United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs
Name Entries
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United States. Bureau of Indian Affairs
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Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Bureau of Indian Affairs
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Indian Affairs, Bureau of (Department of the Interior)
Name Components
Name :
Indian Affairs, Bureau of (Department of the Interior)
Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs
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Name :
Department of the Interior, Office of Indian Affairs
U.S. Bureau Of Indian Affairs
Name Components
Name :
U.S. Bureau Of Indian Affairs
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États-Unis. Bureau of Indian Affairs
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États-Unis
SubdivisionName :
Bureau of Indian Affairs
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United States. Commissioner of Indian Affairs
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Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Commissioner of Indian Affairs
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United State. Indian Service
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Name :
United State
SubdivisionName :
Indian Service
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United States. Office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
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Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Office of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs
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United States. Deptartment of the Interior. Bureau of Indian Affairs
Name Components
Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Deptartment of the Interior
SubdivisionName :
Bureau of Indian Affairs
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United States. Indian Bureau
Name Components
Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Indian Bureau
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BIA (Bureau of Indian Affairs)
Name Components
Name :
BIA (Bureau of Indian Affairs)
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United States. Indian Affairs, Bureau of
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Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
Indian Affairs, Bureau of
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United States. War Department. Bureau of Indian Affairs
Name Components
Name :
United States
SubdivisionName :
War Department
SubdivisionName :
Bureau of Indian Affairs
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United States. Office of Indian Affairs
Name Components
Name :
United States. Office of Indian Affairs
Etats-Unis. Indian bureau
Name Components
Name :
Etats-Unis
SubdivisionName :
Indian bureau
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Exist Dates
Biographical History
The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) was formed in 1824. An agency of the federal government of the United States within the US Department of the Interior, it is responsible for the administration and management of land held in trust by the United States for Native Americans in the United States, Native American Tribes and Alaska Natives.
A Statistics Section was organized as a part of the Library Section of the Office of the Chief Clerk on March 8, 1909, to handle duties transferred for the Miscellaneous Division. In 1939 the Section, then assigned to the Office of the Finance Officer, was made a Division. It was abolished in 1947. The Statistics Division processed census rolls, reports, and statistical data, and compiled information for the ANNUAL REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONER OF INDIAN AFFAIRS.
Jones was a Commissioner at the BIA.
Established in 1885 to replace the Civilization and Education (Civilization) Division, this Division was responsible for school administration, agricultural and mechanical training, matters concerning law and order (including liquor suppression), and health, and sanitation. The Division by 1914 consisted of Employees, Law and Order, Health, Schools, Industries, Construction, and Statistics Sections. In 1926 the Education Division was designated the Administrative Division and was abolished in 1931, the Schools Section of the Administrative Division having become the Education Division in 1930.
The Finance Division, one of the original divisions organized in 1846, was responsible for administrative examination of accounts, appropriations, remittances, stock investments, settlement of claims, and generally for all matters involving expenditure of money for or on account of Indiands.
The Construction Division was established in 1939, but a predecessor Division had operated from April 1908 until March 1909, when it became the Construction Section of the Education Division. The Division was responsible for construction and repair of schools, hospitals, agency buildings, water and sewage systems, housing facilities for employees, and heating and power plants. It functioned until about 1948 when it was replaced by the Division of Buildings and Facilities.
The Forestry Division was not formally established until 1924.
The Law Office was established in 1908 under the supervision of a law clerk, formerly of the Land Division, and by 1911 was usually referred to as the Law Division. In 1913 the Heirship Section of the Land Division was transferred to the Law Division, which thereafter was chiefly concerned with probate work, and by 1917 was known as the Probate Division.
The Indian Organization Division was established in 1934 to supervise the organization of Indian tribes as provided by the Indian Reorganization Act (Wheeler-Howard Act) of June 18, 1934. In 1943 the Division became the Division of Tribal Relations.
The Division was established in 1885 in the Office of Education chiefly to supervise the education of Eskimo and Indian children in Alaska, but it duties were not limited to educational matters. Its representatives served as law enforcement agents, collected data for Government agencies, directed the Alaska Reindeer Service and supplied medical aid to the natives. In 1931 the Division was transferred from the Office of Education to the Office of Indian Affairs.
The Health Division was established in 1924 to conduct health activities formerly handled by the Education Division. From July 1924 until 1931 it was called the Medical division.
These records were created mainly by superintendencies, agencies, and nonreservation schools, most of which were discontinued and their records transferred to Washington, D.C. The kinds of records maintained by the superintendencies and agencies varied little between jurisdictions, although there are great differences in the quantities that survived. For the most part they consist chiefly of correspondence, frequently with indexes and registers to letters received and sent and to financial documents.
The Employees Section, known as the Appointments Section until 1911, was established in the Education Division on March 8, 1909, to handle appointments, transfers, separations, and promotions and other personnel actions of field employees. It was abolished in 1939, and the personnel work of the Bureau was centralized in a Personnel Division.
The Rehabilitation Division was established in 1936 to carry out an Indian relief and rehabilitation program. Funds were provided through the Work Projects Administration, the Resettlement Administration, and its successor, the Farm Security Administration. On October 29, 1941, the Rehabilitation Division was consolidated with the Extension Division, but separate records for the Rehabilitation Division were maintained until 1944.
Indian affairs, generally involving land, treaties, and trade, were handled by the Secretary of War before the Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1824.
Established December 5, 1930, as a successor to the Industries Section of the Administrative (Education) Division, this Division first was known as the Division of Agricultural Extension and Industry, but it was often called the Extension Division. It was organized to assist the Indians in solving domestic and economic problems through instruction and guidance classes, demonstrations, visits, and work supervision. Agricultural extension agents or the agency superintendents supervised the work at the agencies.
The Indian Emergency Conservation Work Division (IECW) was established May 22, 1933, but was renamed Civilian Conservation Corps - Indian Division (CCC-ID) when Emergency Conservation Work becmae the Civilian Conservation Corps on July 1, 1937. The objectives of the CCC-ID program were to provide employement for Indians and to accomplishe useful conservation work. An enrollee program provided training, recreation, and welfare for the Indians. CCC-ID fieldwork was terminated July 10, 1942, but the Washington office continued to operate in order to conclude its affairs.
Zitkala is the Indian name for Gertrude Bonnin, 1876-1938.
The Office of Indian Trade was formally established in 1806, although two Government trading houses had begun operating in 1795 among the Creek and Cherokee Indians. An act of April 18, 1796, which was reenacted from time to time with slight changes until 1822, authorized the President to establish Government trading houses or factories, and some 28 factories were in existence at different time under this system. Headquarters for supplying the factories and for receiving furs and peltries was at Philadelphia, and the system was operated mainly through the facilities of the War Department. In 1806 provision was made for a Superintendent of Indian Trade, who maintained a warehouse in Georgetown, D.C., and was responsible for purchasing and transporting goods to the factories until the system was abolished in 1822.
The Board of Indian Commissioners was established June, 3, 1869, and given the right to inspect records of the Bureau of Indain Affairs, to visit and inspect superintendencies and agencies, to be present when goods were purchased for the Indian Service, and to inspect goods and make recommendations on matters concerning administration of Indian affairs. In its later years the Board limited its activities chiefly to inspections and surveys and to making recommendations. It was abolished by an Executive order of May 25, 1933.
The Division was established in October 1885 to investigate claims against the Indians for depredations. In 1891 the investigation and determination of the Indian depredation claims were transferred to the United States Court of Claims. The Depredation Division continued to answer inquiries and to service records until it was abolished in 1893.
Established in 1846 as one of the original Divisions of the Bureau, the Civilization and General Statistics Division maintained information concerning Indian population, tribal wealth, missionary establishments, traders, and advancement in agricultural and mechanical arts and in schools and education. Later, responsibility for matters concerning depredation claims, conduct of the Indians, liquor control, intrusions on Indian lands, and field personnel was added. In 1881 educational matters came under its jurisdiction, and in 1885 it became the Education Division with all of its non-educational responsibilites assigned to other divisions. Since its records were transferred to the divisions inheriting its functions, the records of the Civilization Division are fragmentary.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs was established in 1824 within the War Department, which from the establishment of the Federal Government had exercised jurisdiction over Indian affairs in their civilian aspects. Known as the Office of Indian Affairs until 1947 when it was officially designated the Bureau of Indian Affairs, it operated informally within the War Department from 1824 until 1832 when the Congress authorized appointment of a Commissioner of Indian Affairs. In 1849 the Bureau was transferred from the War Department to the newly created Department of the Interior.
The Bureau of Indian Affairs is responsible for most of the Federal Government's relations with Indians, including their economic development, education, and legal rights. The Bureau's responsibility has, however, never extended to all Indians, but only to Indians living on reservations or maintaining their tribal affiliation in some manner. Some tribes, particularly in the East, have been under State rather than Federal authority. The Indians and Eskimos of Alaska came under the Bureau's jurisdiction in 1931 with the transfer to the Bureau of the Alaska Division of the Office of Education, which had been established in 1885 to administer matters relating to the education and health of natives of Alaska. In 1955 the Bureau's health activities, including those in Alaska, were transferred to the Public Health Service.
In 1824 the Bureau inherited a well-established system of Indian superintendencies and agencies, and the basic organizational structure has remained unchanged. The Bureau now consists of the central office, area offices, and field installations including Indian agencies, boarding schools, and irrigation projects.
Bureau of Indian Affairs program to relocate Native Americans to urban areas.
Beginning with the Navajo-Hopi rehabilitation project in 1948, the BIA urban relocation program was expanded to other tribes in 1950. In addition to placing relocation officers at reservation agencies, the Bureau opened urban field offices in Denver, Salt Lake City, Los Angeles, and Chicago by 1951, and later added offices in St. Louis, Oakland, San Jose, San Francisco, Dallas, and Cleveland. The program provided transportation, job placement, subsistence funds, counseling, and vocational training (added in 1956) for urban migrants.
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External Related CPF
https://viaf.org/viaf/145346890
https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n79071198
https://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q1010563
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Languages Used
eng
Zyyy
Subjects
Education
Agriculture
Alaska Earthquake, Alaska, 1964
Apache Indians
Teachers
Athapascan Indians
Canals
Cattle
Cayuga Indians
Census
Cherokee
Cherokee Indians
Chickasaw Indians
Chocataw Indians
Church and state
Correspondence
Creek Indians
Dakota Indians
Dakota Indians
Earthquake relief
Eskimos
Fettermen fight
Flathead Indians
Forest and forestry
Forrest reserves
Frontier and pioneer life
Ghost dance
Government, Law and Politics
Indian land transfers
Indian land transfers
Indian reservations
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians of North America
Indians, Treatment of
Indigenous peoples
Industry
Land grants
Land grants
Land titles
Land titles
Land titles
Liquor laws
Logging
Logging
Makah Indians
Material Types
Mormon Church
Mormons
Native Americans
Nez Percé Indians
Ojibwa Indians
Ojibwa Indians
Ojibwa Indians
Ojibwa Indians
Ojibwa Indians
Oneida Indians
Onondaga Indians
Opinions of the Attorney General
Osage
Ottawa
Pacific Coast Indians, Wars with, 1847-1865
Paiute Indians
Paiute Indians
Railroads
Rural schools
Schools
Schools
Seminole Indians
Seneca Indians
Steam-carriage
Surveying
Territorial Government
Timber
Transportation
Tuscarora Indians
Ute Indians
Villages
World War, 1939-1945
Yankton Indians
Nationalities
Americans
Activities
Indian agents
Occupations
Legal Statuses
Places
Minnesota
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Florida
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Wisconsin
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Washington (State)
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Illinois--Chicago
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Leech Lake Indian Reservation (Minn.)
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Tetlin (Alaska)
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Oregon
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Alaska--Cape Prince of Wales
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Tanacross (Alaska)
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Alaska--Wainwright
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Alaska--Wales
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Idaho--Nez Percé Indian Reservation
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Leech Lake Indian Reservation (Minn.)
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Nevada
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California
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South Dakota
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Nez Percé Indian Reservation (Idaho)
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Superior National Forest (Minn.)
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Clinton (Okla.)
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Florida
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Indiana
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United States
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Taos Pueblo (N.M.)
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Chippewa National Forest (Minn.)
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Arizona
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Red Lake
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Copper Center (Alaska)
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Alaska--Klawock
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Atka (Alaska)
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Oregon
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Oregon
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New Mexico
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Idaho--Nez Percé Indian Reservation
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Alaska--Bethel
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Utah
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Nebraska
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Alaska--Aleutian Islands
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White Earth Indian Reservation (Minn.).
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Andarko (Okla.)
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Yellow Medicine Agency
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Santa Clara Pueblo (N.M.)
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Washington (State)
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United States
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Choctaw Trading Post
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Standing Rock Indian Reservation (N.D. and S.D.)
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Chippewa National Forest (Minn.).
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White Earth Indian Reservation (Minn.)
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Florida
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Nebraska City Machine, 1862
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Spokane
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Pueblo of Laguna (N.M.)
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Lawton (Okla.)
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Alaska
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North Dakota
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Afognak (Alaska)
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Wyoming
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Taos Pueblo (N.M.)
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Wisconsin
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Minnesota
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Minnesota
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Lake Traverse Indian Reservation (N.D. and S.D.)
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New Mexico
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Nabesna Region (Alaska)
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Montana
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Flathead
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Old Harbor (Alaska)
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Red Lake Indian Reservation (Minn.)
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Dakota
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Alaska--Hoonah
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Fort Snelling (Minn.)
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English Bay (Alaska)
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Chitina (Alaska)
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Alaska--Killisnoo
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Chenega (Alaska)
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Pine Ridge Indian Reservation (S.D.)
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Jemez Pueblo (N.M.)
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Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation (Utah)
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New York (State)
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Michigan
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Santo Domingo Pueblo (N.M.)
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Red Lake Indian Reservation (Minn.).
AssociatedPlace
Zia Pueblo (N.M.)
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Alaska
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Idaho--Nez Percé Indian Reservation
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Attu (Alaska)
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North Dakota
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Pueblo of Santa Clara, New Mexico
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Wisconsin
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Santo Domingo Pueblo (N.M.)
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Alaska
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South Dakota
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Nez Percé Indian Reservation (Idaho)
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Michigan
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Utah
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Washington (D.C.)
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New Mexico
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South Dakota
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Arizona
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Missouri--Saint Louis
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Idaho
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Santa Ana Pueblo (N.M.)
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Arizona
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Montana
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Utah
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Superior National Forest (Minn.).
AssociatedPlace
Alaska
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Michigan
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Santa Ana Pueblo (N.M.)
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Isleta Pueblo (N.M.)
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Copper River Region (Alaska)
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Utah
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Sedan (Okla.)
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Alaska--Gambell
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Laguna Pueblo (N.M.)
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Zuni
AssociatedPlace
Nez Percé Indian Reservation (Idaho)
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Alaska--Unalaska
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North Dakota
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Arkansas
AssociatedPlace
Jemez Pueblo (N.M.)
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Florida
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Tanana River Region (Alaska)
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Concho (Okla.)
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Isleta Pueblo (N.M.)
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Zia Pueblo (N.M.)
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Ouzinkie (Alaska)
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New Mexico
AssociatedPlace
Washington (State)
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Montana
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Washington (State)
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Alaska
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Convention Declarations
<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>