: In Which the Coast of North-West America Has Been Carefully Examined and Accurately Surveyed. London: Printed for John Stockdale, 1801. Reproduced w/permission: University of Washington, 1996.

  “The Whaling Equipment of the Makah Indians”Internet Archive: Digital Library of Free Books, Movies, Music & Wayback Machine. Web. 12 Mar. 2011.

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  With Pride in Heritage; History of Jefferson County, a Symposium. Port Townsend: Jefferson County Historical Society, 1966. 124 – 131.

  “Woman’s Mutilated Body Found Amid Ruins of Isolated Home,” Port Townsend Weekly Leader, January 6, 1909, 6.

  Yuan, Haiwang. The Magic Lotus Lantern and Other Tales from the Han Chinese. Westport, CT: Libraries Unlimited, 2006. Print.

  Karen Polinsky is a high school English teacher and writer from Bainbridge Island, Washington. Twenty years ago she drove to the Pacific Northwest from Boston with her three children in a beat-up Toyota station wagon. Not long after, she encountered the nineteenth century S’Klallam historian Mary Ann Lambert in a book of primary documents gifted to her by the director of the Port Gamble S’Klallam Cultural Resources. Her fascination with Lambert, a woman-of-vision, eventually turned into Dungeness, a revisionist-history coming-of-age novel inspired by her life. Also a playwright, she has had a half-dozen one-acts produced on Bainbridge Island and in Seattle, and has written scripts for two short films. Polinsky was recognized with the Patsy Collins Award for Environmental Educators in 2012.

 

 

 


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