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The Warm Springs and Wasco bands gave up ownership rights to a 10,000,000-acre (40,000 km 2) area, which they had inhabited for over 10,000 years, in exchange for basic health care, education, and other forms of assistance as outlined by the Treaty with the Tribes of Middle Oregon (June 25, 1855). Other provisions of the Treaty of 1855 ensured ...
By signing the treaty the Wasco and Warm Springs tribes relinquished 10 million acres of land to the United States and kept 640,000 acres for their own use. The first people from the Paiute tribe to arrive on reservation were the 38 Paiutes that were forced to move onto the Warm Springs Reservation from the Yakama Reservation in 1879. Soon more ...
Warm Springs Reservation, of the Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs: 641,118 acres (2,594.51 km 2), mostly in Wasco County and Jefferson County, with parts in Clackamas, Marion, and Linn counties Planned reservations
Warm Springs is a census-designated place (CDP) and an unincorporated community in Jefferson County, Oregon, United States. [5] Located on the Warm Springs Indian Reservation , the community is also known as the "Warm Springs Agency".
The Deschutes River at the confluence of the Columbia, part of the historic homeland of the Tenino people. The Tenino people, commonly known today as the Warm Springs bands, are several Sahaptin Native American subtribes which historically occupied territory located in the North-Central portion of the American state of Oregon.
The six governments negotiating the agreement with the federal government included Washington state, Oregon state and the Yakama Nation, the Umatilla Tribes, the Nez Perce Tribe and the Warm ...
Many tribes were forcibly removed to reservations, including the Warm Springs Reservation, the Umatilla Reservation, and the Coast Indian Reservation. [48] The latter was quickly altered soon after its creation; the reservation lost a significant portion of its original land and was divided into the Grand Ronde and Siletz Reservations.
The Confederated Tribes of Warm Springs of Oregon have 4,000 enrolled tribal members that are Wasco, Walla Walla, Tenino (Warm Springs), and Paiute. [4] 200 of these 4,000 are estimated to be Wasco. [2] Wishram are predominantly enrolled in the Confederated Tribes and Bands of the Yakama Nation in Washington state.