native american indian tribes of the US & Canada    | Add us to your Favorites |      | Shop
Art | Arts & Crafts | Craft Supplies | Clothing |Figurines | Jewelry | Home Decor | Knives | New Products | On Sale! | Closeouts
native americans pets and north american wildlife - us  indian tribes native americans alaska natives - alaskan villages Canada First Nations U.S. Indian Tribes ancient indian civilizations native american genealogy native american posters and art prints native american catalog online
aboriginal people of north america native people of north america - free pictures native american art native american directory
american indian legends
   Celebrating native american indian tribes of the US and Canada
Shop for native american artifact replicas
Shop for mosaic stone jewelry
 Native American Home |InfoWizzard |New Site | All Categories | Articles Master List | Topics Site Map |What's New |Mail Bag

Over 2,000 articles about native americans of the US and Canada First Nations.


Submit your own articles about american indians without knowing any HTML here
 Are you ready?
Today's Top Story:
What is the cultural significance of pronghorns to native americans?
New in the Gallery
Check out the new 3 Day in store specials. We are adding new items daily:
Native American Tribes by States Poster
Native American Tribes by States Poster

Rainbow inlaid stone earrings
78 pair new rainbow colored inlaid stone earrings


Colorful inlaid stone bracelets
20 Colorful inlaid stone bracelets


Medicine shield wall hangings
52Medicine shield wall hangings

Unique dreamcatchers
105 Unique dreamcatchers

painted hand drums
12 new painted hand drums


native american t-shirts and gifts
56 new native american T-shirt designs for more than 50 different tribes.

Your transactions in our store are secure


Official PayPal Seal
Survey
Should Leonard Peltier be paroled?

Yes, certainly.
Hell no!
Who is Leonard Peltier?



Results
Polls

Votes 821
New Navigation
(New Site Design in Progress)
New Navigation
(New Site Design in Progress)
US Tribes
Canadian First Nations
Shopping
Random Headlines

Free NA Pictures
[ Free NA Pictures ]

·native american tattoo designs
·Sitting Bull Pictures
·Nisga'a ceremonial dress
·Flags of Canada's indigenous people
·US Tribal Flags History and Thumbnail Gallery
·Terms of Use for our free pictures
Who is Online
There are currently, 73 guest(s) and 0 member(s) that are online.

You are Anonymous user. You can register for free by clicking here
indian tribeSite Sections
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesActivism &
indian tribesIssues
indian tribesAlaskan Natives
indian tribesAncient Cultures
indian tribesBlood Quantum
indian tribesIndian Dances
indian tribesFirst Nations
indian tribesNA Genealogy
indian tribesFree Pictures
indian tribesNA Poems
indian tribesNA Posters
indian tribesTribal Locations indian tribesMap
indian tribesUS Tribes

Guests
Login/Join
indian tribesYou are an Anonymous user. Anonymous users are not allowed to post stories or leave comments. You can register for FREE.Members have access to more features.
indian tribeSite Info
indian tribesAdd URL
indian tribesContact Us
indian tribesFAQs
indian tribesMail Bag
indian tribesRecommend Us
indian tribesShopping
indian tribesSite Info Index
indian tribesSurveys
indian tribesTop 100 Lists
indian tribesWeb Directory
indian tribesWhat's New

Link Partners
art & artists
birth defect info
beauty & makup
california indians
dog breeds
flowers and gardening
greek mythology
health & diets
holiday ideas
Hot Hair Styles
learn the web
addicted to sports
pets and wildlife
travel guides
Spirit Guides
Hill genealogy

Click here to buy Sale Posters!
Click here to buy Sale Posters!
Recent Articles
Saturday, January 24
· Sovereignty
· Border Crossing Rights-kids poem-teacher tool
· 2008 Lakota Dakota Nakota Language Summit is a Huge Success!
· scholarships for native american students
· native american school grants
· native american student loans
Tuesday, January 20
· Eleven tribes participating in Pesident Obama's inaugural parade
Monday, December 22
· Is this earring an authentic Mohican design?
· Original meanings of fifty tribal names
Saturday, December 20
· Help desperately needed on Pine Ridge Rez - people will freeze as temperatures drop to 60 below zero

Older Articles
Today's Featured Category

Movies
[ Movies ]

·Film crew documents drama of Cherokee tears
·Actor Adam Beach has a plan
·Casting Call given for The Lost Warrior
·New Aboriginal Film Site on the Web
·TV Review: 1st segment of Comanche Moon mini-series
·Wes Studi, back with host of colorful characters for Comanch Moon mini series
·Sequal to 'Dances With Wolves' to go into production soon
·Chris Eyer's new movie is a supernatural thriller
·Navajos showcased on TV
Privacy Policy
Any information collected on our site is used for internal purposes only and will not be shared or sold to third parties!
Videos of the Week
Shoshone-Bannock History in Idaho
PART I OF II: 2008's historic Idaho Democratic Convention, held in Boise, ID, June 12-14, invited Idaho Native American Tribal members from the Shoshone-Bannock/Fort Hall, Shoshone-Paiute/Duck Valley, Nez Perce, and Coeur D'Alene tribal communities to take an active part in the convention activities. On June 12th, the Idaho AFL-CIO hosted a Democratic picnic for convention goers. Mr. Ted Howard, Cultural Resource Director, Duck Valley, spoke to picnic participants about the Shoshone-Paiute-Bannock history in the Boise Valley area. 9:49 minutes.

Part II-Grand Entry, Flag Ceremony and Recessional
All convention tribal members participated in the grand entry at the beginning of the June 13th Idaho Democratic Convention gathering followed by a flag ceremony and presentation by Mr. Lee Juan Tyler, Council Member, Shoshone-Bannock/Fort Hall community. Fort Hall and Duck Valley singers and drummers played songs for the grand entry, flag ceremony and recessional.
9:59 minutes


Native American Prophecy
Narrated by the late Floyd RedCrow Westerman 6:36 minutes

7 Generations
Elder Orin Lyons talks about preparing for the next 7 generations. 8:43 minutes


Custom Search
 TNB->Shoshone Indian: Shoshone try to gain ownership of historic Washakie Cemetery
Posted on Sunday, January 13 @ 19:20:41 CST



AUTHOR: Kristen Moulton

The patch of ground isn't much to look at. Surrounded by sagebrush and tall, dry grass on a hillside just south of the Idaho state line, there's no water - and the only access is a two-track dirt path. But looks deceive.

The parcel, just shy of 5 acres, is the resting place of more than 200 Northwestern Shoshones, including Sagwitch, the chief who led survivors of the 1863 Bear River Massacre into the Mormon Church.

And now the Northwestern Band of the Shoshone, headquartered in Brigham City nearly 35 miles to the south, is taking steps to gain ownership of the Washakie Cemetery, surrounded on all sides by the band's 180-acre "reservation" near Portage.

StumbleUpon Toolbar Stumble It!

Mark Bedel, the band's new executive director, says the idea is to "complete the reservation as it was intended."

Bedel and Patty Timbimboo-Madsen, the band's natural-resources manager, appeared last week before the Box Elder County Commission, asking that the cemetery be turned over to the tribe.

But it turns out the county does not own the cemetery, as the tribe had been told. Instead, the Washakie Cemetery is listed on Box Elder's property rolls as belonging to George M. Ward, the 1920s-era bishop of the Washakie Ward of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Ward died in 1950, and apparently the land, tax-exempt because it's a cemetery, was never transferred to his heirs.

The Washakie Cemetery is where it is because of Sagwitch. He was buried in the field where he died of pneumonia, probably in 1887, as his sons carried him on a stretcher back to the Washakie settlement, writes Sagwitch's biographer, Scott R. Christensen, in the 1999 book Sagwitch: Shoshone Chieftain, Mormon Elder, 1822-1887.

Sagwitch had been harboring one of the settlement's LDS administrators, Isaac Zundel, from polygamist-hunting federal agents, in a camp in Rough Canyon to the west, says Sagwitch's great-great grandson, Jon Warner, now the director of the tribe's Housing Authority.

Over the years, other Shoshones who lived in the Washakie settlement were buried around the chief, and the field became a cemetery. Some tribal members still choose to be buried there, says Timbimboo-Madsen.

And the remains of other natives excavated from early burial sites found on federal properties, such as at Hill Air Force Base, have been reinterred at Washakie. The graves are marked both by homemade markers and formal headstones, including one placed on Sagwitch's grave in 1963 by the Sons of the Utah Pioneers.

Sagwitch and two sons survived the Bear River Massacre on Jan. 29, 1863, when the U.S. Cavalry - it was responding to friction between the Shoshones, and Mormon settlers and Oregon Trail pioneers - attacked the Shoshone camp west of Preston, Idaho. More than 300 Shoshone, many of them women and children, died that day.

In the years after the slaughter, Sagwitch and his band refused to join other Shoshone and Bannock Indians on the Fort Hall reservation in southern Idaho.

Instead, they joined the LDS Church and, under the its protective wing, learned to farm near Corinne in Box Elder County. The hostility of non-Mormons there, however, pushed them farther north to Washakie, where the church bought thousands of acres for a settlement.

By the mid-1900s, the Shoshones had largely left their homes at Washakie, moving to Ogden and northern Davis County to work in the defense industry - or to Fort Hall. Many visited Washakie only on occasion.

The LDS Church closed down the Washakie ward in 1966, and in the early 1970s, burned the remaining homes, Christensen wrote. The land was sold to a private ranching operation.

Those who considered Washakie home, however, considered it an insult from the church they loved, and eventually the band bought back the 180 acres so they could qualify as a federally recognized tribe. That recognition came in 1988.

That reservation is held by the federal government in a trust for the Northwestern Band. There is evidence that the heirs of George Ward tried to turn over the cemetery to the tribe, likely in tandem with the creation of the reservation. Two quit-claim deeds were filed with the Box Elder Recorder by Ward's descendants in 1989.

However, the deeds were not effective, apparently because they were not on record as owners of the cemetery. At least one of those descendants, Ward's son, J. Moroni Ward of Tremonton, has since died, according to genealogy records. Now the band will have to sort through probate records to find surviving heirs or perhaps hire a title company to sort out ownership, says Bedel.

"It just may take some time."

SOURCE:
This article first appeared in the Salt Lake Tribune Ms. Moulton can be reached at kmoulton@sltrib.com




2



 
New Navigation
(New Site Design in Progress)
US Tribes
Canadian First Nations
Shopping

Related Links
· Submit article on this topic
· Shopping Index
· US Tribes Index
· More about US Tribes, Nations & Bands
· News by aaanativearts


Most read story about US Tribes, Nations & Bands:
Where did the Blackfoot Sioux live in the 1700-1800s?

Article Rating
Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

Options

 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

Sorry, due to unrelenting spammers, we have had to disable the ability to leave comments.





©2002 - AAA Native Arts


Website Ranking

Website Designed by: Mazaska Web Design
Hosted by: HostIt4You.com



file: 1554 Shoshone try to gain ownership of historic Washakie Cemetery