In 1950, the Ute Indians of the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation in northeastern Utah were awarded a seventeen million dollar judgment by the U. S. Court of Claims. This provided an unusually challenging opportunity to the Utes and to the administrators of the Indian Service. The official climate of opinion both off and on the reservation was in favor of using the money for Indian-created social and economic development plans. Since the Utes had been organized as a corporate group in 1938 under the Indian Reorganization Act, Congress, the Indian Service, and others felt that the requisite organization for self-planned programming was present.
PDF DOWNLOAD AUDIO BOOK The Dispossessed: Cultural Genocide of the Mixed-Blood Utes, an Advocate's Chronicle. In this disturbing and provocative study, Salt Lake City attorney Parker M. Nielson chronicles the termination of the mixed-blood Utes from the Northern Ute Indian Tribe. He outlines how the termination process, initiated by Utah Senator Arthur V. Watkins, was visited on the Utes in a singular action by the U.S Congress and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, the only partial termination of any tribe in the nation. Termination for the mixedbloods meant loss of both tribal membership and any further claims upon the Bureau of Indian Affairs, similar to the impact of the termination policy upon other tribes in the 1950s. But for the mixed-blood terminated the losses went much further than being cut off from government assistance. Nielson, with first-hand information gained as legal representative for the terminated Utes, details how the separation of the terminees from tribal member...
