The Plateau Culture Area is the area between the Cascade Mountains and the Rocky Mountains in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, British Columbia, and Western Montana. From north to south it runs from the Fraser River in the north to the Blue Mountains in the south. Much of the area is classified as semi-arid. Part of it is mountainous with pine forests in the higher elevations.
While much of the Plateau Culture Area constitutes a dry region characterized by a sagebrush-Juniper steppe area with pine forests at the higher levels, there are portions of the area which do not fit this description. In the northern portion of the Plateau Culture Area, there is a temperate rainforest with higher precipitation.
Among many of the Plateau tribes—Yakama, Flathead, Kootenai, Okanogan, Sanpoil, Nez Perce, and Wishram—the women made two-hide dresses by matching two hides of deer, elk, or bighorn sheep. With regard to decoration, Emil Her Many Horses, in a chapter in Identity by Design: Tradition, Change, and Celebration in Native Women’s Dresses, reports:
“Plateau dresses are also characterized by rows of leather fringes decorated with trade beads called “Russian” or “Siberian” beads.”
These beads were not made in Russia but came to North America via Russian traders.
Shown below are items of Plateau women’s clothing which are on display at the Maryhill Museum near Goldendale, Washington.
Dresses
With regard to women’s dress, Josephine Paterek,in her book Encyclopedia of American Indian Costume, reports:
“The earliest attire was a simple wraparound skirt and poncho top, both made of skin. Later they wore the strap-and-sleeve dress, and may have worn the side-seam dress.”
Puberty Veil
The puberty veil or wedding veil was traditionally worn by a young woman at the time of her betrothal and again at her marriage ceremony. These caps were generally passed down in the family as heirlooms.
Hats
One of the distinctive characteristics of women’s clothing among the Plateau tribes is the basket hat. This hat is usually described as being fez-shaped with designs woven it. In her book Columbia River Basketry: Gift of the Ancestors, Gift of the Earth, Mary Dodds Schlick reports:
“The graceful proportions of these hats and the varied execution of the traditional banded zigzag design required great skill on the part of the weaver.”
In their chapter on Plateau basketry in the Handbook of North American Indians, Richard Conn and Mary Dodds Schlick report:
“Most basket hats were made in the southern Plateau by the people who were settled on the Nez Perce, Umatilla, Warm Springs, and Yakima reservations and by the Joseph band of Nez Perce living on the Colville Reservation.”
Baby Carriers
Long before the modern infant car seat, Indian women had invented safe ways to transport their youngest children.
Indians 101
Indians 101 is a series exploring American Indian cultures, museums, histories, and current concerns. More about the Plateau Indians from this series:
Indians 101: Columbia River Beadwork (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Containers in the Maryhill Museum (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Indian Reservation Life (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Indian Spirituality (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Flat Bags at the Maryhill Museum (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Indian Basket Hats and Trinket Baskets (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Indian Tourist Trade (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: A Plateau Indian Art Collection (Photo Diary)
Indians 101: Plateau Women's Clothing in the High Desert Museum (Photo Diary)