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Friday, July 12, 2002 - 12:00 a.m. Pacific
By Jack Broom
If you're huge, distinctive and hang around a long time, people might think of you as a symbol of the city, just like the 32-foot-tall totem pole in Pioneer Square. But there are a few things you should know about this particular landmark.
They "sorta found" it. The Tlingit pole hoisted in Pioneer Square in 1899 was brought back from Alaska by vacationing Seattle boosters who said they thought the village where they found it was abandoned. But after the Tlingits complained, the "finders" were fined $500 although Seattle got to keep the pole. Second generation. The Pioneer Square pole was set on fire by vandals in 1938. Tlingit craftsmen worked on the replacement. Totem myth: According to cliché, the "low man on the totem pole" has the lowest status. That has no basis in fact, according to the Burke Museum. And other sources note that lower figures on a totem those at eye level may actually have been done by the best carver on the project. For more information on the natural and cultural history of the Pacific Northwest, see www.washington.edu/burkemuseum. |
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