Native American Occupation - Ohlone
 |
An Ohlone village.
Illustration by Michael Harney from "The Ohlone
Way" by Malcolm Margolin. Copyright 1978. Used with permission
of the Publisher, Heyday Books. |
When the Spaniards arrived at the Central California Coast in
1769, it was inhabited by over forty different groups of indigenous
people whom we now know collectively as the Ohlone. For over
4,000 years, these neighboring tribal groups had intermarried,
formed trade relations, and developed a highly complex social
structure known as ranked chiefdoms (Cambra et al. 2003). From
Point Sur to the San Francisco Bay, about 10,000 people lived
out their lives – literally upon the bones of their ancestors
– hunting, fishing, and gathering from the bountiful coastal
region.
These
societies, having developed in a relatively small region over
thousands of years, were extremely complex. This complexity
was evident in the elaborate burial rituals, extensive trade
network, intricate social structure, and craftsmanship including
tule boats, specialized tools, and stylized personal and ritual
ornaments. Within the region, eight separate ethnic groups – defined
by differences in dialect, language, dress, ornamentation, religious
practices, kinship patterns, and even diet – were further
divided into forty tribelets, which averaged about 250 members
each (Cartier et al. 1991; Margolin 1978). Although they shared
borders, traded, intermarried with neighbors, and may have spoken
similar dialects, each tribelet was an autonomous entity. That
so many independent groups could dwell in such close proximity
with so many different languages greatly confused the Spaniards,
so they simply referred to all of the coastal people as "Costenos," or
coastal people. The name was eventually changed to Costanoans
by English speaking immigrants, lumping all of the Native Americans
from Monterey to the San Francisco Bay area into one large tribe,
even though no confederation or alliance of area tribes had previously
existed (Cartier et al. 1991). Each tribelet, however, had
a name for their own group and descendants of the original
inhabitants dislike the name Costanoans, preferring to be called Ohlone.
The origin of the name is unclear; scholars disagree about
whether any of the tribelets actually used the name Ohlone
(Margolin 1978).
 |
California Native women processing acorns, a staple
food.
Photographed by B. F. White, 15-9598;
courtesy of the Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum and the
Regents of the University of California. |
The Central California Coast was very rich in resources and
the Ohlone developed highly efficient ways to provide a balanced
diet for themselves with relatively little hard labor. Because
the region is so ecologically diverse (see the Riparian
Habitat and Upland Plant Communities sections)
and productive, over the centuries each tribelet identified itself
with its own unique territory, usually less than 100 square miles
(Margolin 1978). Within just that small area, the people were
able selectively to hunt and gather seasonal food in a migration
pattern that would have required much longer travel elsewhere
in North America. Tribelets might be only a few miles apart,
but they hunted different animals, gathered different plants,
and over time developed completely different food preferences
and customs. For example, one tribelet might eat skunk much to
the disgust of their neighbors, who ate internal organs of deer
that the skunk eaters would not think to consume (Margolin 1978).
In spite of this variability in food preferences, there were
several universal foods, which included acorn, shellfish, salmon,
deer, waterfowl, seeds, roots, and greens (Ryan 1980). To increase
their food supply, Ohlone regularly used fire to alter their
environment to favor desired game and plant materials. The use
of fire created a grassland matrix interspersed with patches
of scrub that would later support Spanish, Mexican, and American
ranching and farming efforts.
 |
The deer hunt.
Illustration by Michael Harney from "The Ohlone
Way" by Malcolm Margolin. Copyright
1978. Used with permission of the Publisher, Heyday
Books. |
The
Ohlone followed a semi-nomadic life style by moving to different
camps within their territory to make use of seasonally available
food in coastal and inland areas. They fished constantly, using
nets, harpoons, basket traps, hooks, and even fish poisons. Salmon
(Oncorhynchus sp.) were seasonally abundant and were a major food item to Ohlone
living on the coast or near rivers and streams. To draw the salmon
close, fishermen performed rituals in a reenactment of the Sacred
Time, during which Coyote taught the first Ohlone to fish. To
hunt deer, skilled Ohlone hunters disguised themselves as deer
and mimicked the movement of deer so well that they could blend
into the middle of a deer herd without being noticed (Margolin
1978). Each hunt was preceded by several days of fasting, praying,
and cleansing in the village sweat lodge. Many aspects of the
Ohlone life involved the combination of the spiritual world (for
example, praying and fasting) with the material world (for example,
hunting). They regularly burned large patches of land to produce
seed and open space, dammed streams to catch fish, cultivated
and pruned food plants, and even regulated fishing seasons (Slater
2002; Hynding 1982).
Anything that the area lacked, they traded for. The Ohlone were
a part of an intricate trade network that connected the eastern
Sierra Nevada, Sonoma County, and Santa Barbara. In what is
now known as the New Almaden area of Santa Clara County, there
was a rich cinnabar deposit. Competing tribelets in Santa Cruz
and Santa Clara Counties battled over the deposit and defended
it against infringement by others. Trading expeditions came from
as far away as Walla Walla, Washington to trade or fight for the
prized pigment (Ryan 1980; Davis 1974). Other outgoing trade
goods included coastal shell, salt, and dried abalone meat. Items
obtained included obsidian, pinyon nuts, dogs, tobacco, and soapstone
(Cartier et al. 1991).
The arrival of the Spanish on
the California Coast abruptly ended the Ohlone way of life
(go to the section on Spanish Colonization).
Missionization followed the first European explorers on the coast
and the Native Americans began a descent to disease, indenture,
and extermination. Even today, their troubles are not over. Although
their lineage and presence in the region has been proven (Muwekma
Ohlone 2003), present day Ohlone are currently unrecognized by
the United States Government as a Native American Tribe (US EPA
2003).
References
Cambra, R., M.V. Arellano, H. Alvarez, G.E. Arellano, C.M. Sullivan,
K. Thompson, C. Rodriguez, and A. Leventhal. 2003. The Muwekma
Ohlone Tribe of the San Francisco Bay Area [Web page]. Muwekma
Ohlone Tribe [cited October 17, 2003]. View
on-line source.
Cartier, R., L. Crane, C. James, J. Reddington, and A. Ruby.
1991. An Overview of the Ohlone Culture [Web page]. Santa Cruz
Public Library [cited October 15, 2003].
View
on-line source.
Davis, J.T. 1974. Trade Routes and Economic
Exchange Among the Indians of California. Vol. 3, California
Publications of Archaeology, Ethnography, and History. Ramona: Ballena Press.
Hynding, A. 1982. From Frontier to Suburb:
The Story of the San Mateo Peninsula. Belmont, CA: Star Publishing Company.
Margolin, M. 1978. The Ohlone Way Indian
Life in the San Francisco - Monterey Bay Area. Berkeley, CA: Heyday Books.
Muwekma Ohlone Tribe. 2003. The Muwekma Ohlone Tribe: A Brief
History and the Recognition Process [Web page]. Muwekma Ohlone
Tribe [cited October 15, 2003]. View
on-line source.
Ryan, M.E. 1980. "A Well looking, Affable People..." [Web
page]. Santa Cruz Public Library [cited October 15, 2003]. View
on-line source.
Slater, D. 2002. Margolin's way. Sierra Magazine.
November / December.
US Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA). 2003. National
Map of Federally Recognized Tribes and EPA Regions [Web page]
[cited October 22, 2003]. View
on-line source.
Back to top
|