Willie Frank III, Nisqually Citizen, 7th Tribal Council Member and the youngest son of Billy Frank Jr. share about the Paddle to Nisqually this Sunday, July 17th, 2016 at 5pm.
Willie Frank III, Nisqually Citizen, 7th Tribal Council Member and the youngest son of Billy Frank Jr. share about the Paddle to Nisqually this Sunday, July 17th, 2016 at 5pm.
Posted in Make No Bones Shows
Tagged Nisqually, Paddle to Nisqually, Raven Redbone, Willie Frank III
Left to Right
Billy Frank Jr and Hank Adams
I tell my people get ready. That guy, the salmon, he’s coming back.” – Billy Frank Jr.
American of the past sixty years. From his mediation of disputes between the US government and AIM in the 1970s to his key role in the Trail of Broken Treaties, Adams shaped modern Native activism. For the first time Adams’ writings are collected, providing a well-rounded portrait of this important figure and a firsthand history of Indian country in the late twentieth century.
Why Billy’s strategist Hank Adams is “The Most Important Indian”
You could never run out of adjectives describing Hank Adams. The Assiniboine Sioux is uncommonly gifted and marvelously complex. He is as elusive as he is loyal—and rarely without sarcasm. Though few outsiders grasp his role, Adams’s mark is everywhere in Indian Country, from its seminal events to its most obscure. Billy’s friend for a half century, Adams has played a central character at every turn in the Nisqually elder’s life. Hank was the one “making sure you understood that there was a problem,” muses Dan Evans, former governor, of their respective roles in the divisive fish wars. “And Billy was the guy who very quickly started to say, ‘This isn’t working. We’ve got to find a better answer.”
Willie Frank; Billy Frank Jr.; and Fran Wilshusen at the Nisqually Tribe’s charitable event. Photo by Peggan Hines
Posted in Make No Bones Shows
Tagged AIM, Billy Frank Jr., Boldt, Fish Wars, Hank Adams, Nisqually, Salmon, Treaties, Willie Frank III, Wounded Knee