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The Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians (Ojibwe language: Mikinaakwajiw-ininiwag) is a federally recognized Native American tribe of Ojibwe based on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation in Belcourt, North Dakota. The tribe has 30,000 enrolled members.
Location of the main reservation Map of the Turtle Mountain reservation and trust lands.. The main reservation is located in Rolette County, North Dakota. [2] The reservation is six by twelve miles (9.7 km × 19.3 km), and it has one of the highest population densities of any reservation in the United States. [2]
Turtle Mountain Community College (TMCC) is a private tribal land-grant community college in Belcourt, North Dakota. It is located ten miles (16 km) from the Canada–US border in Turtle Mountain, the north central portion of North Dakota. In 2012, TMCC's enrollment was 630 full- and part-time certificate and degree-seeking students. [1]
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Levi, Sister M. Carolissa, CHIPPEWA INDIANS of Yesterday and Today(1956). [1] , an article in the Washington Post Verne Dusenberry, "Waiting for a Day That Never Comes" , Little Shell Tribe History, Little Shell Tribe Newsletter , hosted by Robert Dean Rudeseals The Little Shell Tribe of Montana Archived 2011-01-10 at the Wayback Machine
The Turtle Mountain Times is a weekly [1] local newspaper based in Belcourt, North Dakota. [2] It is published in print edition only, and in English. [ 1 ] It was established by the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians and the first edition was published in June 1993. [ 3 ]
Ottawa, Chippewa and Potawatomi Indians are Algonquian-speaking peoples who gradually migrated from the Atlantic coast, settling around the Great Lakes throughout Canada, and the Midwest of what became the United States: Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.
Chippewa notation: The Sharrock report/addendum to the official Ewers Report notes the 1908 land was proposed for "Rocky Boy's Band of Chippewa Indians". [citation needed] Chippewa notation : According to the papers of Indian agent Frank Bird Linderman (1869-1938), [7] Chief Rocky Boy died at Ft. Assiniboine on April 18, 1916. Contemporary ...