- Gabrielino High School
Gabrielino High School grades 9-12 located in San Gabriel, California
- Gabrielino Tongva Nation: First Aboriginal People of Los Angeles
Gabrielino Tongva are the aboriginal people of the Los Angeles Basin and the true first Angelinos Learn more about our culture and quest for sovereignty
- Gabrielino-Tongva Indian Tribe
The rethinking takes us to Native Americans on the California coast and their perspective of Thanksgiving Today in part three, we learn the Thanksgiving perspective of the Gabrielino-Tongva people
- Gabrielino Indians, California, Los Angeles - Britannica
Gabrielino, any of two, or possibly three, dialectally and culturally related North American Indian groups who spoke a language of Uto-Aztecan stock and lived in the lowlands, along the seacoast, and on islands in southern California at the time of Spanish colonization
- San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians | Gabrieleno
We are the only and original San Gabriel Band of Mission Indians, led by the Gabrieleno Tongva Tribal Council, which has been in continuous community and governance since time immemorial As the original Most Likely Descendants in Los Angeles and Orange County, listed on the Native American Heritage Commission since 1978
- Gabrielino High School - Wikipedia
Gabrielino High School (abbreviated GHS and often referred to as Gab) is a public high school located on San Gabriel Boulevard in San Gabriel, California, 10 miles (16 km) east of Downtown Los Angeles, serving the 9th to 12th grades It was established in 1994
- Gabrielino Tongva Nation of the Greater Los Angeles Basin
The Tongva were included in all three censuses under the name Gabrielino, but are still to this day unrecognized by the federal government, though we have contributed greatly to the founding of California and are repeatedly acknowledged through other federal government means on an individual basis
- Gabrielino - California Language Archive
Gabrielino (also called “Gabrieleño”, “Tongva”, and “Kizh”) is a member of the Takic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family Within Takic, it is related to Cahuilla, Cupeño, Juaneño, Kitanemuk, Luiseño, Serrano, and Tataviam
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