And now:Ish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:

Utes swept aside by expansion

Indian domain carved into reservations
http://www.insidedenver.com/millennium/0601mile.shtml
By Mike Anton

Before Colorado, before the prospectors and the pioneers, before the French and the 
Spanish, there were the Utes.

For centuries, the tribe roamed Colorado virtually alone - hunting game and gathering 
food across some 79 million acres that stretched into present day Utah, Wyoming and 
New Mexico.

By 1881, they would be left with a mere fraction of that.

The story of how the Utes were herded onto reservations exemplifies how Indians 
throughout the West were stripped of ancestral lands during the 19th century.

It's a story replete with good intentions gone bad, treaties made and broken, 
ignorance and fear, a story of a people who tried and failed to sidestep the 
juggernaut of American expansion.

``It's a classic story of cultural misunderstandings and bigotry and racism,'' said 
Duane Smith, a history professor at Fort Lewis College in Durango.

For decades, the Utes avoided conflict with most white settlers. Their territory lay 
west of Colorado's booming Front Range, in the rugged mountains and dry plateaus of 
the largely unexplored frontier.

Early on, as the first wave of miners staked out gold and silver camps, the Utes 
sought peace. In 1863, as territorial Gov. John Evans battled raiding Indians on the 
plains, he signed a treaty with the Utes. Led by Chief Ouray, the tribe ceded the San 
Luis Valley in exchange for most of Colorado's Western Slope.

It didn't last.

Just five years later, Ouray traveled to Washington, D.C., met with the president and 
gave up more territory in exchange for peace. The new treaty left the Utes with 16 
million acres, the western third of Colorado, land the whites didn't want.

And then they did.

In the early 1870s, miners began pouring across the Continental Divide, flooding one 
new mining district after another - Silverton and Lake City, Red Mountain and Rico, 
Telluride and Ophir.

The profits were huge, and the Utes were in the way.

``It was suddenly the promised land,'' Smith said. ``And the Utes were doomed.''

The miners were illegally trespassing on the tribe's land. But the Utes were powerless 
to enforce the treaties, and the federal government either couldn't - or wouldn't - 
evict the newcomers.

In 1872, just four years after the last treaty was signed, Ouray again went to 
Washington. This time, the tribe gave up 4 million acres in exchange for more promises 
and an annual payment of $25,000.

``We had no choice whether or not to sign these treaties,'' Ute historian Alden 
Naranjo said. ``It was either they did it and hoped for the best, or they became 
landless. It was the best deal they could get.

``So we started with all of Colorado, then half, then a third. Then not even that. 
This was inevitable.''

In 1876, Colorado became a state and ``Utes Must Go'' became a political slogan across 
the Western Slope.

Tensions rose. Ouray, the multilingual peace-making chief chosen by the U.S. 
government to speak for all the Utes, couldn't, in fact, speak for the diverse bands 
of the tribe.

Some believed things would be best if the Utes just quit roaming, settled down and 
became ``civilized'' by adopting Christianity and farming.

Nathan Meeker was among them. The Indian agent quickly became the embodiment of 
everything the Utes feared and hated about the white settlers. Their rules and fences. 
Their schools and lectures. Their desire to turn warrior-hunters into plow-pushers.

``Meeker was having the men do things that only women had done,'' Smith said.

It all came to a head in the summer of 1879 when Meeker ordered an Indian horse-racing 
track plowed for crops. Meeker was attacked near the modern town in northwestern 
Colorado that bears his name. Worried, he called for Army troops to back him up.

When the soldiers from Wyoming reached the reservation boundary, they were ambushed 
and pinned down by Utes. Thirteen were killed, including the group's commanding 
officer.

By the time the survivors were rescued by reinforcements, Meeker and 11 other men at 
his White River agency were dead - some mutilated. Meeker's wife and daughter were 
among a group of women taken hostage. In the weeks to come, Ouray would secure their 
release.

The fate of the Utes, however, had been sealed.

``Either they or we must go, and we are not going,'' the Denver Times wrote. ``Western 
Empire is an inexorable fact. He who gets in the way of it will be crushed.''

In 1880, Chief Ouray made one final trip to Washington and signed one final treaty. 
The Utes would be left with three reservations - two in southwestern Colorado, one in 
Utah.<<<END EXCERPT
Reprinted under the Fair Use http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.html doctrine 
of international copyright law.
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