Celebrating Native American Heritage Month in Washington’s National Parks


November 1, 2024

By WNPF’s Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee

National Native American Heritage Month is officially celebrated each November, but at Washington’s National Park Fund, along with our three park partners, we work to celebrate Native culture year-round. In Seattle, Indigenous Peoples’ Day is celebrated on October 14 and 2024 is the ten-year anniversary of it being an official city holiday. We were honored to be invited to table and join the celebration in the heart of downtown Seattle. From youth performances and storytelling to hearing how Native communities advocated for an official holiday recognized by the city, so much was celebrated that day.

During the reading of the proclamation by a Seattle city representative, they mentioned “We are nothing without our young people and nothing without our elders.” It’s a great reminder that having tribal partners represented in the parks’ work is essential in stewarding these wonderful places for generations to come.

a large group of hikers standing on a rock, overlooking a turquoise lake.
Youth exploring the wonders of Mount Rainier National Park. Photo by Kristen Oliphant.

This past summer, we partnered again with Rachel Heaton – a member of the Muckleshoot tribe and the 2023 All-Native climb team of Tahoma – to provide a youth camping trip at Mount Rainier’s White River Campground. With support from REI and donated gear from Patagonia, Washington Trails Association, and Rainier Watch, BIPOC youth and adults experienced the wonders of Mount Rainier National Park. From hiking, singing songs, and learning how to set up and break down camp, to learning about Leave No Trace and meeting park staff, the camping trip was filled with excitement, exploration, and inspiration. We’re honored to work with all our partners who made this event possible!


Learn more about the tribes with traditional connections to the lands of North Cascades, Mount Rainier and Olympic National Parks here:


A Monumental Climb

In 2023, WNPF partnered with Rachel Heaton, mentioned earlier, to support an all-Indigenous team to climb Mount təqʷuʔmaʔ, the Muckleshoot name for Mount Rainier. Rachel is an avid hiker and climber but, as she shared,

“I started realizing my people weren’t out here on the mountain. Our stories, our knowledge, our language, and our faces weren’t visible out there. Yet when visitors are out there, they can see the plants that we use every day in our cultural teachings and that are important for our food sovereignty. … It got me thinking, if we’re not out there, what are these people being exposed to? What are they learning?”

Although the team couldn’t summit because deteriorating conditions on the glaciers made it too dangerous, Rachel and the team feel the effort was a success all the same: “That’s not what it’s about. It’s about having our faces and our stories out on the mountain. And inspiring our youth and showing them that we are out here.”

You can learn more about the team in this blog and hear about how their trip went at our virtual field trip where a few climbers talked about their climb experience.

Indigenous People at Mount Rainier

The land that is now Mount Rainier National Park is the ancestral land of six tribes: the Nisqually, Puyallup, Squaxin Island, Muckleshoot, Yakama, and Cowlitz.

Native people have hunted and gathered plants in the area for thousands of years. Archeological studies at the park have confirmed the oral history, with artifacts revealing evidence of long-term camps, short-term hunting camps, areas where cedar bark was stripped, and food storage locations.

In 2020, Cowlitz elders Greg LaDue-Grove and Patty Kinswa-Gaiser spoke about their personal ancestral connection to Ohanapecosh, and its healing power:

Recently, a lake at the park was renamed as part of a Department of Interior effort to remove derogatory place names from federal lands. Secretary Haaland personally called for the changes, saying:

Words matter, particularly in our work to make our nation’s public lands and waters accessible and welcoming to people of all backgrounds. Consideration of these replacements is a big step forward in our efforts to remove derogatory terms whose expiration dates are long overdue. Throughout this process, broad engagement with Tribes, stakeholders and the general public will help us advance our goals of equity and inclusion.”

The lake, which sits alongside the Wonderland Trail about five miles northwest of Longmire, is now known as “Kiya Lake.” The name was suggested by the Puyallup Tribe, and means grandmother in Twulshootseed.

Native People of the North Cascades

The land that is now North Cascades National Park was home to Native people for thousands of years prior to colonization. Ancestors of the modern-day Sauk-Suiattle, Nlaka’pamux, Upper Skagit, Chelan, and Okanagan people hunted, fished, gathered plants, and traded across the Cascade range. What is now known as Cascade Pass was a key trade route for the Chelan and Upper Skagit people – they called the pass “Stehekin,” which means “the way through.”

North Cascades National Park Service Complex is currently partnering with two local Tribes, the Lummi and Sauk-Suiattle, as well as the Darrington School District, Glacier Peak Institute, and other partners on an innovative new project: Community Resilience Through Food Sustainability and Native Plant Education. With funding support from WNPF, the program serves 160 youth participants per year and was recently recognized with the National Park Service’s Education Award, the highest recognition presented to an NPS team for outstanding contributions to the profession of education.

NPS staff show students plants in the greenhouse
North Cascades National Park’s native plant center is an outdoors nursery protected by a plant shade that was funded by WNPF donors.

In spring of 2022, Darrington High School students took a field trip to the park’s native plant center, where they got a behind-the-scenes look at the park’s revegetation process from the park’s horticulturalists.

They put their new native plants knowledge to work and got their hands dirty at the North Cascades Visitor Center in Newhalem, developing and planting an ethnobotanical garden. This field trip is just one of the ways that the project inspires a sense of land stewardship in future generations. Read about the trip in our blog.

Curious for more? You can learn about what this project is accomplishing for the park and the area communities in our virtual field trip, and what’s next for the project, with Rangers Katie and Anna:

Olympic Native History

The eight area tribes with traditional connections to the lands of Olympic are the Hoh, Jamestown S’Klallam, Makah, Port Gamble S’Klallam, Quileute, Quinault, and Skokomish. Olympic National Park celebrates these original residents, providing a thorough history in their Ancient Peoples and Area Tribes page. Their resources include this thought-provoking introduction:

“What if your highways were rivers and mountain ridges? What if your grocery store was the forest and ocean? What if your home overlooked a beautiful coastline complete with whales and sunsets? For the original residents of the Olympic Peninsula, the majestic landscape and wealth of resources supplied both physical and spiritual sustenance. Although the land and its ownership has changed, these essential connections have been maintained through generations. Today Olympic National Park protects the natural resources that engendered those connections as well as the cultural resources that reveal the rich history of the people who first called this rugged place home.”

two images of rocks on the shores of Olympic National Park, containing significant petroglyphs.
Park visitors can access significant petroglyphs including Wedding Rocks (left) and Whale (right).

Another project that WNPF is proud to support is the Makah Cultural Resource Monitoring Program. Personnel from Makah Museum, Makah Cultural and Research Center, and the NPS will collaborate to increase scientific knowledge of the cultural resources of the park, and to develop and refine techniques for their preservation. In this multi-year project, work will include: cultural site monitoring at various locations along the coast with focus at the Ozette area of the park, resource education to visitors about the sensitivity of the sites, and photo documentation of many of these sites. The photos of Wedding Rocks (shown above) is one of the many cultural resources that are part of this program.

Learn More & Be Inspired

To explore more deeply, check out the website jointly maintained by the Library of Congress, the National Archives and Records Administration, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the National Gallery of Art, the Smithsonian Institution, the United States Holocaust Memorial Organization, and the National Park Service: nativeamericanheritagemonth.gov. There, you’ll find film, audio, photographs, artwork, and writing from a broad range of Indigenous creators as well as a calendar of events celebrating and educating about Native history and culture. Explore more about how the National Park Service celebrates Indigenous culture and history here.

Another great resource to check out is this informational sheet created by the American Indian Alaska Native Tourism Association (AIANTA) and Leave No Trace. They provide great notes on how to responsibly recreate when visiting tribal lands and indigenous communities.

Washington’s National Park Fund is committed to equity and inclusion of all people, a commitment we share with the National Park Service and Washington’s three largest national parks. We strongly believe that by actively funding projects that give access and opportunities to traditionally underrepresented communities — and by building an organization whose donors and partners represent diverse cultures, backgrounds, and life experiences — we become more fruitful stewards and champions of Mount Rainier, North Cascades, and Olympic National Parks. Learn more about our efforts.