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Canada-ON-MIDLAND Azienda Directories
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Azienda News:
- FLATHEAD COMPACT TRIBAL WATER RIGHT SUMMARY - Montana
• Basin 76I, including the Middle Fork of the Flathead River and its tributaries The Tribal Water Right means the water rights of the Tribes, including any Tribal member or Allottee, the basis of which are federal law, as set forth in the following Compact provisions:
- Fire and the Forced Removal of the Salish from the Bitterroot - CSKT | NRD
Belying popular notions that land in the Bitterroot Valley was desperately needed by settlers, it took the U S government over 25 years to sell off the 1872 Salish allotments Officials repeatedly reappraised the lands and lowered the prices in order to try to attract buyers
- Flathead Reservation Timeline - Montana Office of Public Instruction
President Grant signed an Executive Order, requiring the Salish to leave the Bitterroot Valley and go the “Jocko” reservation The president’s action was not based on any survey or examination of the Bitterroot for a suitable place (reservation) for the Salish, as required by the 1855 Treaty of Hell Gate
- THOMAS L. JUDGE. GOVERNOR 32SOUTH EWING STATE OF MONTANA
but sixteen years later, in 1871, the federal government was persuaded by settlers to order the Flathead people out of the Bitterroot Valley The Flatheads maintained that the Bitterroot Valley was made a part of the reservation at the signing of the Hell Gate Treaty and even today they
- Ditch History - Bitter Root Irrigation District
In 1839 a delegation of Flathead Indians, headed by a Frenchman named Ignace LaMousse, went to St Louis, Missouri with the intention of bringing a priest back to their homelands Thus, in 1840 the group headed toward Montana with Father Pierre Jean DeSmet, who had agreed to go with them
- The Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Fight for Quantified . . .
The CSKT, the federal government, and the state of Montana were on the precipice of entering into a Water Rights Compact that would quantify the CSKT’s right to waters on and off the Flathead Reservation in Montana
- Removal of Salish from Bitterroot Valley, 1855-1891
After Xwetxxcln died, settlers successfully lobbied President Grant to declare the Flathead Reservation "better adapted to the wants of the Flathead tribe" in 1872 Congress sent future President Garfield to arrange for the removal of the Selíš
- The Flathead Indians 150 Years Ago, 1869 - Native American Netroots
In 1869, Flathead chief Victor dictated a letter to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs in which he discussed the problems facing the Flathead in the Bitterroot Valley of Montana He asked for justice for his people
- Water Rights Compact reaches into the Bitterroot Valley
The water rights settlement provides for the administration of water rights on the Flathead Indian Reservation and will quantify the water rights of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes on and off the Reservation, including their aboriginal hunting, fishing and trapping grounds in the Bitterroot River basin
- Bitterroot Valley History
The “Bitter Root Valley” was historically the home of the modern Salish (Flathead) and Pend d’Oreille Tribes The area was claimed for the United States in 1788 in the Oregon Country Acquisition
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