946 



INDIAN LAND CESSIONS IN THE UNITED STATES [etha-vn. 18 



SCHEDULE OF INDI^iN^ 



1893 



Mar. 3 



Where or how 

 concluded 



Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Reference Trihe 



3 Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Mar. 3 Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Apr. 12 Executive or- 

 der. 



Sept. 11 



1894 



June 6 



Executive or- 

 der. 



Act of Con- 

 gress. 



Stat. L., 



XXVI I, 



557. 



Stat. L., 



XXVII, 



640. 



Stat. L., 



XXVII, 



643. 



Stat. L., 



XXVII, 



644. 



Kickapoo 



Description of cession or reservation 



Aug. 15 Act of Con- 



stat. L., 



XXVIII, 



Stat. L., 



XXVIII, 



314. 



Confirms agreement made witli said Indians .Sept. 9, 1891, 

 wliereby they cede to the U. S. all their title and interest iu 

 the following lands: Commencing at the S\V. corner of the 

 Sac and Fox reservation; thence N. along the western bound- 

 ary of said reservation to the Deep Fork of the Canadian 

 river; thence up said Deep Fork to the point where it inter- 

 sects the Indian meridian; thence S. along said Indian meri- 

 dian to the N. fork of the Canadian river; thence down said 

 river to the place of beginning. 



Confirms agreement of Dec. 19, 1891, by which these Indians 

 cede to the U. S. all their title and interest in the following 

 lands : Bounded on the W. by the one hundredth degree of 

 W. longitude; on the N. by the state of Kansas; on the E. 

 by the ninety-sixth degree of W. longitude, and on the S. by 

 the Creek Uiition ; the territory of Oklahoma and the Chey- 

 enne aud Arapaho reservation created or defined by Execu- 

 tive order, dated Aug. 10, 1869. 



Confirms agreement made with these Indians Oct. 21, 1891, by 

 which thev cede to the U. S. all their title and interest iu the 

 following lands : T. 25 N., R. 1 \V. ; T. 26 N., E. 1 W. ; T. 25 N., 

 E. 2 W., and T. 26 N., E. 2 W. 



Confirms agreement with these Indians made Nov. 23, 1892, by 

 which they cede to the U. S. all their title and interest in the 

 following lands: All that tract of country between the 

 Cimarron and Arkansas rivers, embraced within the limits of 

 Ts. 21, 22, 23, and 24 N., I.'. 4 E. ; Ts. 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, and 24 

 N.,R.5E.; Ts. 18, 19,20,21,22, and23N.,E. 6 E. ofthe Indian 

 meridian. 



Osette Indians President sets apart as a reservation in the state of Washing- 

 ton for said Indians the following lands: Commencing at 

 Point Apot-Shies (Indian name) on the ocean beach about 

 one-half mile N. of the Indian village Osette in Clallam 

 county, said state; thence due E. 1 mile; thence due S. to 

 the point of intersection with the southern boundary line of 

 the said Indian village extended eastward and the northern 

 boundary line of Charley Weberhard's claim ; thence due W. 

 to the Pacific ocean; thence with the Pacific ocean to the 

 point of beginning. These lands are hereby withdrawn 

 from sale and settlement and set apart as a reservation for 

 the Osette Indians not now residing upon any Indian 

 reservation. 



President sets apart as a reservation for said Indians the fol- 

 lowing described lands in the .state of Washington: Com- 

 mencing at a point in the middle of the mouth of the Hoh 

 river, Jeftersou county, Washington, and running thence up 

 said river in the middle of the channel thereof 1 mile; thence 

 due S. to the S. bank of said river; thence due S. from said 

 S. bank 1 mile ; thence due W. to the Pacific ocean, and 

 theuce with the Pacific coast line to the place of beginning. 



Declares the northern boundary of the Warm Springs reserva- 

 tion to be that part of the line rnn and surveyed by T. B. 

 Handley, in the year 1871, from the initial point up to and 

 including the twenty -sixth mile thereof; thence in a due W. 

 course to the summit of the Cascade mountains, as found by 

 the commissioners, Mark A. FuUerton, William H. H. Dufur, 

 and .James F. Payne, in the report to the Secretary of the 

 Interior of date June 8, 1891. 



Yankton Sioox Confirms agreement with these Indians made Dec. 31, 1892, by 

 which they cede to the U. S. all their title and interest in all 

 the unallotted lands in their reservation. 



Hoh Biver In- 

 dians. 



Warm Springs 



