Item Records

This page shows all the information we have about this item. Both the institution that physically holds this item, and RRN members have contributed the knowledge on this page. You’re looking at the item record provided by the holding institution. If you scroll further down the page, you’ll see the information from RRN members, and can share your own knowledge too.

The RRN processes the information it receives from each institution to make it more readable and easier to search. If you’re doing in-depth research on this item, be sure to take a look at the Data Source tab to see the information exactly as it was provided by the institution.

These records are easy to share because each has a unique web address. You can copy and paste the location from your browser’s address bar into an email, word document, or chat message to share this item with others.

  • Data
  • Data Source

This information was automatically generated from data provided by Sto:lo Research & Resource Management Centre. It has been standardized to aid in finding and grouping information within the RRN. Accuracy and meaning should be verified from the Data Source tab.

Description

Image of the Baby Basket Rock, where Sto:lo people would bring the baby baskets.

Lexwp'oth'esála, Always Baby Basket Rock

Lexwp'oth'esála - Xwp'oth'esála, baby basket rock just below main bay and sand bar of Lexwtl'átl'ekw'em (Klaklacum, Indian Reserve #12, first village and reserve south of American Creek), on the west side of the Fraser River. The rock is about 20 or 30 feet high and hollowed out at its center where people put baby baskets when the baby outgrew them, they just left them and made a new one for the next child, this was done in memory of a story (sxwôxwiyám) in which a fish from salt water was sent a message to come upstream; she had a baby in a p'óth'es and it was heavy, so on the way up she and those travelling with her bathed the baby in medicines to make it grow fast so it could travel without the p'óth'es; at Xwp'oth'esála it finally got big enough and they left the p'óth'es at that rock (Susan (Josh) Peter 8/24/77); this is similar to and probably part of the story of the sockeye baby told in Hill-Tout 1902 and Wells 1970:14-18 (in story told by Dan Milo July 1964); Amelia Douglas went to the rock with Reuben Ware and others from Coqualeetza and they took photos of the rock.
Brent Douglas Galloway, Dictionary of Upriver Halkomelem, Volume I (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2009) 416.

Provenance

Sto:lo Archives

Item History

With an account, you can ask other users a question about this item. Request an Account

With an account, you can submit information about this item and have it visible to all users and institutions on the RRN. Request an Account

Similar Items