When Jimmie "Jim" Atwine was born about 1868 on the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation, his father, Atwine, was 35 and his mother, Greep-Kotch Chee-Puck, was 24. He married Tavian (Tave-ave) Wopsock about 1890 on the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation. They were the parents of at least four sons and three daughters. He later lived in Uintah and in Ouray for about six years. He died on 16 June 1963 in Neola, Utah, at the age of 96, and was buried there.
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...







