This is a list of Indian Shaker Church buildings in Washington state. Indian Shaker Church building architecture is unique to the Pacific Northwest, with unadorned, unpainted rectangular wooden structure.[1]
The list is derived from Washington Secretary of State archives unless noted.[2]
- Malott
- Muckleshoot Indian Reservation—(Auburn)[3]
- Mud Bay — Mud Bay Indian Shaker Church was the first Shaker Church
- Neah Bay
- Nespelem
- Nisqually State Park[4]
- Nooksack
- Oakville
- Queets
- Skokomish; new church house built 1962[5]
- Swinomish
- Taholah
- Tulalip Indian Reservation—(Marysville): Indian Shaker Church (Marysville, Washington)
- Wapato
- White Swan — Independent Shaker Church of White Swan[6]
- Yakama Indian Reservation—Satus
Mud Bay church
The first Shaker Indian church, also called the "mother church", was built above Mud Bay near Olympia, Washington, near the homes the co-founders of the church.[7][8]
The original about 18-by-24-foot (5.5 m × 7.3 m) church was oriented in an east-west direction, in a manner that would set the pattern for subsequent church architecture.[9][10]
References
- ^ Segal Chiat 1997, p. 425.
- ^ SOS 1996.
- ^ Flewelling 2002.
- ^ Nisqually Tribe 2014.
- ^ Ruby & Brown 1996, pp. 103 and 132.
- ^ Walker & Schuster 1998, p. 510.
- ^ SOS 1996, p. 3.
- ^ Mooney 1896, pp. 754 and 758.
- ^ Potter 1976.
- ^ Evening Post 1896, p. 8.
Sources
- "Washington churches" (PDF), INDIAN SHAKER CHURCH OF WASHINGTON, RECORDS, Washington Secretary of State, c. 1996, pp. 16–17, Ms 29
- Flewelling, Stan (October 2002), "Auburn-area Churches", White River Journal, White River Valley Museum
- Mooney, James (1896), "The Ghost-Dance Religion and the Sioux Outbreak of 1890", Fourteenth Annual Report of the Bureau of American Ethnology to the Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, 1892–1893, U.S. Government Printing Office
- Walker, Deward E. Jr; Schuster, Helen H. (1998), "Religious Movements", in Sturtevant, William C.; Walker, Deward E. Jr (eds.), Handbook of North American Indians, V. 12, Plateau, Smithsonian Institution/United States Government Printing Office, pp. 499–514, ISBN 0-16-049514-8
- Segal Chiat, Marilyn Joyce (1997), America's Religious Architecture: Sacred Places for Every Community, Wiley, ISBN 9780471145028
- "Indian Shakers" (PDF), New York Evening Post, July 29, 1896 – via Fultonhistory.com
- Potter, Elizabeth Walton (January 7, 1976), National Register of Historic Places nomination form: Indian Shaker Church in Marysville, U.S. National Park Service
- Park request for proposal, Nisqually Tribe, May 22, 2014
- Ruby, Robert H.; Brown, John Arthur (1996), John Slocum and the Indian Shaker Church, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 9780806128658
External links
- Media related to Indian Shaker Church buildings at Wikimedia Commons