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  2. Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soboba_Band_of_Luiseño...

    The Soboba Band of Luiseño Indians is a federally recognized tribe of Luiseño people, headquartered in Riverside County, California. On June 18, 1883, the Soboba Reservation was established by the United States government in San Jacinto. [5] There are five other federally recognized tribes of Luiseño people in southern California.

  3. List of Indian reservations in the United States - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Indian...

    Soboba Reservation: California: 482: 10.62 (27.50) ... A state designated American Indian reservation is the land area designated by a state for state-recognized ...

  4. Soboba Hot Springs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soboba_Hot_Springs

    For reservations and folder address John G. Althouse, Owner, San Jacinto, Cal." [18] In the 1920s the resort added a miniature golf course, and what was called the "Indian village" and intended to turn the resort's proximity to the Soboba reservation into a marketing hook.

  5. List of federally recognized tribes in the contiguous United ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_federally...

    Sandoval [5] warned, "it is not... that Congress may bring a community or body of people within range of this power by arbitrarily calling them an Indian tribe, but only that in respect of distinctly Indian communities the questions whether, to what extent, and for what time they shall be recognized and dealt with as dependent tribes" (at 46). [6]

  6. Pochea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pochea

    In 1774 the Juan Bautista de Anza expedition stopped at the Pochea Indian village during the expedition. Someone in the expedition had smallpox that was passed to a Pochea member. A smallpox epidemic broke out and spread. Those that did not die moved to the present day Soboba Reservation, home of the Soboba Band of Luiseno Indians. [1]

  7. San Jacinto Valley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Jacinto_Valley

    They were hunters and gatherers and they subsisted primarily on small game and acorns. The Soboba Indian Reservation, just east of San Jacinto, is now the home to the descendants of some of these people. The first Spanish explorers entered the San Jacinto Valley in the early 1770s.

  8. Chemehuevi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chemehuevi

    McKinley Fisher, a Chemehuevi man employed by the Indian Service at Colorado Agency, Arizona in 1957. The Chemehuevi were originally a desert tribe among the Southern Paiute group. Post-contact, they lived primarily in the eastern Mojave Desert and later Cottonwood Island in Nevada and the Chemehuevi Valley along the Colorado River in California .

  9. Luiseño - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luiseño

    During the October 2007 California wildfires, the Poomacha Fire ravaged the La Jolla Indian Reservation, destroying 92% of the reservation. State and federal agencies provided aid to rebuild the tribe's facilities and residents of the tribe were able to return to the reservation by the end of the next year.