Colestah

Yakama medicine woman


title: "Colestah" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["year-of-birth-unknown", "1800s-births", "1865-deaths", "19th-century-native-american-people", "history-of-spokane,-washington", "native-american-history-of-washington-(state)", "native-american-people-of-the-indian-wars", "native-american-women-in-warfare", "people-from-whitman-county,-washington", "women-in-19th-century-warfare", "yakama-people", "19th-century-native-american-women", "native-american-people-from-washington-(state)"] description: "Yakama medicine woman" topic_path: "history" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colestah" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Yakama medicine woman ::

::data[format=table title="Infobox person"]

FieldValue
nameColestah
birth_date1800s
death_date1865
known_for*Yakama medicine woman

| | spouse | One of the five wives of Chief Kamiakin | ::

| name = Colestah | image = | caption = | birth_date = 1800s | birth_place = | death_date = 1865 | death_place = | predecessor = | successor = | native_name = | other names = | known_for = *Yakama medicine woman

  • warrior who fought at Battle of Four Lakes | death_cause = | resting_place = | resting_place_coordinates = | party = | education = | spouse = One of the five wives of Chief Kamiakin | partner = | children = | parents = | relations = | signature = | footnotes = Colestah (died 1865), was one of the five wives of Chief Kamiakin (1800–1877) of the Yakama Native American tribe. She is described as being a medicine woman (twati), a psychic, and a "warrior woman".

Early life

Colestah was the youngest daughter of Chief Tenax (Klickitat). Her older sisters were Kem-ee-yowah, Why-luts-pum and Hos-ke-la-pum. She bore two children with Kamiakin: Tomeo and Tomomolow (Tomolio).

Battle of Four Lakes

On September 5, 1858, she accompanied Kamiakin to the Battle of Four Lakes (or Battle of Spokane Plains) against Colonel George Wright, armed with a stone war club, vowing to fight by his side. According to the historian of criminal justice, Kurt R. Nelson, she dressed formally for the battle in "her finest" buckskin dress, with her hair braided tightly. When Kamiakin was seriously wounded by a branch dislodged by a howitzer shell, Colestah carried him back to the family camp located at the Spokane River and used her skills as an "Indian doctor" in traditional tribal medicine to nurse him back to health.

Colestah and Kamiakin moved to the Palouse River camp, between today's St. John and Endicott in 1860, where his family followed its "seasonal rounds of root-digging, berry-gathering and salmon fishing." Colestah had a new son, Tomolow, with Kamiakin in 1864, but then she became sick, and died in 1865.

References

References

  1. (2011). "Treaties and Treachery: The Northwest Indians' Resistance to Conquest". University of Nebraska Press.
  2. (2008). "Finding Chief Kamiakin: The Life and Legacy of a Northwest Patriot". Washington State University/The McGregor Company.
  3. (1986). "Renegade Tribe: The Palouse Indians and the Invasion of the Inland Pacific Northwest". Washington State University Press.
  4. (2003). "A necessary balance : gender and power among Indians of the Columbia Plateau". University of Oklahoma Press.
  5. "Chief Kamiakin (ca. 1800-1877)". History Link.
  6. (1988). "General George Wright, Guardian of the Pacific Coast". University of Oklahoma Press.
  7. Salmonson, Jessica Amanda. (1991). "The Encyclopedia of Amazons". Paragon House.
  8. (2005). "Spokane & the Inland Empire: An Interior Pacific Northwest Anthology". Washington State University Press.

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year-of-birth-unknown1800s-births1865-deaths19th-century-native-american-peoplehistory-of-spokane,-washingtonnative-american-history-of-washington-(state)native-american-people-of-the-indian-warsnative-american-women-in-warfarepeople-from-whitman-county,-washingtonwomen-in-19th-century-warfareyakama-people19th-century-native-american-womennative-american-people-from-washington-(state)