Museum Guide News
Warm Springs Museum Fills a Need to Remember Tribal Traditions!

The Museum at Warm Springs, in Warm Springs OR. is many things, not the least of which is a striking piece of architecture, a 25,000 square-foot structure that packs an emotional wallop all too seldom felt in contemporary public buildings.
But most of all, perhaps, The Museum exists as an answer to a question that has troubled Native Americans in general, and The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs in particular for most of the past century. Can this nation’s Indigenous peoples take any meaningful steps on their own initiative, under their own control to halt the erosion of their traditions, the dispersal of their sacred artifacts, the loss of their very identity as a culture?
Chief Delvis Heath of the Warm Springs Tribe is a quiet man with a deeply lined face. “Way back in the 1960s,” the Chief laments, “We could see that the old ways were disappearing, the old language was disappearing, and pretty soon none of our young people would know where they came from or who they were. That’s when we decided to build a museum.” This was truly, a dream come true!
The Museum at Warm Springs exists to preserve the culture, history and traditions of the three Tribes which comprise The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs. The Museum was designed to provide a welcoming sight to the public as well as a safe conservatory for the traditional treasures of the Tribes.
The Museum contains the Permanent Exhibit, a changing exhibit gallery, an exquisite gift shop, public restrooms, a library/archive, education room with cooking facilities, a conference/board room, artifact collection space and an office, a maintenance room and an administrative area. Just outside to the west, a small amphitheater is designed to be used for outdoor performances, demonstrations, and other public events.
These galleries showcase tribal artifacts, but The Museum devotes as much to the cultural and historical record of The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs Reservation as it does to their arts and crafts. “We wanted the museum to tell the story of our people,” explains Delbert Frank, Sr., President of The Museum’s Board of Directors in 1993 and an influential member of the Tribal Council. “We wanted it to tell the truth. To educate both the public and our own children. To tell them who we are.”
We look forward to welcoming you this year - https://museum.warmsprings-nsn.gov/