hoyce] 



CESSIONS OF 1861 



825 



L^][>^13 CESSIONS-Continiied. 



Historical data anil ri'inarka 



Designation of cession on map 



Location 



Seeexplanatary uoteopposite uuratifiedtreaty of Sept. 17, 1851, atFort Laramie.. 



Ceded by tieiity of (Jet. 14, 1865. 



Nebraska, Kansas 1, 

 Colorado 1, Wyo- 

 ming 1. 



This covers a part of the cession previously made by tlio Iowa, but afterwaril 

 selected by the Sauk and Fox of the Missouri for a reserve. 



Act of Congress of Aug. 15, 1876, provides for the sale, with the Indians' consent, 

 of W. 10 sections of this reserve. 



W. 10 sections 



Remainder 



323,427 



This constitutes their present reserve 



428 



429 



Nebraska (easti^rn 

 portion). 



Kansas 2. 

 Kansas 2. 



430 Kansas 2. 



See 425 Kansas 2. 



This constitutes the present Fintah valley reserve. These bands were the Tim 

 panoy, Uintah, PahVant, San Pitche, Pi-ede, Seuvarit, etc. 



By treaty of June 8, 1865, with the various bands of Uta in Utah territory, 

 they ceded all their claim to land (except the Uintah reserve) in that ter- 

 ritory. The treaty, however, failed of ratification. 



This is the tract now known as the Potawatomi reserve in Kansas and is oc- 

 cupied by those conuuonly termed the " Prairie baud of Potawatomi." 



The portion to be sold to the railro.id company comprised all that should be I 

 left of the original reserve after the "reserve in common " slioiild be set 

 apart and after the individual allotments should have bi^en made out of the I. 

 remainder. The individual allotments were sold from time to time by the f 

 allottees, who became citizens of the V. S., but who afterward, on their own 

 petition, were assigned a reserve as Indians in Indian Territory. 1 



Arizona 1, Utah 1, 

 Nevada, Colorado 1, 



