Years this material was created:
1977-1980
Quantity: 6 linear shelf feet (in 3 records boxes, 3
document cases, and 1
smaller card file box)
© 2004 by Fort
Lewis College Foundation, Center of Southwest Studies account
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M
206
Navajo claims collection
1977 -
1980
6 linear shelf
feet
(in 3 records boxes, 3 document
cases, and 1 oversize flat box)
This collection consists of photocopies of historical documents, exhibits, files, note cards, and maps compiled by John Kessell as a researcher and expert witness when he was working for the Rodey Law Firm (Albuquerque, N.M.), which was representing the Navajo Nation before the U.S. Indian Claims Commission regarding Navajo land, oil and gas claims against the Federal Government between about 1977 and 1980. These were received in one 2' deep Transfile box and one square 14" box.
In addition, the collection includes three document cases of printed materials that Dr. Kessell compiled in the course of his research. The Center received these in two card file boxes (since then, consolidated into two card file boxes by removing a stack of empty note cards; one was summaries of documents, in chronological order, with topics noted in green ink in the upper right corner of the card; the other, half full, was a topical bibliography and notes). In addition to the card files, these research materials include a folder of pages that are a typed transcription of documents excerpted from the federal records of the U.S. Commissioner of Indian Affairs pertaining to the Navajo Indian boarding school experience, 1871-1950. In March of 2004 the Center's archival staff produced two archival quality photocopies of that -- one for this collection (M 206) and the other, spiral bound to be cataloged for the Delaney Library.
The Center's staff placed all of this accession into 3 records boxes, 3 document cases and 1 card file box on April 4, 2003.
Historical and biographical notes: the ICC and John Kessell
The U.S. Indian Claims Commission:
First proposed in the 1930s, the Indian Claims Commission Act (the ICC Act) was passed by the Congress serving under President Harry S. Truman on August 13, 1946 for the purpose of receiving claims for a period of five years. The Act created a special judicial body through which American Indian tribes could file claims against the United States government, extending back to the American Revolution. No claim existing before that date, and not presented within the five-year period after that date, could be submitted to any court, Congress or administrative agency for consideration.
President Truman stated his reasoning of the need for the ICC Act: “Instead of confiscating Indian lands, we have purchased from the tribes that once owned this continent more than 90% of our public domain, paying them approximately 800 million dollars in the process. It would be a miracle if in the course of these dealings – the largest real estate transaction in history – we had not made some mistakes and occasionally failed to live up to the precise terms of our treaties and agreements with some 200 tribes. But we stand ready to submit all such controversies to the judgment of impartial tribunals. We stand ready to correct any mistakes we have made.”
Before the 1951 deadline, 852 claims were filed; they became 370 different dockets. The ICC Act provided that when the Commission had filed its final report on a case, the decision of the commission should have the same effect as a final judgment of the Court of Claims, which in fact replaced the ICC on September 30, 1978. The United States Supreme Court has cited ICC payments in denying Indian Claims in many recent rulings. Informally, however, many courts persist in allowing tribal suits despite the original deadline.
Previously, the legal interactions between the United States and Indians were considered political or military matters over which the courts had no jurisdiction. As a result, tribes could not sue for damages and Congress had to pass special acts for each claim in order to allow courts to hear cases or award any compensation to Indian tribes. This system was extremely complicated and time-consuming, which made it difficult for many tribes to successfully receive compensation. Though the ICC, Commissioners were required to be lawyers, though typical legal concepts were generally exempt such as the Commission's authority to lift the statute of limitations and to hear moral claims. If a claim existed by an Indian tribe prior to passage of the Act, that claim was forever barred if not filed by August 13, 1951. Commissioners heard evidence from both the tribes and the government, determined which side had the stronger case, and passed judgment.
All 176 federally recognized Indian tribes were notified of the Commission and its purpose shortly after its inception and nearly every existing tribe in the nation filed claims under the ICCA. Some tribes wanted to have sacred land returned to them, which proved difficult to grant since much of that land was now in the hands of private individuals who had nothing to do with the original transactions. The Commission believed that the return of land would only create an entirely new group of people who would be wronged, necessitating more lawsuits, not a closure of these claims. Therefore, the Commission decided that monetary awards were highly preferable to the return of lands.
Other tribes wanted to have the government held accountable for the way tribal money was spent -- and these petitions were frequently successful. As trustee, the Department of the Interior and later the Bureau of Indian Affairs were in charge of overseeing and, in many cases, designing programs on reservations. The Commission even ordered the government’s General Accounting Office to prepare reports listing transactions that involved any Indian funds for a period of almost an entire century.
Attorneys for the tribes insisted not only that the government must account for all expended funds, but that they must also pay interest on any unspent funds. The government had generated millions of dollars for tribes by overseeing non-Indians’ use of Indian land. This money was deposited in a trust account, and was then used to fund various Indian programs. The United States Government asserted that no interest was due on the funds, since the money was constantly being spent for the benefit of the tribes. Tribal attorneys countered this by pointing to a statute, passed in 1841, that required funds held in trust by the United States to be invested in bonds bearing at least five percent interest. The Commission awarded the tribes the interest -- not at a simple interest rate, but at a compound rate that would have turned into ten times the original amount. The Department of Justice, representing the U.S. Government before the Commission, appealed the case to the Court of Claims. William Schaab was the attorney of record for the case. The Court of Claims reversed the decision, determining that the tribes were not entitled to interest -- a decision that has been contested by advocates of increased tribal awards.
The most prevalent of all cases were those dealing with compensation for taken aboriginal lands. Determining what land could be considered as belonging to tribes was complicated by nomadic lifestyles and displacement from whites' settlement patterns. The Commission was lenient with tribes on this issue, requiring little proof to link tribes to the land they claimed. However, the awarding of damages was also complicated by the need to determine the land's worth, which varied by whether the land should be assessed at its worth in 1841, at what it would be worth with improvements, or at its valued use the tribes had for the land. The Commission always selected a value that was in between all of these conflicts of interest. Overall, the Commission awarded damages in 341 cases, or over 62% of the claims that it adjudicated. At an average of nearly $2.4 million per case, the Indian Claims Commission awarded about $1.3 billion during its thirty-two year lifespan.
Ever since the Indian Claims Commission ended in 1978, after being extended six times longer than originally intended, attorneys on behalf of Indian tribes have sought new ways to file lawsuits over old claims to circumvent the closure intended by Congress in passing the ICCA. Today, the doors of the courthouse are simply closed to claims that arose between 1776 and 1946.
Source of the preceding biographical note: (websites were accessed on 11/21/2004)
http://www.perm.org/articles/a140.html
http://www.ronan.net/~morris/page7.html
John Kessell:
Currently (2004) a Professor of History Emeritus at the University of
New Mexico, Dr. Kessell formerly worked as a U.S. National Park Service
historian after receiving his doctorate from the University of New Mexico. In
1980-81, Kessell served as project director and founding editor of The Journals
of Diego de Vargas, in cooperation with Meredith D. Dodge, Rick Hendricks, and
Larry D. Miller. The Vargas Project was started with a grant from the National
Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC) and a Guggenheim
Fellowship.
Pictured from left to right, in October of 2002, are John L. Kessell, Rick Hendricks, Meredith D. Dodge, and Larry D. Miller, editors of The Journals of don Diego de Vargas. Photo is courtesy of David Schneider, After Words Books, Albuquerque, New Mexico: http://www.archives.gov/grants/annotation/march_2003/vargas_project.html
Source of the preceding biographical note: http://www.archives.gov/grants/annotation/march_2003/vargas_project.html (viewed on 11/29/2004)
Partial bibliography of published works by Dr. John Kessell:
Spain in the Southwest : A Narrative History of Colonial New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, and California. Published in 2002.
A Settling of Accounts: The Journals of Don Diego De Vargas, New Mexico 1700-1704. Published in 2002.
To the Royal Crown Restored: The Journals of Don Diego De Vargas, New Mexico 1692-94. Published in 2001.
That Disturbances Cease: The Journals of Don Diego De Vargas, New Mexico 1697-1700. Published in 2000.
Blood on the Boulders: The Journals of Don Diego De Vargas, New Mexico, 1694-97. Published in 1998.
The Spanish Missions of New Mexico I: Before 1680. Published in 1991.
Letters from the New World: Selected Correspondence of Don Diego De Vargas to his Family, 1675-1706. Published in 1992.
By Force of Arms: The Journals of Don Diego De Vargas, New Mexico, 1691-1693. Published in 1992.
Remote Beyond Compare: Letters of Don Diego de Vargas to his Family from New Spain and New Mexico, 1675-1706. Published in 1989.
Kiva, Cross, and Crown: The Pecos Indians and New Mexico, 1540-1840. Published in 1979; 2nd edition, 1987.
Navaho Foreign Affairs, 1795-1846. Published in 1983.
The Missions of New Mexico Since 1776. Published in 1980.
Friars, Soldiers and Reformers: Hispanic Arizona and the Sonora Mission Frontier, 1767-1856. Published in 1976.
Mission of Sorrows: Jesuit Guevavi and the Pimas, 1691-1767. Published in 1970.
Father Kino in Arizona. Published in 1966.
Administrative information
About the organization of this collection:
Acquisition information: This collection is the Center of Southwest Studies' accession 2003:03005.02. Dr. Kessell signed the deed of gift on March 10, 2003.
Processing information: This collection was arranged and described by J. Todd Ellison, Archivist, October 2004, with assistance by Fort Lewis College student archival worker Andrew Hayes, who produced the folder list of the Kessell research materials in boxes 1 through 4; Haley Sladek produced the folder list for boxes 5 through 9 in January of 2006. Student archival assistant Olivia Everett produced the historical and biographical sketches in November of 2004. Student archival assistant Laurie Cottrill produced the folder list of research materials regarding the use of Navajo tribal lands (i.e., Series 1, box 2) in October of 2005. This inventory was produced by Todd Ellison in October of 2004 (last updated and revised in January 2006).
A related collection at the Center: Expert testimony before the Indian Claims Commission. Compiled and edited by Norman A. Ross. New York: Clearwater Publishing, ca. 1975-1980. 285 microfiche. Accession 1996:09010C.
Series descriptions
Series 1: John Kessell research notes and printed materials, circa 1977-1980, in 3 document cases and 1 card file box, arranged chronologically.
Series 2: Navajo claims legal case records and research materials, circa 1977-1980, in 3 records boxes, arranged chronologically.
Series 1: John Kessell research notes and printed materials
Folder 1: “Anthropology and Anthropologists in the Indian New Deal,” journal article, 1980.
Folder 2: Oil, Land and Politics: The California Career of Thomas Robert Bard, by W. H. Hutchinson 1965; Volume I; partial book
Folder 3: Formative Years in the Far West: Standard Oil Company of California, by Gerald T. White, 1962; excerpt and resources.
Folder 4: Scientists in Conflict: Oil Industry in California, by Gerald T. White, 1968; excerpt and resource list.
Folder 5: An act to confirm private land claims in New Mexico, U.S. Statutes at Large, June 21, 1860.
Folder 6: Private land claims against the public domain in New Mexico, June 30, 1880; Report of Secretary of the Interior (copy).
Folder 7: “A Pygmy among Giants”, 1959 Brand Book of the Denver Posse of the Westerners, edited by Raymond Colwell, 1960.
Folder 8: Pablo Montoya Grant and Baca Location No. 2, San Miguel Company, abstract of title.
Folder 9: “The Tangled Web: The Controversy over the Tumacácori and Baca Land Grants,” Journal of Arizona History, Vol. 8, 1967.
Folder 10: “The Tangled Web: The Controversy over the Tumacácori and Baca Land Grants,” by Ray H. Mattison, Journal of Arizona History, Vol. 8, 1967.
Folder 11: Lamy of Santa Fe, His Life and Times, by Paul Hogan, 1975; excerpt and sources.
Folder 12: Bishop John Lamy Grant, printed material, photocopy report, and final report; copy material dealing with Land claims dating 1860, and ledgers from the John Lamy Grant.
Folder 13: To Possess the Land: A Biography of Arthur Rochford Manby, by Frank Waters, 1973; sources and acknowledgements.
Folder 14: Maxwell Land Grant: A New Mexico Item, by William A. Keheler, 1964; source list.
Folder 15: Copy, New Mexico Historical Review, Vol. XLIX, No. 4”, October 1974 (from file JLK noted “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 16: Copy, New Mexico Professional Engineer and Contractor, Vol. VII, No. II, 1950 (from file JLK noted “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 17: Copy of book, The Maxwell Land Grant, with notes (from file JLK marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 18: “Report by Lana Doris,” reference material (from file JLK marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 19: Copy, Arizona Law Review reference material (from file JLK marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 20: Copy, “University of New Mexico General Library Special Collections Dept. of Archives- Maxwell Land Co.,” pages 1872-1966, with inventory (from file marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 21: John L. Kessler reference notes (from file marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 22: John L. Kessler reference notes (from file marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 23: Copy, To Possess the Land: A Biography of Arthur Rochford Manby, by Frank Waters, 1973 (from file marked “Maxwell Grant”).
Folder 24: Parsons-Scott transaction (from file marked “Maxwell Grave”).
Folder 25: Copy material from “California: Two Centuries of Man, Land, and Growth in the Golden State”; “Directory of American Scholars”; and “Dictionary of American Biography" (file JLK marked “Parson- Scott Transaction”).
Folder 26: A History of Montezuma County, Colorado, by Ira S. Freeman, and “Aneth Area Chronology, 1832-1927.”
Folder 27: Washington Matthews: Army
Surgeon and Field Anthropologist in the American West 1845-1905, paper by
Katherine Halpern, October 1984.
Box 2: Use of Navajo tribal lands
Folder 1: Treaty with the Navajo, 1868; reference materials.
Folder 2: Treaty between the United States of America and the Navajo Tribe of Indians, by K.C. Publications, 1968.
Folder 3: Notes for Space for Navajo People, by John L. Kessell; sources, 1941-1980.
Folder 4: Space for the People: Adjusting the Navajo Land Base, by John L. Kessell, 1980; manuscript.
Folder 5: Navajo Use and Occupation of the Lands North of the San Juan River in Present-Day Utah to 1935, by David Brugge, pages 1-50.
Folder 6: Navajo Use and Occupation of the Lands North of the San Juan River in Present-Day Utah to 1935, by David Brugge, pages 51-101.
Folder 7: Navajo Use and Occupation of the Lands North of the San Juan River in Present-Day Utah to 1935, by David Brugge, pages 102-153.
Folder 8: Navajo Use and Occupation of the Lands North of the San Juan River in Present-Day Utah to 1935, vy David Brugge, pages 153-216.
Folder 9: Supplement to the appraisal of the lands of the Navajo Indian Tribe in New Mexico, Arizona, Utah, and Colorado, 1977.
Folder 10: Geology of the Navajo Country and Reconnaissance of Parts of Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah, Government Printing Office, 1917.
Folder 11: Bibliography for Geography and Water Resources in Navajo Country.
Folder 12: Navajo Tribal Lands Indian Commission, Docket No. 229, 1997; exhibits and notes.
Folder 13: Navajo contestants' list of exhibits for Utah, Docket No. 030009 (A- 28670).
Folder 14: Early Spanish and Mexican settlements.
Folder 15: Miscellaneous land records copies, 1868-1899 (photocopies, made in 1977).
Folder 16: Navajo-Hopi reservations land dispute newspaper clippings from the Albuquerque Journal, 1981 April 12 and 1983 Dec. 4.
Folder 17: Navajo Land Claims government correspondence (photocopies).
Folder 18: Some Navajo Value Terms in Behavioral Context, by Clyde Kluckhorn (Harvard University).
Folder 19: Navajo Community College
Press catalog, 1984.
Folder 1: Navajo Indian boarding schools records of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1871-1950, typescript of excerpts and photocopy; Plaintiff Exhibit T-1977-3 (287 pages).
Folder 1A: Navajo Indian boarding schools records of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs, 1871-1950, same as Folder 1 except that this is an archival Permalife Bond photocopy of Dr. Kessell's photocopy of excerpts (287 pages).
Folder 2: An Analysis of Sources of Information on the Population of the Navajo, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, 1966.
Folder 3: A History of the Chaco Navajos, Volume I, by David M. Brugge.
Folder 4: A History of the Chaco Navajos, Volume II, by David M. Brugge.
Folder 5: Navajo Political Process, publication of the Smithsonian Institution, 1970.
Folder 6: “Navajo Ways in Government”, by Mary Shepardson, June 1963.
Folder 7: La Gaceta, Vol. V, No. 1, 1970.
Box 4: John Kessell's card files
Section 1: Topical biography and notes, arranged by the following topics: (the Center retained the original order of these cards)
New Mexico general history
Pueblo Indians
Spanish Colonial Period (1598-1821)
Mexican Period (1821-1848)
Territorial Period (1848-1912)
20th Century New Mexico
Abiquiu
General CD
Bibliography
General Description
Bosque Redondo
Treaties
Land
Education
Grazing-Timber Rights
Oil, Gas, and Other Resources
Related Topics
Archival Sources
Disputes with Zuni
Education (sources)
Grazing
Timber
Agriculture and Irrigation
Agents
Accounting
Section 2: Document summaries, ordered chronologically
into the following periods:
(the Center retained the original order of these cards)
1867-1885
1885-1895
1895-1905
1905-1910
1910-1915
1915-1920
1920-1925
1925-1930
1930-1935
1935-1939
Series 2: Navajo claims legal case records and research materials
Folder 1 Navajo claims: oil and gas, begins 1925
Folder 2 NTC (Navajo Tribal Council), 1920s
Folder 2a Navajo Tribal Council in the 1920s
Folder 3 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (1- 1891 ACT 2- Mins. 1907 Council)
Folder 4 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (3 – McL. To SI, 4- Hayzleit 1901, McNitt Tros.)
Folder 5 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (6- Minutes 7/1901 and Huff Lease 7/1901)
Folder 6 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (7- Huff Lease Amend. 11/9/1901)
Folder 7 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (8- CIA Jones 12/3/1901, 9- ACTG. ST. Ryan 7/29/1903)
Folder 8 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (10- Huff 5/27/1905, 11- Gregory)
Folder 9 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (Estep 5/13/21, Minutes 1st SJC 5/7/1921)
Folder 10 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (12- Wormser 2/10/1906, 13- missing, 14- Larrabee 7/13/1907)
Folder 11 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (15- Estep 6/17/1919, 16- 3/18/1931)
Folder 12 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (17- Estep 3/31/1920, 18- 1/11/1921, 19- Merritt 3/3/1921)
Folder 13 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (21- Kelly pp.48-51, 22 Estep 8/161921 and Minutes SJC)
Folder 14 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (23- Estep 11/22/1921, 24- 3/6/1922, 25- Mins. SJC 3/25/1922)
Folder 15 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (26- Bruington 3/27/1922, 27- Estep 4/21/1922)
Folder 16 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (28- 4th SJC 9/23/1922)
Folder 17 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (28- Betts, 30- Kelly 51-55, 31- Nowles Oct. 1923)
Folder 18 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (32- Estep 11/19/1922, 33- Burke 12/4/1922)
Folder 19 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK 34
Folder 20 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (35- Nowels 3/31/1931)
Folder 21 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (36- Kelly pp. 54-75)
Folder 22 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (37- Fall 1/2/1923, 38- Memo 12/5/1922)
Folder 23 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (39- Regs. NTC 1/27/1923)
Folder 24 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (40- HJH to Fall 2/9/1923)
Folder 25 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (41- Regs. NTC 4/24/1923)
Folder 26 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (42- Memo/REGS 1/19/1923, 43- HJH 5/20/1927)
Folder 27 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (44- Shepardson, 45- Young “Rise”)
Folder 28 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (46- Young, Pol. Hist., 47- Williams)
Folder 29 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (48- Mins. 1st NTC)
Folder 30 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (49- HJH 7/8/1923 and NTC Resol. 7/7/1923)
Folder 31 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (50- Resol. NTC 10/31/1933, Revok P.O.A.)
Folder 32 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (51- Collier to HJH 11/9/23 and article)
Folder 33 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (52- NTC 7/7/1924)
Folder 34 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (53- NTC 7/18/1925)
Folder 35 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (54- NTC 7/7/1926)
Folder 36 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (55- NTC 7/7/1927)
Folder 37 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (56- NTC 9/3/1929)
Folder 38 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (57- NTC 7/7/1930)
Folder 39 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (58- NTC 11/12/1928)
Folder 40 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (59- Burke 6/28/1924, 60- HJH 7/8/1924)
Folder 41 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (61- HJH 9/18/1929)
Folder 42 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (62- Kelly pp.76-103, 190-194)
Folder 43 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (63- HJH 8/16/1923, 64- HJH 9/18/1923, 65- HJH 10/3/1923)
Folder 44 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (66- Sale 10/15/1923, 67- Law 1924)
Folder 45 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (68- Bretschneider 10/13/1924, 69- HJH 10/27/1924)
Folder 46 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (70- Burke 7/18/1924, 71- HJH 10/28/1924, 72- Bret. 11/3/1924)
Folder 47 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (73- 11/12/1924, 74- HJH to Si. 75- HJH to Burke)
Folder 48 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (76- HJH An. Rpt. 1925)
Folder 49 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (77- HGH 2/6/1926, 78- Burke 2/17. 79- HJH 2/26, 80- Bret. 8/28/1923)
Folder 50 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (81- HJH 11/28/1923, 82- 1st assignment, RS 12/28/1923)
Folder 51 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (83- 1/1 Int. to Mutual 10/27/1924, 84- HJH 9/13/1926)
Folder 52 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (85- Ferguson 5/29/1926, 86- HJH 6/3/1926)
Folder 53 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (87- HJH to Fergu. 6/11/1926, 88- Duclos – Burke)
Folder 54 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (89- HJH 7/30/1925, Extension Stip. 8/13/1926)
Folder 55 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (90- Young, Pol., Hist., 53-65, 91- Shepardson 115-118)
Folder 56 Plaintiff Exhibit OGK (92- Young, NYB, NTC 1927 and 1928, 93- Stewart 1946, 94- Lease Ft. Def. 1922)
Folder 57 Champion Rebuttal, 1926 and 1981
Folder 58 Approval 3/26/1926 of 2nd S.F. Co./Cont. Assign.
Folder 59 S. Fe Co./S. Fe Corp. Deal
Folder 60 Rattlesnake Lease
Folder 61 Def. Ex. Digest
Folder 62 Oil properties on Navajo Reservation, August 1926
Folder 63 Navajo Tribe vs. United States
Folder 64 An appraisal of the lands of the Navajo, 1868
Folder 65 Plaintiff exhibit, 1977 Dec. 7
Folder 66 Misc. documents (land use report, PLB records, letters to Mr. Walker, 1924)
Folder 67 Articles and notes from 1960s plus
Folder
68 “Indian Agent 1950, “Long March”
Folder 1 Everett diary of Kit Carson’s first Navajo campaign, 1863
Folder 2 San Juan River memo, 1859
Folder 3 Volume 3: Before the Indian Claims Commission, booklet
Folder 4 Administrative history of Canyon De Chelly, 1976
Folder 5 Navajo claims, Navajo Tribal Council, 1923 -1928
Folder 6 Navajo notes
Folder 7 Navajo Treaty of 1868
Folder 8 Introduction “Ignorance, Malice or neglect”
Folder 9 General Sherman and the Treaty
Folder 10 Motives of economy
Folder 11 “Supply liberally with sheep”
Folder 12 Aand P Railroad Grant
Folder 13 E.O. additions and deletions
Folder 14 Misc. outlines, intro., etc.
Folder 15 Current notes on sources, etc.
Folder 16 Bosque Redondo
Folder
17 Navajo Treaty, 1868
Box 7
Folder 1 Eighth Claim
Folder 2 October 29th 1878 E.O. W. of Tr.
Folder 3 January 6, 1880 E.O. E.,S., and W. May 17th, 1884 S. of San Juan River
Folder 4 December 16th, 1882 E.O. Hopi Res.
Folder 5 May17th, 1884 E.O. San Juan
Folder 6 April 24th , 1886 E.O. San Juan
Folder 7 November 19th , 1892 E.O. San Juan
Folder 8 January 8th, E.O. West Navajo
Folder 9 November 14th, 1901 E.O.Leupp
Folder 10 March 10th and May 15th 1905 E.O. 324A Anetn
Folder 11 November. 9, 1907 E.O. 709 East Navajo
Folder 12 May 4th, 1908 S.O. Castle Butte
Folder 13 December 30th, 1908 E.O. 1000 East Navajo
Folder 14 January 16th, 1911 E.O. 1284 East Navajo
Folder 15 May 24th, 1911 E.O. 1359 East Navajo
Folder 16 May 7th, 1917 E.O. 2612 L. Colorado and January 19th, 1918
Folder 17 February 19th, 1929 S.O. Paivte St.
Folder 18 May 23rd, 1930 46 stat. 378, 379 and Tusayan N.F. February 21st, 1931 46 Stat. 1204
Folder 19 July 18th, 1931 S.O. Lupton
Folder 20 March 1, 1933 47 stat. 1418-1419
Folder 21 June 14th, 1934 48 stat. 960 Arizona Boundary Bill
Folder 22 1934-1936 New Mexico Boundary Bill (not passed)
Folder 23 September 2nd, 1958 76 sat. 1686-1690 Page-McCr. Mesa Exchange
Folder 24 Navajo claims: General
Folder 25 Navajo claims: Land
Folder 26 Navajo claims: Education
Folder 27 Navajo claims: Grazing
Folder 28 Navajo claims: Timber
Folder 29 Navajo claims: Accounting
Folder 30 Navajo claims: National Archives Nicklason research, etc.
Folder
31 BIA real property management files – Window Rock “SWTP, Albuquerque
Box 8
Folder 1 Navajo claims bibliography
Folder 2 Ethno bibliography of North America
Folder 3 Nicklason, “Preliminary Report,” 1974
Folder 4 Nicklason, drafts, 1846-1879
Folder 5 Amsden, “Exile at Bosque”
Folder 6 Brown, K. D., “Relations”
Folder 7 Brugge and Correll, “Treaties,” Brugge, “Historical chronology, Chelly”
Folder 8 Burge, “Navajos and the land.”
Folder 9 Danzinger, “Steck – Carleton”
Folder 10 Fanale, “Navajo land use project: working paper”
Folder 11 Hangerman, “Navajo Reservation”
Folder 12 Hoopes, “IRA and Navajo,” 1990-1995
Folder 13 Hoover, “Navajo land problems
Folder
14 Kunitz, Stephen J., demographic change
Box 9
Folder 1 La Farge, Oliver; “The Changing Indian”
Folder 2 Mosk, Sanford A., “Land Tenure Problems”
Folder 3 Parman, Donald L., “J. C. Morgan: Navajo Apostle of Assimilation”
Folder 4 Reeve, Frank, “Federal Indian Policy in New Mexico, III”
Folder 5 Reeve, Frank, “The Federal Indian Policy in New Mexico, IV”
Folder 6 Reeve, Frank, D., “The Government and the Navajo”
Folder 7 Reeve, Frank, D., “A Navajo Struggle for Land”
Folder 8 Royce, Charles C., “Indian Land Cessions in the US”
Folder 9 Sasaki, Tom and Adair, John – Spicer, Edward H. and Collier, John
Folder 10 Van Valkenburgh, Richard F.,“A Short History of the Navajo People”
Folder 11 Vogt, Evon Z., “Navajo”
Folder 12 Weber, Rev. Anselm, O.F.M., “Statement of facts”
Folder 13 Navajos: current clippings
These collections are located at the Center of Southwest Studies on the campus of Fort Lewis College. Researchers wanting more information about using this material at the Center may email the archivist at archives@fortlewis.edu or click here to use our E-mail Reference Request Form (or phone the archivist at 970/247-7126). The Center does not have a budget for outgoing long-distance phone calls to answer reference requests, so please email if you wish to receive a response from the Center. To request reproductions and copies, click here for instructions.