Precontact era The Lummi originally inhabited many settlements on the
San Juan Islands. However, due to high amounts of raiding from northern peoples and disease, they migrated to the mainland, settling around the lower
Nooksack River. They displaced or assimilated the people living there at the time, the Skalakhan and Hulwhaluq. The villages that they occupied on the mainland were fortified with large
stockades, which they used to defend themselves from the northern raiders.
19th-century: Treaty of Point Elliott In 1855, the predecessor tribes of the Lummi Nation (including the Lummi people) were signatory to the
Treaty of Point Elliott, which was signed at modern-day
Muckilteo.
Chowitsoot, one of the Lummi leaders at the time, signed the treaty for the Lummi "and other tribes". 13 additional people signed the treaty for the Lummi. The treaty demanded that the Lummi cede the title to their lands, and in return, the 12,562.94 acre Lummi Reservation was established near the mouth of the Nooksack River, on the
Lummi Peninsula. The Lummi Nation was part of the broader fight for fishing and treaty rights, which came to a head in 1974 with
United States v. Washington (commonly known as the Boldt Decision). In 2017, the Lummi Nation declared a
state of emergency in the aftermath of the
2017 Cypress Island Atlantic salmon pen break. They recaptured most of the recovered non-native, farmed
Atlantic salmon. The Lummi and other parties interested in the fisheries of the Northwest were very worried about Atlantic salmon interfering with those of the Pacific waters and rivers. In 2024, a nonprofit led by a Lummi Nation elder acquired over 2 acres of land just north of Madrona Point on
Orcas Island. The organization intends to restore the land to the Lummi Nation. The newly acquired land, situated next to Madrona Point, adds to the Lummi Nation's existing holdings of over 24 acres.
Madrona Point is a sacred area held in trust by the United States. It, along with the recent acquisition, is part of the ancestral village of Ts’elxwisen’, which historically covered what is now Eastsound.
Gateway Pacific Terminal The
Gateway Pacific Terminal was a proposed coal export terminal at Xwe’chi’eXen (
Cherry Point) in
Whatcom County, along the
Salish Sea shoreline. The Lummi opposed the project because of potential adverse environmental impact on their treaty fishing rights and their sacred sites. It did not win approval. == Lummi Reservation ==