- Source: Mud Bay Indian Shaker Church
Mud Bay Indian Shaker Church is the first church built by the Indian Shaker Church.
The first Shaker Indian church, also called the "mother church", was built c. 1885 near Olympia, then the capital of Washington Territory. The structure was built on a shoulder of the Black Hills above Mud Bay, at the southern end of Eld Inlet, an arm of Puget Sound. It was near the homes of Louis "Mud Bay Louie" Yowaluch (aka Mud Bay Louis) and his brother Sam "Mud Bay Sam" Yowaluch, co-founders of the church, first and second "headman"s respectively. Mud Bay Sam was the first Bishop (church leader) after incorporation of Shaker Indian Church in 1910.
The original church was oriented in an east-west direction, in a manner that would set the pattern for subsequent church architecture. The earliest several churches were about 18-by-24-foot (5.5 m × 7.3 m) plain wooden buildings with 10-foot (3.0 m) shingle roofs, stout wooden doors and floors. The Mud Bay church was rebuilt in 1910.
See also
List of Indian Shaker Church buildings in Washington
References
Sources
"Washington churches" (PDF), INDIAN SHAKER CHURCH OF WASHINGTON, RECORDS, Washington Secretary of State, c. 1996, pp. 16–17, Ms 29
Wilkinson, Charles (2012), The People Are Dancing Again: The History of the Siletz Tribe of Western Oregon, University of Washington Press, p. 253, ISBN 9780295802015
Ruby, Robert H.; Brown, John Arthur (1996), John Slocum and the Indian Shaker Church, University of Oklahoma Press, ISBN 9780806128658
Kirk, Ruth; Alexander, Carmela (1995), Exploring Washington's past : a road guide to history (Rev. ed.), Seattle: University of Washington Press, ISBN 0295974435
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
"Indian Shakers" (PDF), New York Evening Post, July 29, 1896 – via Fultonhistory.com
Steele, E.N. (1957), The rise and decline of the Olympia oyster, Elma, Washington: Fulco Publications, doi:10.5962/bhl.title.6544
Potter, Elizabeth Walton (January 7, 1976), National Register of Historic Places nomination form: Indian Shaker Church in Marysville, U.S. National Park Service
Barnett, H.G. (1972), Indian Shakers: A Messianic Cult of the Pacific Northwest, SIU Press, ISBN 9780809385720
External links
Media related to Mud Bay Indian Shaker Church at Wikimedia Commons
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Mud Bay Indian Shaker Church
- Indian Shaker Church
- List of Indian Shaker Church buildings in Washington
- Mud Bay, Thurston County, Washington
- John Slocum
- South Puget Sound
- Upper Skagit Indian Tribe
- Squaxin Island Tribe
- History of the United States (1815–1849)
- Boston