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Indians
inhabited Oregons inland valleys for thousands of years before
Euro-Americans began to arrive in the late 18th Century. In the
early 1780s, and again in the 1830s, diseases spread by seafarers
and fur trappers swept through Oregons valleys killing most
of the native population. The opening of the Oregon Trail in the
1840s incr4eased pressure to remove the remaining Indians from their
homelands. In 1856, the U.S. Government created the Grand Ronde
Reservation, and in the winter of 1857, federal troops forced the
native people to leave their aboriginal lands and march to the reservation.
The
Grand Ronde reservation, originally 70,000 acres, was later divided
into individual parcels for the Indians, and surplus
land was sold to non-Indians. In 1954, the Grand Ronde Tribe was
terminated, and all but 7 1/2 acres of the Tribes
land was sold. Termination meant the U.S. Government no longer recognized
the Tribe or its people as Indians.
In
1983, after a prolonged and dedicated effort by tribal members and
their supporters, the U.S. Government restored the Tribe to federal
recognition. In 1988, Congress re-established a 9,811 acre reservation
in the mountains north of Grand Ronde. The Tribe has since acquired
additional land, built a community center, and has developed housing,
education, health care, and other programs for tribal members. The
Tribe has also embarked upon an ambitious economic development program
as part of its plan to achieve self-sufficiency.
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