Methow Conservancy "Care for the Land" scholarships for graduating seniors

Methow Conservancy "Care for the Land" scholarships for graduating seniors

This opportunity is for graduating high school seniors in the Methow Valley and Okanogan regions. One $500 scholarship will be awarded to a student within the Methow Valley School District boundaries and one $500 scholarship will be awarded to a student who is a member or descendant of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation graduating from high school in Brewster, Lake Roosevelt, Mansfield, the Methow Valley, Okanogan, Omak, Oroville, Pateros, or Tonasket. Students must be admitted to a 2-year or 4-year college or university or a trade/technical school in order to be eligible.

OPEN APPLICATION

Deadline: April 15, 2024

Questions? Email Ashley@MethowConservancy.org or call 509.996.5033

Email your completed application: Ashley Lodato, Associate Director. Ashley@MethowConservancy.org

You can also mail your application to: Methow Conservancy, PO Box 71, Winthrop, WA 98862 but it must arrive by April 15, 2024.

Read about our 2023 "Care for the Land" scholarship winners HERE.

Since Time Immemorial

13,000 years ago the last of the Missoula floods swept across Eastern Washington and down the Columbia River Gorge. Glaciologists estimate that the glaciers in the Methow Valley were up to a mile deep. The First People of the Methow Valley have stories about the great flood and its impacts.

For hundreds of generations, the Methow Valley has been the home of the mətx̌ʷu/Methow People. When the first white settlers arrived in the Methow Valley in the late 1800s, most of the mətx̌ʷu/Methow People were forcibly relocated from the Moses-Columbia Reservation, formed in 1879. In 1884, the Moses-Columbia Reservation was dissolved and most of the Methow People were moved to the area east and south of present-day Omak, becoming one of the twelve tribes of the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation.

Others in this diaspora refused to enter the reservations and simply stayed or dispersed in the region. Even today, many Methow Tribal families maintain a consistent presence in this valley. We are grateful for the mətx̌ʷu/Methow People’s careful stewarding of this land and hope to learn from their example.

Learn more about the Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation and the mətx̌ʷu/Methow People here.

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Inspiring people to care for the land of the Methow Valley since 1996.

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