<p>Welcome back to Queens of the Mines. This is Season 4. Yosemite. </p>
<p>This season of Queens of the Mines explores the making of Yosemite National Park and true stories of women who were there along the way, and women that were there before.</p>
<p>In this episode, I am going to tell you about To-tu-ya, who was later known as Maria Lebrado. She was part of that 5 percent and she was the last survivor born of the Ahwahneechee band that was driven out of the Yosemite Valley by the Mariposa Battalion during the Mariposa War. </p>
<p>5,500 years ago, Indigenous tribes were the first to settle what we now know as Yosemite. The most recent native group to live there was primarily an extension of the Southern Sierra Miwok. They had named the Yosemite Valley “Ahwahnee” and they referred to themselves as the Ahwahneechee. People of the valley. The Ah-wah-nee´-chees had been a large and powerful tribe and 171 years ago, before white men arrived to Yosemite, there were 37 indigenous villages in the area with over 10,000 Miwok living there. </p>
<p>After a war, and what the Miwoks called the fatal black sickness, the majority had died or had fled to live with other tribes. When it was all said and done, only around 500 of the 10,000 Miwoks remained. That is five % of their population.</p>
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Queens of the Mines

Andrea Anderson, Gold Rush Author & Historian

To-tu-ya & the Mariposa War - Yosemite

SEP 19, 202346 MIN
Queens of the Mines

To-tu-ya & the Mariposa War - Yosemite

SEP 19, 202346 MIN

Description

<p>Welcome back to Queens of the Mines. This is Season 4. Yosemite. </p> <p>This season of Queens of the Mines explores the making of Yosemite National Park and true stories of women who were there along the way, and women that were there before.</p> <p>In this episode, I am going to tell you about To-tu-ya, who was later known as Maria Lebrado. She was part of that 5 percent and she was the last survivor born of the Ahwahneechee band that was driven out of the Yosemite Valley by the Mariposa Battalion during the Mariposa War. </p> <p>5,500 years ago, Indigenous tribes were the first to settle what we now know as Yosemite. The most recent native group to live there was primarily an extension of the Southern Sierra Miwok. They had named the Yosemite Valley “Ahwahnee” and they referred to themselves as the Ahwahneechee. People of the valley. The Ah-wah-nee´-chees had been a large and powerful tribe and 171 years ago, before white men arrived to Yosemite, there were 37 indigenous villages in the area with over 10,000 Miwok living there. </p> <p>After a war, and what the Miwoks called the fatal black sickness, the majority had died or had fled to live with other tribes. When it was all said and done, only around 500 of the 10,000 Miwoks remained. That is five % of their population.</p> <p><br></p> <p><a href="https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/andreaandersin/subscribe" target="_blank" rel="noopener noreferer">Subscribe now for Ad-Free Episodes</a></p> <p><br></p> --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/andreaandersin/message