944 



INDIAN LAND CB8SIONS IX THE UNITED STATES 



SCHEDULE OF INDIA.^^ 



Where or how 

 concluded 



1892 

 June 17 Executive or- 

 der. 



Act nf Con- 

 gress. 



July 



Act of Con- 

 gress. 



July 13 Act of Cou- 



eress. 



July 13 Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Nov. 19 Executive or- 

 der. 



Nov. 21 Executive or- 

 der. 



Nov. 28 



1893 



Feb. 20 



Executive or- 

 der. 



Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Heferance 



Description of ceaaion or reseriation 



Stat. L., 

 xxvn, 



Stat. L., 

 xwi I, 

 62. 



Stat. L., 

 xxvn, 

 124. 



Stat. L., 



XXVII, 



139. 



Stat. L., 



XXVII, 



469. 



Coenr d'Alene 



Spokane 



Ciiippewa . 



White Moun- 

 tain Apa- 

 che. 



The President sets apart as an addition to Fort Berthold res- 

 ervation the following lands, to Tvit: All that portion of 

 T. 147 N., R. 87 W., lying N. of the Missouri river, not in- 

 cluded within the Fort Stevenson military reservation. 



Restores the original Klamath River reservation 1o the public 

 domain. Provides for allotments to Indians settled thereon. 



Provides that, subject to allotments in severalty, a portion of 

 Colville reservation be restored to the puOlic domain, as fol- 

 lows: Beginning at a point on tlieeasturu boundary line of the 

 Colville Indian reservation, where the townsliiji Hue between 

 Ts. 34 and 35 N., R. 37 E. of the Willamette meridian, if 

 extended W., would intersect the same, said point being in 

 middle of the channel of the Columbia river, and running 

 thence W. parallel with the forty-ninth parallel of latitude 

 to the western boundary line of the said Colville Indian 

 reservation in the Okanagon river; thence N., following 

 the said western boundary line, to the said forty-ninth paral- 

 lel of latitude; thence E. along the said forty-ninth parallel 

 of latitude to the NE. corner of the said Colville Indian 

 reservation; thence S., following the eastern boundary of 

 said reservation, to the place of beginning. 



Directs that upon consent of these Indians a portion of their 

 reservation in Idaho be restored to the public domain, as 

 follows: Commencing at a point on the boundary line 

 between the reservation and the ceded lands on the E. bank, 

 where it crosses the Ca-ur d'Alene river, and running thence 

 E, on said boundary line one-half mile; thence S. at right 

 angles to said boundary line one-half mile; thence \V. at 

 right angles to said S. line to the E. shore of the Co'ur 

 d'Alene lake; thence N. with the shore of said lake to the 

 place of beginning. 



Provides for carrying into effect the agreement of Mar. 18, 

 1887, whereby said ludians cede to the U. S. all right, title, 

 or claim they have or ever had to any and all lands lying 

 outside of the Indian reservations in Washington and Idaho, 

 and agree to remove to and settle upou the Ca;ur d'Alene 

 reservation in Idaho. 



Modifies the Executive order of May 17, 1884, so that all the 

 lands described in said order which lie W. of the one hundred 

 and tenth degree of W. longitude and within the territory of 

 Utah be restored to the public domain. 



President sets apart certain lands as an addition to the dimin- 

 ished Red Lake reservation, as follows: Fractional sec. 33, 

 T. 152 N., R. 32 W., and fractional sees. 4, 9, 16, 17, 19, and 20, 

 and sec. 21, T. 151 N., R. 32 W. 



Directs the Secretary of the Interior to survey and set apart 

 for said Indians near to theirpresent reservation as provided 

 by article 10, treaty of June 9, 185.5. a tract of land equal to 

 one township or 6 miles square in the state of Washington. 



Restores to the public domain that portion of the reservation 

 bounded as follows: Beginning at the summit of Chromo 

 Butte, a prominent peak of the Apache mountains about 3i 

 miles SVV. of the town of McMillen; thence running N. 45- 

 E. a distance of 12 miles; thence due N. to the middle 

 of Salt river, a distance of 5 miles, more or less; thence 

 down the middle of Salt river to the intersectiou thereof 

 with the present western boundary liue of said reservation; 

 thence southerly with the said western boundary line as the 

 same has been ascertained and located by John C. Smith, 

 dejinty surveyor, to the place of beginning. 



