This letter asks a Ute Indian Agent to call a meeting to discuss the appropriation of Indian lands; The record also contains a letter to Indian peoples living on the reservation to discuss the reason for an upcoming meeting.
The 1954 Ute Partition and Termination Act ended federal recognition of the mixed-blood Uinta of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation, removing them from the Ute Indian Tribe. Classified as being of mixed ancestry, they lost trust land protections, federal benefits, and tribal status. Like many Native communities subjected to termination policies, they faced devastating consequences, including the loss of land, resources, and traditional ways of life.
This letter asks a Ute Indian Agent to call a meeting to discuss the appropriation of Indian lands; The record also contains a letter to Indian peoples living on the reservation to discuss the reason for an upcoming meeting.