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The Upper
St’át’imc are
the original inhabitants of the territory which extends west of
the Fraser River from the mouth of Pavilion Creek (Sk’elpáqs),
down to Texas Creek into the mountains above the Bridge River and
west through the valleys of the Seton and Anderson Lakes toward
Duffey Lake. To the east of the Fraser, the Upper St’át’imc
territory includes the Three Lake Valley and the adjacent mountains
extending toward Hat Creek. For countless generations, the Upper
St’át’imc have lived in close harmony with the
Lower St’át’imc to the south. Both speaking the
St’át’imc language, the two peoples have always
maintained deep bonds through marriage, political allegiance and
trade. Today the Upper and Lower St’át’imc are
considered one Nation.
The
Upper St’át’imc were settled in several main
villages located on bench lands above the Fraser River and on the
sand benches of Seton and Anderson Lakes. It is believed that the
word "St’át’imc" originated from the ancient
village of T’at’lh on Keatley Creek. In traditional
times, principal settlements existed at Sk’ámqain at
the foot of Seton Lake, Sat’ at the present town site of Lillooet,
Nxwísten at the mouth of Bridge River, Cáclep (Fountain),
Slha7äs and Tsal’álh on Seton Lake and Nk’wátkwa
at the west end of Anderson Lake. Aside from these villages, there
existed smaller settlements throughout the territory. Pavilion (Tsk’wáylacw),
a predominantly Secwápmec-speaking community in the nineteenth
century, through intermarriage gradually became a St’át’imc-speaking
village by the early twentieth century.
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