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The '''Kalapuya''' (also '''Kalapuyan''', '''Kalapooian''', '''Calapooya''', '''Calapooia''') are a ] ] that once inhabited the area of present-day western ] in the ] and are now part of the ].
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(also '''Kalapuyan''', '''Kalapooian''', '''Calapooya''', '''Calapooia''') are a ] ] that once inhabited the area of present-day western ] in the ] and are now part of the ].


The Kalapuya comprised eight related groups speaking three different languages of the ] family: ], ], and ] (also called Southern Kalapuya). Their territory comprised the ], as well as the valley of the ] in ]. The Kalapuya comprised eight related groups speaking three different languages of the ] family: ], ], and ] (also called Southern Kalapuya). Their territory comprised the ], as well as the valley of the ] in ].

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(also Kalapuyan, Kalapooian, Calapooya, Calapooia) are a Native American ethnic group that once inhabited the area of present-day western Oregon in the United States and are now part of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon.

The Kalapuya comprised eight related groups speaking three different languages of the Oregon Penutian family: Northern Kalapuyan, Central Kalapuyan, and Yoncalla (also called Southern Kalapuya). Their territory comprised the Willamette Valley, as well as the valley of the Umpqua River in Douglas County.

Thought to number under 4,000 individuals before contact with whites, the introduction of the diseases of the whites were catastrophic to the Kalapuya people. The smallpox epidemic that raged through the Pacific Northwest in 1782-1783 may have caused the death of half the bands' population. Malaria likewise swept the region between 1830 and 1833. 90% of the Kalapuya population died of these diseases. It is sufficient to say that the Kalapuya were greatly weakened by the time whites began to show up in numbers in the Willamette valley in the middle of the nineteenth century.

The Kalapuyan groups (identified by language) were:

In his description of the Indians of the Willamette Valley in 1849, Governor Joseph Lane (after whom Lane County is named) gave the following estimates for the tribes' populations:

"Calipoa": 60 "Tualatine": 60 "Yam Hill": 90 "Lucka-mues": 15

In 1854 they ceded many of their lands to the United States under the Kalapuya Treaty in exchange primarily for money. The Calapooia River is named for the tribe.

Copied from Kalapooian article

A group of tribes who used to live in the Willamette River valley, who spoke a distinct language. Some of the tribes, such as the Yonkalla, pushed as far south as Northern California.

The Kalapooian tribes suffered severe losses by epidemic disease in or about 1824, with their numbers never recovering.

In the Treaty of Calapooia Creek, Oregon, (November 29, 1854), the Umpqua and Kalapooian tribes of Umpqua Valley ceded their lands to the United States. Their lands were to be held in reserve for them, unless the President should decide to move them. In the treaty at Dayton, Oregon, (January 22, 1855), the Calapooya and other tribes of the Willamette valley ceded the entire drainage area of the Willamette river, and the tribes were moved to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation.

The known tribes of the Kalapooian family include: Ahantchuyuk, Atfalati or Tualatin, Calapooya, Chelamela, Chepenafa, Lakmiut, Santiam, Yamel, and Yonkalla.

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