Etymology The name La Push is from French term,
La Bouche, meaning "The Mouth" of the Quillayute River, adapted into
Chinook Jargon.
Quileute Tribe history La Push, 14 miles from
Forks, is home to the
Quileute Tribe. Tribal members traditionally built cedar canoes for a variety of uses; they ranged in size from two-man to ocean-going freight vessels capable of carrying three tons. The Quileute ranked second only to the
Makah as whalers and first among all the tribes as seal hunters. They bred special woolly-haired dogs and spun and wove their hair into prized warm blankets. According to traditional stories, the Quileutes' only kin, the
Chimakum, were separated from them by a great flood that swept them to the
Quimper Peninsula on the other side of the North
Olympic Peninsula. There they were attacked and destroyed in the 1860s by
Chief Seattle and the
Suquamish Tribe. Their first treaty with the United States occurred in 1855, when the Quileutes signed a treaty with representatives of the governor of the
Washington Territory,
Isaac Stevens. A treaty a year later would have moved them to a reservation in
Taholah, but the Quileute territory was so remote that it was not enforced. In February 1889, an executive order by President
Grover Cleveland established a one-mile square reservation at La Push. At the time the town had 252 inhabitants. Later in 1889, arsonists destroyed La Push while villagers were picking
hops in
Puyallup.
La Push relocation Work began in 2017 to relocate the village to higher ground. The plan was to reduce damage from tsunamis and flooding that might result from a higher sea level caused by
climate change. The plan required modification of the boundaries of the
Olympic National Park. The first building that was moved was the K-12 school. == Geography ==