Epsiode 2
Show's Late- Should have started: on Mar 18th at 8:10 pm
- Filed Under: Uncategorized
In the University of Washington (UW) image archives, he is called Chudups John or Lake Union John. His family was one of the few of the Duwamish people who did not move from Seattle to the Port Madison Reservation or other reservations. He and his family lived on Portage Bay, part of Lake Union, when a lyrical photo was taken around 1885.[1] According to the Duwamish Tribe, Lake John had a cabin and potato patch at the foot of Shelby Street (either West Montlake Park or Roanoke neighborhood, Portage Bay�sources are not specific. A commemorative plaque of unknown reliability is said to exist at the eastern foot of Shelby. This land was given to him by Seattle pioneer David Denny or the property was purchased�see below.[2] Photographer Orion O. Denny recorded Old Tom and Madeline, ca. 1904, further noted in the archives of the UW as Madeline and Old John, also known as Indian John or Cheshishon, who had a house on Portage Bay in the 1900s, south of what is now the UW campus[3] although n
Previously, on The New Show with McCulay Kulkin'
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1st (01:00)
In the University of Washington (UW) image archives, he is called Chudups John or Lake Union John. His family was one of the few of the Duwamish people who did not move from Seattle to the Port Madison Reservation or other reservations. He and his family lived on Portage Bay, part of Lake Union, when a lyrical photo was taken around 1885.[1] According to the Duwamish Tribe, Lake John had a cabin and potato patch at the foot of Shelby Street (either West Montlake Park or Roanoke neighborhood, Portage Bay—sources are not specific. A commemorative plaque of unknown reliability is said to exist at the eastern foot of Shelby. This land was given to him by Seattle pioneer David Denny or the property was purchased—see below.[2] Photographer Orion O. Denny recorded Old Tom and Madeline, ca. 1904, further noted in the archives of the UW as Madeline and Old John, also known as Indian John or Cheshishon, who had a house on Portage Bay in the 1900s, south of what is now the UW campus[3] although n





