Home | WebMail | Register or Login

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Sign Up

Sign Up

Please fill this form to create an account.

Already have an account? Login here.

British Columbia

Whatever happened to the Salish woolly dog? Learn more about this extinct breed with virtual history lessons

Museum of North Vancouver Indigenous Cultural Programmer Senaqwila Wyss of the Swxw7mesh xwumixw (Squamish Nation) is hosting free online sessions with the museum that will explore the history and cultural importance of the now extinct furry friend of many coastal First Nation communities.

Museum of North Vancouver Indigenous educator hosting free knowledge-sharing sessions

A painting shows four Indigenous people, one of them weaving a blanket, and a small white dog.
In this 1856 painting by Paul Kane, a Coast Salish woman from Vancouver Island is depicted weaving a blanket. Next to her is a depiction of a Salish woolly dog, once a beloved pet in many Salish communities. (Royal Ontario Museum)

Senaqwila Wyss wants people to know what really happened to the furry companions of her people.

Wyss, who hails from the Swxw7mesh xwumixw(SquamishNation), is theIndigenous culturalprogrammer at the Museum of North Vancouver and starting July 21, she will be holding virtualknowledge-sharing sessions on alternating Wednesdays that will look at the history and extinction of the Salish woolly dog.

The Salish woolly dog was a small, usually white, long-haired dog with a curled tailand thick fur very similar to sheep's wool.Bred before European contact,the oldest remains of the dog were found in Puget Sound and theGeorgia Strait that date back 4,000 years.

The dogs were foundinCoast Salish communitiesthroughout southern Vancouver Island, the Salish Sea, and Washington State and while their hair was usedto makeclothing and blankets, they were also kept as companions.

"We did have a utilitarian use of sharing the wool, depending on the dog, usually around once a year, so they were used for a special weaving fibre, but they were also a beloved pet," said Wyss, speaking to CBC's The Early Edition Wednesday.

Senaqwila Wyss sits near an area overlooking what was once the Swxw7mesh village site called K'emk'emely. In her role as Indigenous cultural programmer at the Museum of North Vancouver, Wyss is hosting a series of Zoom sessions to share knowledge about the Salish woolly dog, including sharing archival photos as well as having local nations share oral histories on the now extinct animal. (Ben Nelms)

But the Salish woolly dog's population declined with colonizer contact and by1900, the long, woolly fur characteristics of the breed had virtually disappeared, with the exception ofa fewrare sightings on reservesup to 1940.

After contact with European traders, and the introduction of cheaper sheep's wool from the Hudson's Bay Company, the wool dogs disappeared as a distinct breed.

Wyss said while it is not documented in history books, their extinction is a consequence of the same colonial agenda inflicted on Indigenous people.

"Through my different Indigenous communities, it has been shared with me ... that many communities actually had [the] RCMP or government kill the dogs on the shoreline," said Wyss. "The Salish woolly dogs were part of the colonial genocide that happened."

Dogs brought by Europeans also bred with the west coast woolly and eventually, the beloved breed ofso many First Nationcommunities ceased to exist.

"It was definitely a story that was not written through history books," said Wyss.

To hear more from Wyssabout the cultural significance of the extinct canine,register for her free one-hour knowledge-sharing sessions.

The virtual sessions will be held onZoom every second Wednesday starting tonight at 7 p.m. and will include archival photos and guests from local nations.

With files from The Early Edition