North Dakota Tribes


North Dakota Tribes occupied the Northern Plains at least 11,500 years ago.

FEDERALLY RECOGNIZED TRIBES IN NORTH DAKOTA
(Federal List Last Updated 5/16)

Spirit Lake Tribe (formerly Devils Lake)
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe (North Dakota and South Dakota)
Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation (Hidatsa, Arikara, Mandan)
Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians of North Dakota

STATE RECOGNIZED TRIBES
(Not recognized by the Federal Government)

None

UNRECOGNIZED / PETITIONING TRIBES

Christian Pembina Chippewa Indians.Letter of Intent to Petition 6/26/1984.

Little Shell Band of the North Dakota Tribe (a.k.a. Little Shell Pembina Band of North America). Letter of Intent to Petition 11/11/1975. This tribe has been accused of being a domestic terrorist organization by the Anti-defamation League.

FIRST CONTACT TO PRESENT

When the first white explorers arrived, many distinct Indian groups existed in what is now North Dakota. These included the Lakota, Dakota and Nakota Nations (The Dakota, Lakota, and Nakota are collectively called Sioux), Assiniboine, Cheyenne, and the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara (now known as the Three Affiliated Tribes of Fort Bertold).

Groups of Chippewa (or Ojibway) moved into the northern Red River valley around 1800, and Cree, Blackfeet, and Crow frequented the western buffalo ranges.

These peoples represented two different adaptations to the plains environment.

Nomadic groups depended primarily upon vast herds of American Bison for the necessities of life.

When the horse was brought to the Northern Plains in the 18th Century, the lives of the Dakota, Assiniboine, and Cheyenne changed dramatically.

These bands quickly adapted to the horse, and the new mobility enabled them to hunt with ease and consequently to live better than ever before.

The horse became a hallmark of Plains cultures, and the images of these mounted Indians bequeathed a romantic image of power and strength that has survived in story, films, and songs.

In contrast, the sedentary Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara lived in relatively permanent earthlodges near the Missouri River and supplemented produce from extensive gardens with hunting.

Their fortified villages became commercial centers that evolved into trading hubs during the fur trade of the 18th and 19th centuries. Indians and Euro-Americans first came into contact during the 18th Century.

The first recorded visitor was La Verendrye, a French explorer who reached the Missouri River from Canada in 1738 while searching for a water route to the Pacific Ocean. Others followed, including La Verendrye’s sons in 1742.

However, most contact resulted from the Canadian fur trade until Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led the American “voyage of discovery” up the Missouri from St, Louis in 1804.

PRE-CONTACT NORTH DAKOTA TRIBES

PRE-HISTORIC CULTURES IN NORTH DAKOTA

9,500 BC – Paleo-Indian peoples initially occupied the Northern Plains, hunting mammoths, giant bison, and other mega-fauna. Mining of Knife River Flint, North Dakota’s first export commodity, began in Dunn and Mercer Counties.

5,500 BC – Archaic peoples based their lifeways on hunting and gathering of essentially modern fauna since the previous era’s mega-fauna were now extinct. The atlatl, a dart throwing device which drastically increased the range, effectiveness, and safety of hunting, came into use.

700 BC – Ceramics were first used in North Dakota for cooking and food storage.

550-410 BC – Early Woodland peoples living along the James River in Southeastern North Dakota built a log and brush house. Charred grape chenopod (Goosefoot), and Marshelder seeds were found together in the house remains when they were excavated in A. D. 1985.

100 BC – Middle Woodland peoples began building burial mounds in North Dakota, including complex ceremonial centers. The bow and arrow were introduced during this period.

AD 30 – Jamestown mounds, a complex burial and ceremonial site, were occupied.

AD 900 – Late Woodland peoples used the bow and arrow extensively, produced ceramics resembling the later Plains Village wares, and gardened intensively.

AD 950 – Plains Village peoples raised corn and other crops in sufficient quantities to store seed and trade for other goods. Seasonally occupied, permanent villages of earthlodges were built.

AD 1200 – Jamestown mounds site was abandoned.

AD 1200-1400 – A drought reduced agricultural production and fewer living sites were established on the open prairies. Plains Village peoples abandoned the lower James River area by A.D. 1300.

14th c. Scandinavians in North Dakota?

AD 1600 – The Cheyenne, living in earthlodges, occupied the Sheyenne River valley; the Hidatsa moved west from Devils Lake to the Missouri; the Sioux moved onto the plains from the woodlands of Minnesota.

Before Euro-American settlement of the Northern Plains began in the 19th Century, the land had been occupied for many centuries. Archeological investigations document the presence of big game hunting cultures after the retreat of the continental glaciers about 10,000 years ago and later settlements of both hunting and gathering and farming peoples dating ca. 2000 B.C. to 1860.

RESOURCES
Genealogy:Sources of records on US Indian tribes

North Dakota Native American Boarding Schools

North Dakota Tribal Colleges