Summary of Grand Ronde position on a hunting and fishing agreement with Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
Title
Summary of Grand Ronde position on a hunting and fishing agreement with Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife
Description
Summary of the negotiation of hunting and fishing rights between the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde and the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife. The Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde includes over 30 tribes from Oregon, California, and Washington. In the early 1850s, the United States forced these tribes off their lands, eventually establishing the Grand Ronde Reservation in Oregon in 1857. In 1954, Congress passed the Western Oregon Indian Termination Act, which ended federal recognition of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde. Beginning in the 1970s, tribal leaders began working to restore the tribe's federal status, lobbying Congress to first pass the Grand Ronde Restoration Act in 1983, which restored federal recognition, then the Grand Ronde Reservation Act in 1988, which restored a small part of the reservation. This summary outlines the concerns of the tribe, beginning with the passage of the Grand Ronde Restoration Act. It was probably prepared in 1987, as part of the negotiations to reestablish a reservation. This document is one of a collection of digitized objects from the Les AuCoin Papers (MS.147) at the Pacific University Archives. See also digital objects PUA_MS147_73 through PUA_MS147_84 and PUA_MS147_128 through PUA_MS147_129 for further information about the Grand Ronde bills.
Date Created
1987
Subject
Grand Ronde Indian Reservation (Or.)
Federally recognized Indian tribes
Oregon--Politics and government
Indian termination policy
Fish and game licenses
Place
Oregon
Identifier
PUA_MS147_78
Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/CNE/1.0/
Type
Text