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Omaha Reservation

The Omaha Reservation (Omaha–Ponca: Umoⁿhoⁿ tóⁿde ukʰéthiⁿ) of the federally recognized Omaha tribe is located mostly in Thurston County, Nebraska, with sections in neighboring Cuming and Burt counties, in addition to Monona County in Iowa. As of the 2020 federal census, the reservation population was 4,526.[2] The tribal seat of government is in Macy.[3] The villages of Rosalie, Pender and Walthill are located within reservation boundaries, as is the northernmost part of Bancroft. Due to land sales in the area since the reservation was established, Pender has disputed tribal jurisdiction over it, to which the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in 2016 that "the disputed land is within the reservation’s boundaries."[4][5]

Omaha Reservation
Location of the Omaha Reservation in Nebraska
Omaha Reservation
Location in the United States
Coordinates: 42°05′33″N 96°32′09″W / 42.09250°N 96.53583°W / 42.09250; -96.53583Coordinates: 42°05′33″N 96°32′09″W / 42.09250°N 96.53583°W / 42.09250; -96.53583
TribeOmaha
CountryUnited States
StateNebraska and Iowa
CountyThurston County, Nebraska, Cuming County, Nebraska, Burt County, Nebraska and Monona County, Iowa
HeadquartersMacy
Area
 • Total309.993 sq mi (802.88 km2)
 • Land307.032 sq mi (795.21 km2)
 • Water2.961 sq mi (7.67 km2)
Population
 • Total4,526
 • Density14.7/sq mi (5.7/km2)
WebsiteOmaha Tribe of Nebraska

History

The reservation was established by a treaty at Washington, D.C. dated March 16, 1854. By this treaty, the Omaha Nation sold the majority of its land west of the Missouri River to the United States, but was authorized to select an area of 300,000 acres (470 sq mi; 1,200 km2) to keep as a permanent reservation.[6] The Omaha Nation chose an area around the Blackbird Hills and obtained the President's approval on May 11, 1855.[7]

In a treaty on March 6, 1865, the Omaha Nation agreed to sell the northern part of the reservation to the United States for the use of Ho-Chunk refugees from Crow Creek, South Dakota who became the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska, establishing the Winnebago Reservation just north of the Omaha Reservation.[8][9] The Omahas later conveyed an additional 12,348 acres of timber land to the Winnebago Reservation through an act of Congress on June 22, 1874 and a deed dated July 31, 1874.[10] This reduced the Omaha Reservation to its present size.

Federal legislation in the late nineteenth century caused the reservation to be allotted, ultimately enabling white settlers to buy most of the land on the reservation. An act on June 10, 1872, authorized the survey and sale of land on the western end of the reservation, but the property initially failed to attract buyers, resulting in the sale of only 300.72 acres (1.2170 km2) the first year.[11]

Through the lobbying efforts of anthropologist Alice Cunningham Fletcher, Congress passed another act on August 7, 1882, that divided the eastern portion of the reservation into individual allotments for Omaha tribal members, while authorizing the sale of land west of the Sioux City and Nebraska Railroad to settlers and speculators. Fletcher personally oversaw the allotments, allocating 76,810 acres (310.8 km2) to 954 tribal members and leaving about 55,000 acres (220 km2) in tribal ownership.[12] The 1882 act on the Omaha Reservation served as a model for the Dawes Act of 1887, which authorized the similar allotment of land on reservations nationwide.[13] An additional act on March 3, 1893 allotted most of the remaining Omaha tribal land to individual women and children who had been left out of the 1882 legislation.[14]

The sale of land on the reservation has led to numerous jurisdictional disputes between the Omaha Nation and the white-led government of Thurston County, which is entirely within the Omaha and Winnebago reservations. Special legislation in 1916 empowered the county to assess property tax on Omaha allotments, forcing a large number of tribal members to sell or mortgage their allotment land to outsiders in order to pay back taxes.[15] The county continued to tax tribal trust land until the 1970s, when federal courts ruled that the tribe could not be taxed without its consent.[16]

Geography

 
Blackbird scenic overlook on the Omaha Reservation

According to the United States Census Bureau, the reservation has a total area of 309.99 square miles (802.9 km2), of which 307.03 square miles (196,500 acres; 795.2 km2) is land and 2.96 square miles (7.7 km2) is water.[1]

Due to allotments in the late nineteenth century, much of the reservation is no longer tribally-owned. According to the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the Omaha Nation's trust land amounts to 27,828 acres (43.481 sq mi; 112.62 km2), or about 14.2% of the total reservation land area.[17]

Demographics

As of the census of 2020,[2] the population of the Omaha Reservation was 4,526. The population density was 14.7 inhabitants per square mile (5.7/km2). There were 1,563 housing units at an average density of 5.1 per square mile (2.0/km2). The racial makeup of the reservation was 47.6% Native American, 47.5% White, 0.3% Asian, 0.2% Black or African American, 0.1% Pacific Islander, 1.6% from other races, and 2.7% from two or more races. Ethnically, the population was 4.1% Hispanic or Latino of any race.

Boundary disputes

Boundary claims and areas of jurisdiction have continued to be issues for the Omaha Indian Reservation. In the late nineteenth century, Congress authorized sales of land to non-Omaha in the western portion of the reservation, where European-American farmers had settled. Due to the sales and federal legislation subsequent to the treaty establishing the reservation, a Nebraska state court in 2000 ruled that the western boundary of the reservation ended at railroad tracks east of Pender, Nebraska.[18]

The Omaha Tribe contends that Pender is within tribal jurisdiction, as Congress did not change the boundaries of reservation, which includes most of Thurston County.[18][19] The tribe says that the state does not have the power to redefine the boundary set by the Omaha treaty with the US government in 1865. It holds that although Congress authorized land sales in this area, it did not diminish the jurisdiction of the tribe within the reservation boundaries. "Under Supreme Court precedent, only Congress can diminish a reservation."[19]

Asked for its opinion on a related matter related to the Omaha Tribe's law that liquor merchants on the reservation had to pay tribal license fees and sales taxes (see section below), the Nebraska state attorney general noted its opinion, based on Congressional laws and a field ruling during the Ronald Reagan administration, that Pender was outside the reservation boundaries. It also noted that ultimately this was a matter of federal jurisdiction.[20]

There have been continuing issues related to tribal jurisdiction in Pender and other areas along its western boundary. For instance, in 2003 the tribal police tried to stop non-Omaha people from entering the reservation from Pender. The tribe negotiated with the state in 2003–2004 related to its policing functions in this area, but the parties signed no agreement. Prior to this period, the state generally had policing functions on the roads and in Pender.[18]

On March 22, 2016, the United States Supreme Court held, in a unanimous decision, that Pender is within the reservation's boundaries.[21]

Current issues

In December 2006, the Omaha Tribe issued notices to the seven liquor stores in Pender (which has a population of 1,000), as well as those in Rosalie and Walthill, Nebraska, informing them that as of January 1, 2007, the merchants would have to pay the Omaha Tribe liquor licensing fees and a 10 percent sales tax to continue to operate within the reservation. The executive director of the Nebraska State Liquor Commission said that he would be consulting with the state attorney general on the issue. Ben Thompson, an Omaha attorney who represents the tribe, notes that it has the legal right to establish such laws within the reservation.[22] The Nebraska Attorney General offered the opinion that the Omaha Tribe had the authority to regulate liquor sales on its reservation and it did not interfere with the Nebraska Liquor Commission. While offering an opinion, he said the tribal boundary was a federal jurisdictional issue.

In April 2007, liquor merchants in Pender (later joined by the village) filed a federal lawsuit challenging the tribe's authority to demand the liquor taxes, based on their contention that Pender was outside the reservation boundaries. In October 2007 the US District Court ordered the parties first to take their challenge to the Omaha Tribal Courts, as part of the tribal exhaustion doctrine, and denied the plaintiffs' request for dismissal. Judge Richard Kopf said he may not be bound by the tribal court, but wanted to hear their opinion.[23] He required the parties to report back to him regularly until a ruling was made by the Omaha Tribal Courts. While the case was pending, the judge ordered a temporary stay on the merchants' paying the liquor sales tax.[23]

In January 2012, the plaintiffs in Pender v. Omaha Tribe filed a request with the Omaha Tribal Courts for a summary judgment due to the length of time the case had taken. The defendants had requested that no hearing be held before June 2012. The plaintiffs had submitted a report to them by an expert witness on transactions related to Pender and the western boundary. In 2008 the village had voted for a five-year, 1% sales tax to finance its lawsuit on the boundary and liquor tax, as well as to promote economic development in the town. Residents voted in May 2012 on whether to renew the sales tax, as the boundary issue continued.[24]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b "2020 Gazetteer Files". census.gov. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  2. ^ a b c "2020 Decennial Census: Omaha Reservation, NE--IA". data.census.gov. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  3. ^ "Omaha Tribe" 2007-07-29 at the Wayback Machine, Nebraska Indian Commission. Retrieved 6/28/08.
  4. ^ "Nebraska v. Parker, 14-1406" (PDF). supremecourt.gov.
  5. ^ Durocher, Skip; Nichols, James & Streitz, Mary (March 25, 2016). "Supreme Court Unanimously Holds that Omaha Tribe's Reservation Not Diminished by 1882 Statute". Minneapolis, MN: Dorsey & Whitney LLP. Retrieved 28 March 2016.
  6. ^ "Treaty with the Omaha, 1854". Tribal Treaties Database. Oklahoma State University. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  7. ^ Boughter 1998, pp. 64–72.
  8. ^ Boughter 1998, pp. 88–90.
  9. ^ "Treaty with the Omaha, 1865". Tribal Treaties Database. Oklahoma State University. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  10. ^ Wishart 1994, pp. 233–234.
  11. ^ Wishart 1994, pp. 233.
  12. ^ Wishart 1994, pp. 236–237.
  13. ^ Boughter 1998, p. 8.
  14. ^ Boughter 1998, pp. 154–155.
  15. ^ Boughter 1998, pp. 202–203.
  16. ^ County of Thurston, State of Neb. v. Andrus, 586 F.2d 1212 (8th Cir. 1978).
  17. ^ "Winnebago Agency". www.bia.gov. Bureau of Indian Affairs. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
  18. ^ a b c Paul Hammel, “Debate Over Tribal Jurisdiction at Standstill Police on the Omaha Reservation; Want the Authority to Arrest non-Indians,”, Omaha World Herald (Nebraska), 15 February 2004, p. 3b, accessed 27 February 2012
  19. ^ a b "Omaha Tribe's court to hear non-Indian challenge", Indianz.com, 9 October 2007, accessed 1 March 2012
  20. ^ "Nebraska Attorney General's Opinion on Omaha Tribe Liquor Tax", 15 February 2007, Liquor Control Commission website, accessed 1 March 2012
  21. ^ "Nebraska v. Parker, No. 14-1406" (PDF). supremecourt.gov. Retrieved March 22, 2016.
  22. ^ Paul Hammel, "Tribe's Liquor Tax May Restart Old Boundary Dispute," 2013-05-24 at the Wayback Machine, Omaha World-Herald (Nebraska), 28 December 2006, p. 03B, at H-Amindian Discussion Log, accessed 27 February 2012
  23. ^ a b Timberly Ross (Associated Press), "Judge orders liquor lawsuit to Omaha tribal court", News from Indian Country, October 2007, accessed 1 March 2012
  24. ^ "Pender has spent $285,000 on reservation boundary dispute", The Pender Times online, January 2012, accessed 1 March 2012

References

  • Boughter, Judith A. (1998). Betraying the Omaha Nation, 1790-1916. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-3091-0.
  • Wishart, David J. (1994). An unspeakable sadness : the dispossession of the Nebraska Indians. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. ISBN 978-0-8032-4774-1.

External links

  • "Nebraska Attorney General's Opinion on Omaha Tribe Liquor Tax", 15 February 2007, Liquor Control Commission website
  • Pender v. Omaha Tribe, US District Court of Nebraska, 4 October 2007
  • Omaha Reservation tract map, US Census.

omaha, reservation, omaha, ponca, umoⁿhoⁿ, tóⁿde, ukʰéthiⁿ, federally, recognized, omaha, tribe, located, mostly, thurston, county, nebraska, with, sections, neighboring, cuming, burt, counties, addition, monona, county, iowa, 2020, federal, census, reservatio. The Omaha Reservation Omaha Ponca Umoⁿhoⁿ toⁿde ukʰethiⁿ of the federally recognized Omaha tribe is located mostly in Thurston County Nebraska with sections in neighboring Cuming and Burt counties in addition to Monona County in Iowa As of the 2020 federal census the reservation population was 4 526 2 The tribal seat of government is in Macy 3 The villages of Rosalie Pender and Walthill are located within reservation boundaries as is the northernmost part of Bancroft Due to land sales in the area since the reservation was established Pender has disputed tribal jurisdiction over it to which the Supreme Court ruled unanimously in 2016 that the disputed land is within the reservation s boundaries 4 5 Omaha ReservationIndian reservationFlagLocation of the Omaha Reservation in NebraskaOmaha ReservationLocation in the United StatesCoordinates 42 05 33 N 96 32 09 W 42 09250 N 96 53583 W 42 09250 96 53583 Coordinates 42 05 33 N 96 32 09 W 42 09250 N 96 53583 W 42 09250 96 53583TribeOmahaCountryUnited StatesStateNebraska and IowaCountyThurston County Nebraska Cuming County Nebraska Burt County Nebraska and Monona County IowaHeadquartersMacyArea 1 Total309 993 sq mi 802 88 km2 Land307 032 sq mi 795 21 km2 Water2 961 sq mi 7 67 km2 Population 2020 2 Total4 526 Density14 7 sq mi 5 7 km2 WebsiteOmaha Tribe of Nebraska Contents 1 History 2 Geography 3 Demographics 4 Boundary disputes 5 Current issues 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditThe reservation was established by a treaty at Washington D C dated March 16 1854 By this treaty the Omaha Nation sold the majority of its land west of the Missouri River to the United States but was authorized to select an area of 300 000 acres 470 sq mi 1 200 km2 to keep as a permanent reservation 6 The Omaha Nation chose an area around the Blackbird Hills and obtained the President s approval on May 11 1855 7 In a treaty on March 6 1865 the Omaha Nation agreed to sell the northern part of the reservation to the United States for the use of Ho Chunk refugees from Crow Creek South Dakota who became the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska establishing the Winnebago Reservation just north of the Omaha Reservation 8 9 The Omahas later conveyed an additional 12 348 acres of timber land to the Winnebago Reservation through an act of Congress on June 22 1874 and a deed dated July 31 1874 10 This reduced the Omaha Reservation to its present size Federal legislation in the late nineteenth century caused the reservation to be allotted ultimately enabling white settlers to buy most of the land on the reservation An act on June 10 1872 authorized the survey and sale of land on the western end of the reservation but the property initially failed to attract buyers resulting in the sale of only 300 72 acres 1 2170 km2 the first year 11 Through the lobbying efforts of anthropologist Alice Cunningham Fletcher Congress passed another act on August 7 1882 that divided the eastern portion of the reservation into individual allotments for Omaha tribal members while authorizing the sale of land west of the Sioux City and Nebraska Railroad to settlers and speculators Fletcher personally oversaw the allotments allocating 76 810 acres 310 8 km2 to 954 tribal members and leaving about 55 000 acres 220 km2 in tribal ownership 12 The 1882 act on the Omaha Reservation served as a model for the Dawes Act of 1887 which authorized the similar allotment of land on reservations nationwide 13 An additional act on March 3 1893 allotted most of the remaining Omaha tribal land to individual women and children who had been left out of the 1882 legislation 14 The sale of land on the reservation has led to numerous jurisdictional disputes between the Omaha Nation and the white led government of Thurston County which is entirely within the Omaha and Winnebago reservations Special legislation in 1916 empowered the county to assess property tax on Omaha allotments forcing a large number of tribal members to sell or mortgage their allotment land to outsiders in order to pay back taxes 15 The county continued to tax tribal trust land until the 1970s when federal courts ruled that the tribe could not be taxed without its consent 16 Geography Edit Blackbird scenic overlook on the Omaha Reservation According to the United States Census Bureau the reservation has a total area of 309 99 square miles 802 9 km2 of which 307 03 square miles 196 500 acres 795 2 km2 is land and 2 96 square miles 7 7 km2 is water 1 Due to allotments in the late nineteenth century much of the reservation is no longer tribally owned According to the Bureau of Indian Affairs the Omaha Nation s trust land amounts to 27 828 acres 43 481 sq mi 112 62 km2 or about 14 2 of the total reservation land area 17 Demographics EditAs of the census of 2020 2 the population of the Omaha Reservation was 4 526 The population density was 14 7 inhabitants per square mile 5 7 km2 There were 1 563 housing units at an average density of 5 1 per square mile 2 0 km2 The racial makeup of the reservation was 47 6 Native American 47 5 White 0 3 Asian 0 2 Black or African American 0 1 Pacific Islander 1 6 from other races and 2 7 from two or more races Ethnically the population was 4 1 Hispanic or Latino of any race Boundary disputes EditBoundary claims and areas of jurisdiction have continued to be issues for the Omaha Indian Reservation In the late nineteenth century Congress authorized sales of land to non Omaha in the western portion of the reservation where European American farmers had settled Due to the sales and federal legislation subsequent to the treaty establishing the reservation a Nebraska state court in 2000 ruled that the western boundary of the reservation ended at railroad tracks east of Pender Nebraska 18 The Omaha Tribe contends that Pender is within tribal jurisdiction as Congress did not change the boundaries of reservation which includes most of Thurston County 18 19 The tribe says that the state does not have the power to redefine the boundary set by the Omaha treaty with the US government in 1865 It holds that although Congress authorized land sales in this area it did not diminish the jurisdiction of the tribe within the reservation boundaries Under Supreme Court precedent only Congress can diminish a reservation 19 Asked for its opinion on a related matter related to the Omaha Tribe s law that liquor merchants on the reservation had to pay tribal license fees and sales taxes see section below the Nebraska state attorney general noted its opinion based on Congressional laws and a field ruling during the Ronald Reagan administration that Pender was outside the reservation boundaries It also noted that ultimately this was a matter of federal jurisdiction 20 There have been continuing issues related to tribal jurisdiction in Pender and other areas along its western boundary For instance in 2003 the tribal police tried to stop non Omaha people from entering the reservation from Pender The tribe negotiated with the state in 2003 2004 related to its policing functions in this area but the parties signed no agreement Prior to this period the state generally had policing functions on the roads and in Pender 18 On March 22 2016 the United States Supreme Court held in a unanimous decision that Pender is within the reservation s boundaries 21 Current issues EditIn December 2006 the Omaha Tribe issued notices to the seven liquor stores in Pender which has a population of 1 000 as well as those in Rosalie and Walthill Nebraska informing them that as of January 1 2007 the merchants would have to pay the Omaha Tribe liquor licensing fees and a 10 percent sales tax to continue to operate within the reservation The executive director of the Nebraska State Liquor Commission said that he would be consulting with the state attorney general on the issue Ben Thompson an Omaha attorney who represents the tribe notes that it has the legal right to establish such laws within the reservation 22 The Nebraska Attorney General offered the opinion that the Omaha Tribe had the authority to regulate liquor sales on its reservation and it did not interfere with the Nebraska Liquor Commission While offering an opinion he said the tribal boundary was a federal jurisdictional issue In April 2007 liquor merchants in Pender later joined by the village filed a federal lawsuit challenging the tribe s authority to demand the liquor taxes based on their contention that Pender was outside the reservation boundaries In October 2007 the US District Court ordered the parties first to take their challenge to the Omaha Tribal Courts as part of the tribal exhaustion doctrine and denied the plaintiffs request for dismissal Judge Richard Kopf said he may not be bound by the tribal court but wanted to hear their opinion 23 He required the parties to report back to him regularly until a ruling was made by the Omaha Tribal Courts While the case was pending the judge ordered a temporary stay on the merchants paying the liquor sales tax 23 In January 2012 the plaintiffs in Pender v Omaha Tribe filed a request with the Omaha Tribal Courts for a summary judgment due to the length of time the case had taken The defendants had requested that no hearing be held before June 2012 The plaintiffs had submitted a report to them by an expert witness on transactions related to Pender and the western boundary In 2008 the village had voted for a five year 1 sales tax to finance its lawsuit on the boundary and liquor tax as well as to promote economic development in the town Residents voted in May 2012 on whether to renew the sales tax as the boundary issue continued 24 See also EditNative American tribes in Nebraska Dr Susan LaFlesche Picotte Memorial Hospital Omaha Nation Public SchoolsNotes Edit a b 2020 Gazetteer Files census gov U S Census Bureau Retrieved 19 July 2022 a b c 2020 Decennial Census Omaha Reservation NE IA data census gov U S Census Bureau Retrieved 19 July 2022 Omaha Tribe Archived 2007 07 29 at the Wayback Machine Nebraska Indian Commission Retrieved 6 28 08 Nebraska v Parker 14 1406 PDF supremecourt gov Durocher Skip Nichols James amp Streitz Mary March 25 2016 Supreme Court Unanimously Holds that Omaha Tribe s Reservation Not Diminished by 1882 Statute Minneapolis MN Dorsey amp Whitney LLP Retrieved 28 March 2016 Treaty with the Omaha 1854 Tribal Treaties Database Oklahoma State University Retrieved 19 July 2022 Boughter 1998 pp 64 72 Boughter 1998 pp 88 90 Treaty with the Omaha 1865 Tribal Treaties Database Oklahoma State University Retrieved 19 July 2022 Wishart 1994 pp 233 234 Wishart 1994 pp 233 Wishart 1994 pp 236 237 Boughter 1998 p 8 Boughter 1998 pp 154 155 Boughter 1998 pp 202 203 County of Thurston State of Neb v Andrus 586 F 2d 1212 8th Cir 1978 Winnebago Agency www bia gov Bureau of Indian Affairs Retrieved 19 July 2022 a b c Paul Hammel Debate Over Tribal Jurisdiction at Standstill Police on the Omaha Reservation Want the Authority to Arrest non Indians Omaha World Herald Nebraska 15 February 2004 p 3b accessed 27 February 2012 a b Omaha Tribe s court to hear non Indian challenge Indianz com 9 October 2007 accessed 1 March 2012 Nebraska Attorney General s Opinion on Omaha Tribe Liquor Tax 15 February 2007 Liquor Control Commission website accessed 1 March 2012 Nebraska v Parker No 14 1406 PDF supremecourt gov Retrieved March 22 2016 Paul Hammel Tribe s Liquor Tax May Restart Old Boundary Dispute Archived 2013 05 24 at the Wayback Machine Omaha World Herald Nebraska 28 December 2006 p 03B at H Amindian Discussion Log accessed 27 February 2012 a b Timberly Ross Associated Press Judge orders liquor lawsuit to Omaha tribal court News from Indian Country October 2007 accessed 1 March 2012 Pender has spent 285 000 on reservation boundary dispute The Pender Times online January 2012 accessed 1 March 2012References EditBoughter Judith A 1998 Betraying the Omaha Nation 1790 1916 Norman University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 3091 0 Wishart David J 1994 An unspeakable sadness the dispossession of the Nebraska Indians Lincoln University of Nebraska Press ISBN 978 0 8032 4774 1 External links Edit Nebraska Attorney General s Opinion on Omaha Tribe Liquor Tax 15 February 2007 Liquor Control Commission website Pender v Omaha Tribe US District Court of Nebraska 4 October 2007 Omaha Reservation tract map US Census Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Omaha Reservation amp oldid 1099242612, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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