In 1792,
Robert Gray visited Grays Harbor and the Lower Chehalis. A contemporary leader of the Chehalis, Kaukauan, recalled that they were given weapons and tools by Gray. The earliest recorded mention of the Lower Chehalis is later that year, when fur trader
John Boit mentioned that he saw people at the
Columbia River whom he had previously seen at Grays Harbor. Around the beginning of the 19th century, there were an estimated 1,500–2,000 Lower Chehalis. After the creation of
Fort Vancouver, the Lower Chehalis became involved in a trade network spanning between the Southwestern Coast Salish and
Southern Coast Salish on
Puget Sound. The Lower Chehalis were so important in the trade networks of the time that
Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) ships anchored in the bay often had rooms in them reserved for important Lower Chehalis visitors. In 1824, the Lower Chehalis feared an attack from fur traders. In an effort to assuage tensions and regain the trust of the Chehalises, the HBC trader
John Work distributed tobacco to members of the tribe. In the 1830s, a malaria epidemic devastated the lower Columbia Valley, shifting the organization and composition of local peoples. The Lower Chehalis and
Lower Chinook inhabiting Willapa Bay merged, becoming a bilingual population (today the
Shoalwater Bay Indian Tribe), with Lower Chehalis eventually replacing
Chinook. This group in turn would eventually absorb the
Kwalhioqua living on the bay as well, whose territory was then filled by
Sahaptin-speaking groups. Around the early 19th century, the leader of the main Chehalis village at Westport was a "very old man" named Kakowan. He was succeeded by his son, Tuleuk, in the mid-19th century. After the 1846
Oregon Treaty and the 1850
Donation Land Claim Act, American settlers began to displace Indigenous peoples in the region. By this time, the Lower Chehalis population had dropped to around 400. Around 1854, ethnographer
George Gibbs estimated that there were around 100 Lower Chehalises on Grays Harbor and the lower Chehalis River. In 1855, he reported that the population was 217. In order to extinguish
Indian title, territorial governor
Isaac Stevens began a treaty process in the spring of 1855. Stevens called the Lower Chehalis and several other groups, including the Chinook, Quinault, Queets, Satsop, Upper Chehalis, and Cowlitz, to treat with the United States and cede their lands. Stevens' policy was to concentrate as many Indians on as few reservations as possible, and a sole reservation was proposed between the Makah and Grays Harbor. Stevens ignored pleadings that two reservations be established. The Lower Chehalis (along with other groups) refused to leave their homes and live with the Quinault, and Stevens cancelled the treaty process. Although the Quinault were later given their own treaty, the Lower Chehalis were never given another chance for a treaty. Despite this, the government would succeed in obtaining the title to Chehalis land without compensation. In 1857, Indian agent
J.W. Nesmith recommended a treaty be concluded with the Upper and Lower Chehalises and the Cowlitz, so that their claims to the land could be extinguished. In 1858, agents reported that the Lower Chehalis were facilitating a liquor trade across the coast of Washington state.
An unofficial reservation where the Cowlitz and Upper Chehalis had begun living was made official on July 8, 1864, by
executive order, and the Lower Chehalis were directed to remove to it; however, most did not, preferring to stay in their homes. The Humptulips and Shoalwater Bay Indians outright refused to take any goods distributed to them by White authorities in fear that by taking them, they would be ceding their land to the United States. Those that moved to the reservation were subjected to the "civilizing" process: forced to adopt
Christianity, stop speaking their language, and adopt the White way of living. Goods were distributed to
reservation agents by the federal government; however, they were often sold by the agents or misused. Some who did not move to reservations joined non-Indian communities and assimilated. In 1887, the Lower Chehalis made up a significant portion of the peoples on the
Quinault Reservation. Besides the 61
Hoh, 85 Queets, and 107
Quinaults, the Lower Chehalis population included 36 Ayhut, 5 Chehalis, 16 Humptulips, 16 Hoquiam, 16 Wynoochee, and 69 Shoalwater Bay Chehalis, for a total of 158 Lower Chehalis. There were also 12 Satsop at the time, as well as 3 people of mixed race. The Lower Chehalis were not compensated for their lands until 1960, when the
Indian Claims Commission decided on their claims. == Culture ==