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Cecelia Svinth Carpenter

Cecelia Svinth Carpenter
Born September 2, 1924
Roy, Washington
Died June 25, 2010
Tacoma, Washington
Nationality American
Alma mater Pacific Lutheran University
Occupation Historian, writer, publisher
Known for Nisqually people historian

Hope Cecelia Svinth Carpenter was the first historian to write in depth about the Nisqually people. As a Tacoma, Washington schoolteacher and enrolled member of the Nisqually tribe, when Carpenter discovered that her students' history books provided an inaccurate relation of the history of native people, she began researching and writing the tribe's history to set the record straight.

Relying upon only primary sources and original documents, which took her to distant archival repositories such as the U.S. National Archives in Washington, D.C., and London, England to locate original materials, she authored some 23 books, including:

Carpenter's expertise in writing and disseminating the history of the Nisqually people as a record of and supplement to their rich traditional oral history earned her the office of Nisqually tribal historian, chief consultant on Indian history for the permanent exhibit of the Washington State Historical Society, and curator of the society's Remembering Medicine Creek exhibit at the Washington State History Museum.

Daughter of Hans Svinth, a Danish-born Lutheran pastor, and Mary Svinth, a Nisqually woman, Carpenter was the twelfth of thirteen children raised on a family farm seven miles east of Roy, Washington. At age 17, she married Marvin G. Carpenter and began raising a family. When her children were older, she returned to school and earned her high-school diploma through night school. She went on to earn a bachelor's degree in 1966 and a master's degree at Pacific Lutheran University, and to teach in the public schools for sixteen years in Tacoma at the junior-high and high-school levels. She died June 25, 2010 in Tacoma, Washington, at the age of 85.


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