Background
Sister Francella was born Florence Griggs on February 5, 1920, to Lloyd Manley and Amanda West Griggs.
Sister Francella was born Florence Griggs on February 5, 1920, to Lloyd Manley and Amanda West Griggs.
She graduated from Saint Mary School in Medford, Oregon.
She successfully advocated for the restoration of federal recognition of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians. The tribe regained federal recognition in 1977. The oldest of two sisters, Grigg"s parents both died when she was young.
She completed bachelor"s degrees in English and Spanish.
Sister Francella then taught at high schools throughout the Pacific Northwest, including Holy Names Academy in Seattle, Holy Names Academy in Spokane, Sacred Heart Academy in Salem, Oregon, Saint Mary"s High School in Eugene, Oregon, Star of the Sea in Astoria, Oregon, and Saint Mary"s Academy in Portland, Oregon. Griggs began focusing on Native American issues beginning in the late 1960s.
She joined a commission to restore federal recognition of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians, which she and her family were members. She collaborated with several Oregon United States representatives for federal recognition, which was restored in 1977.
She became a professor at the Indian Center of Eastern Oregon State College, now known Eastern Oregon University, in Louisiana Grande, Oregon.
She also served as the executive director of the Portland Urban Indian Program. Griggs died on January 7, 2012, at the Marie-Rose Center at Mary"s Woods in Lake Oswego, Oregon, at the age of 91. Her Mass of Christian Burial was held at the Mary's Woods Provincial House Chapel in Lake Oswego and she was buried in a family plot on the Siletz Indian reservation.
She was the oldest member of the Confederated Tribes of Siletz Indians at the time.