1787
Congress passes Northwest Ordinance declaring that the
"land and property [of Indian tribes] shall never be
taken from them without their consent."
1803
Tribes of the Louisiana Purchase Territory
officially came under U.S. jurisdiction.
1842
First wagons cross Sioux country on Oregon Trail.
1851
Fort Laramie Treaty between the United States and plains
tribes recognizes Sioux ownership of 60 million acres of
land, but allocates Powder River and Big Horn country to
other tribes.
1851 Treaty with Assiniboines, Blackfeet, Gros Ventres
and Crows for a hunting area--Rocky Mountains east to the
mouth of the Yellowstone.
1852May 24,
Treaty of Fort Laramie Amended.
1854 & 1861 Nebraska Territory defined.
1855
October 17, Treaty with Blackfeet Nation. (Defines and
restricts the hunting grounds of the Assiniboine.
Refinement upon the 1851 Fort Laramie Treaty.)
1855 Fort Stewart: Built on the Missouri River near
present Blair, MT built by Frost, Todd & Co.
1857 Sitting Bull kills "Hohe" family by
Poplar River
1860Fort Kipp
built on the Misouri River above the mouth of the Big
Muddy, built by Jim Kipp.
1860Mining
Boom-first large non-Indian population for Montana.
1861Fort
Poplar-Built on the Missouri River near the Poplar River,
built with help of Chas. Larpenture.
1865United
States negotiates treaty with "friendly" Sioux
bands.
1866 United States enters negotiations with hostile
Sioux over travel routes to Montana. Red Cloud declares
war when United States moves to fortify Bozeman Trail.
Sioux annihilate Colonel William Fetterman and his
troops.
1867
& 1868 Indian Peace Commission negotiates
final treaties with Indians (last of 370 Indian Treaties
on August 13, 1868.)
1868 Fort Buford military reserve established from the
Assiniboine land.
1868 &1869Addendum:
Gros Ventre, Assiniboine, And River Crow assigned to
Upper Milk River Agency.
1868 Treaty of 1868 establishes Great Sioux
Reservation as permanent home of the Sioux Nation and
preserves Powder River and Big Horn country as
"unceded Indian territory."
1869January 2,
Sitting Bull captured mail carrier between Fort Hall and
Fort Peck
1868-1869Sub-Agency
built to furnish rations to the lower Assiniboine, Sioux,
Gros Ventre and River Crows; located south of the Milk
River and called Fort Browning.
1870 Baker Massacre.
1870 Grant's Peace Policy-Fort Peck awarded to
Methodist.
1870 Montana census (non-Indians) : 20,595
1871 Fort Peck Agency established at old Fort Peck to
serve lower Assiniboine and Sioux.
1871 Indians attach themselves to the Agency.
1871 August 18 Executive Order--Fort Buford
1871 The U.S. no longer recognizes Sioux or any other
tribes as an autonomous group.
1872 United States aids Fort Peck Agency.
1872 August 26, Grand Peace Council at Fort Peck.
1873 Boundaries of Blackfoot Reservation began to
change.
1873 Fort Peck Agency opened at the confluence of the
Milk River and the Missouri Rivers.
1874 Established north of the Marias River and
Missouri River extending from the summit of the Rockies
to the Dakota line set aside as an undivided reservation
for Blackfeet, Assiniboine, Gros Ventre and Sioux.
1874 April 15--Act of Congress.
1875 L.A. Fitch goes to Fort Peck to teach Indians to
toil the land and some of the rudiments of education.
1875 December 3, order for Indians to go back to the
reservation.
1875 April 13--Executive Order
1875 December 3, order for Indians to go back to the
reservations.
1876-1877 Sioux Campaign with Sitting Bull.
1876 January 31--Date set for Sioux to return to
reservation from hunting expedition or be considered as
hostiles.
1876 June 25--Battle of the Little Big Horn.
1877 Started moving the Fort Peck Agency to Poplar
River and General Miles stationed at Fort Peck to
maintain order.
1877 The Fort Peck Agency was moved to a site on which
a portion of the town of Poplar now Stands
1877 Sitting Bull fled into Canada.
1879 Presbyterians secured permission from the
Methodists for a mission on the reservation.
1880 Indians compelled to settle on reservation.
1880 11th Infantry established at Poplar Creek.
1880 Establishment of a military post at a point just
north of Poplar, and known as Camp Poplar River. It was
abandoned about 1893.
1880 Presbyterian Mission established at Fort Peck.
1880 July, Executive Order: much of the region south
of the Misouri River had been opened to white settlement.
1881 Chief Gall surrenders.
1881 First Indian Tribe Allowed to Sue the Gov't.
1881 When Sitting Bull surrendered at Fort Buford in
1881, his warriors came to Fort Peck and Camped on the
site of the town of Poplar.
1883 Rev. George Wood moves from Poplar Creek to Wolf
Point to establish church.
1883 April 10--Sun Dance and other Sioux customs and
religious practices are forbidden by Secretary of the
Interior.
1883 Winter--Buffalo Exterminated in Northeastern
Montana.
1883 Starvation on the Fort Peck Indian Reservation.
1885 February 28, Proposal to divide the reservation.
1885 Northwest Rebellion in Sask., Canada.
1885 February 28 proposal to divide reservation in to
smaller sections. (Greater Blackfeet)
1886 Order prohibiting Sundances.
1886 May 15, Secretary of the Interior authorized new
contract for reservation
1886 December 28, Fort Peck agreement signed at Fort
Peck. A treaty, establishing the confines of the Fort
Peck reservation, was entered into between the Indians
and the government
1887
February 8, Congress passed the Dawes General
Allotment Act which granted 160 acres to each Indian
family head and 80 acres to each other single person over
eighteen.
1887 February 11, Treaty signed by adult Indians
giving the United States 17,500,000 acres of land and the
division of the remaining 6,000,000 into three separate
reservations.
1887 Railroads through Reservation in Northern Montana
1887 Teacher moves into Wolf Point.
1888 May 1, Congress passed the act of fixing the
boundaries of the three reservations.
1888 May 1, Act of Congress -- Agreement which
established the Fort Peck Reservation
1889 Cut the rations of beef to Indians on
reservation.
1889 March 2, Sioux Act reduces reservations to
present size.
1889 Statehood for Montana.
1889 Ghost Dance Religion
1889 Wounded Knee
1893 Army abandoned Camp Poplar River.
1895 Capt. 8th Cav. Acting Agent Wm. Sprole suggests
to the Commissioner of Indian Affairs;"a canal to be
taken out of the Missouri river, running the entire
length of the Reservation,..."
1896 Government aid to Indian Missions discontinuted.
1897 Catholics establish mission at Fort Peck.
1902 July, Makaicu Presbyterian church established
southwest of Brockton.
1904 December, Manisda Presbyterian church established
at Chelsea.
1905 Canipa Presbyterian church organized in Wolf
Point in connection with the Mission School.
1908 May 30--Allotment Act for land on Fort Peck.
1908 May 30--Act of Congress Five irrigation projects
for Fort Peck Reservation were contemplated in an act of
Congress. These projects were never completed.
1909 Yankton and Assiniboine Council elects Business
Committee and considers certain applications for
enrollment.
1912 November 11-Good Voice Hawk's Winter Count
interpreted by Ben Harrison.
1913 July 25--The surplus lands on reservation were
opened for homestead entry.
1924 June 2--Indians Granted U.S. Citizenship.
1926 January 1100 Indians received checks for $100
each. The estimatd numbers of Indians on the reservation
on government rolls is about 2400.
1927March
2--Act of Congress
1927 --Fort Peck Tribes Constitution
1927 --There is a large encampment of Indians at
Chicken Hill for their 5-day July Fourth Celebration.
1928 January 30--Docket J-31 in U.S. Court of Claims
1930 June 9--Senate Joint Resolution No. 167
1930 July 23--Docket J-31 Amended
1931 Irrigation Activities: The Little Porcupine unit
has 2400 acres under constructed canels with a storage of
3800 acre feet depending upon the spring runoff.
1933 April 10--Docket J-31 Dismissed U.S.C.C.
1933 Submarginal Lands Act
1934 May 7--U.S. Supreme Court Refusal
1934 June 18--Indian Reorganization Act authorizes
self government for all tribes.
1946 August 13--Indian Claims Commission Established.
1948 United Nations Convention on the Punishment of
the Crime of Genocide.
1950 April 26--Docket 62 in Indian Claims Commission
1952 December 12--Docket 62 Dismissed I.C.C.
1954 June 8--Appeal Docket I-53 Dismissed U.S.C.C.
1954 October 25--U.S. Supreme Court Refusal
1960 Fort Peck Tribes Constitution & By -laws
Revised
1967 Indian Policy Statement on Policy and
Legislation.
1972 Congress passes the Indian Education Act of 1972,
creating a BIA level Office of Indian Education as well
as a National Advisory Council on Indian Education
designed to improve the quality of public education for
Indian Students.
1978 Indian Claims Commission Dissolved
1979 March 31--Assiniboine Claims Council Reformed