Edward Eugene Claplanhoo (August 8, 1928 – March 14, 2010) was an American Makah elder and former chairman of the Makah Tribe, located on the northwest tip of the Olympic Peninsula in Washington state. Claplanhoo was the first Makah to earn a bachelor's degree.[1] Claplanhoo was the chairman of the Makah during the excavation of the Ozette Indian Village Archeological Site in the 1970s.[1][2][3] He is credited with keeping the artifacts uncovered at Ozette in Neah Bay.[1] Under his leadership, the Makah Museum, which houses the Ozette collection, was established at Neah Bay in 1979.[1] He also established Fort Núñez Gaona–Diah Veterans Park in Neah Bay in 2008.[3]
Claplanhoo returned to Washington State College in 1953, shortly after his honorable discharge from the Army in 1952.[2][4] He received a bachelor's degree in agriculture and forestry from Washington State in 1956, becoming the first Makah to graduate from college.[1][2] He was hired by the Washington Department of Natural Resources shortly after graduation.[2]
Makah chairman
In 1970, a winter storm uncovered the remains of a village on Cape Alava, now known as the Ozette Indian Village Archeological Site, which had been buried by a mudslide in the 1700s.[1][2] Claplanhoo, who was chairman of the Makah at the time of storm, immediately recognized the importance of the discovery.[2] He soon contacted Richard Daugherty, an archeologist at Washington State University.[2] Daugherty was the WCU freshman class adviser during the 1950s when Claplanhoo had served as class treasurer.[2]
Edward Claplanhoo and Richard Daugherty, who led the Ozette excavation, collaborated to preserve the artifacts found at the site.[2] Claplanhoo lobbied researchers and Washington state officials in an effort to keep the artifacts on Makah land.[1] Claplanhoo spearheaded the creation of the Makah Museum in Neah Bay, which houses the Ozette artifacts within the Makah Cultural and Research Center.[1][2] The Makah museum and cultural center opened in 1979. In 2010, Ruth Kirk, wife of Richard Daugherty and author of a book on the Ozette excavation, noted the contributions that both men made to the dig and the museum: "Ed and Dick were really instrumental in getting the museum set up. Usually, back then, artifacts were taken back to the university, but here Dick always wanted them, and Ed worked with him because the Makah wanted them to stay in Neah Bay...Now it is common to do that, but back then it was a new idea."[3]
Claplanhoo remained actively involved with his community. He served as the chairman of the United Indians of All Tribes Foundation of Seattle, a member of the Makah committee to promote higher education, and a Neah Bay Assembly of God Church elder.[3] Edward Claplanhoo was a member of the Makah Whaling Commission, which drew worldwide attention for killing a gray whale in May 1999 after a seventy-five year abstention in whaling.[6] (The Makah are the only tribe permitted to hunt whales in the continental United States.[6] The right was granted to them in an 1855 treaty in exchange for much of their traditional lands.)[6]
Claplanhoo and his wife, Thelma, (together with two other Makah families) donated land to establish Fort Núñez Gaona–Diah Veterans Park in Neah Bay in May 2008.[7] The Claplanhoo's property had been inherited from his parents.[3] After the death of his father, Art, in 1973, Edward Claplanhoo and his mother, Ruth, jointly inherited the property.[4] Edward Claplanhoo approached his mother with the idea of eventually building a memorial to Neah Bay's military veterans on the land, "When my dad passed away, my mother [Ruth] and I inherited this piece of property...Before she passed away, I said to her if you give me your share, I will build a veteran's memorial to honor all the people who left Neah Bay to go to all the wars."[4] His mother agreed to the idea.[4]
Claplanhoo had known about the history of his property long before the dedication, even taking the time to place a memorial sign at the site.[8] However, he began planning for a full park and memorial following a conversation Lieutenant GovernorBrad Owen in 2002.[8] Claplanhoo became further interested in the park when Owens invited Edward and Thelma Claplanhoo to a 2004 opening reception for an exhibit on Spanish exploration from 1492 to 1819 at the Seattle Art Museum.[7] Other prominent guests at the reception included King Juan Carlos I and Queen Sofia of Spain.[7] Claplanhoo was impressed that sketches of Makah people and their canoes were displayed alongside depictions of Spanish vessels at the exhibit.[7] Negotiations soon commenced to establish Fort Núñez Gaona–Diah Veterans Park.[7] Claplanhoo worked closely with the Makah Tribal Council, office of the Lieutenant Governor of Washington, the government of Spain, and the Spanish Honorary Vice Consul Luis F. Esteban during the planning stages.[4][7] The Embassy of Spain, Washington, D.C. also donated $40,000 to build the memorial.[9]
Edward Claplanhoo was also inducted into the Washington State University Wall of Fame in 2008, an honor reserved for just one percent of the university's alumni.[5]
Claplanhoo died of a heart attack on March 14, 2014, at the age of 81.[1][4] He had suffered from cardiac problems, with his heart working at only partial capacity during his later life.[2] He was survived by his wife, Thelma Claplanhoo; daughter, Karen, and son, Vern; five grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.[3] Nearly 1,000 people attended his memorial in Neah Bay.[1][5] He was buried at Tahoma National Cemetery in Kent, Washington.[3][4]
The 2010 Makah Days celebration, which is held annually in August, marked the first time that Claplanhoo did not serve as master of ceremonies since 1965.[2]