Paiute Tribes

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Native American Topics
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Buffalo Hunt under the Wolf-Skin Mask
Beginning Research
Tribes
Record Types
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Other Topics
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Introduction

Two major groups: Northern Paiute and the Southern Paiute.

Ancestral homelands: Northern Paiute in what is now northwestern Nevada, southeastern Oregon, southwestern Idaho, and northeastern California.Southern Paiute in area now western Utah, southern Nevada, northwestern Arizona, and southeastern California. Another group live along the Sierra Nevada in southeastern California - the Owen Valley Paiute

Tribal Headquarters

Fallon Band of Paiute-Shoshone

Fallon Band of Paiute-Shoshone
8955 Mission Road
Fallon, Nevada 89406
Telephone: 1-702-423-6075
Local call from the Reno area: 1-323-3780 Fax:1-702-423-5202



Fort McDermitt Paiute

Fort McDermitt Paiute
P.O. Box 457
McDermitt, Nevada 89421
Telephone: 1-702-532-8259
Fax:1-702-532-8263

U-tu Utu Gwaitu Paiute

U-tu Utu Gwaitu Paiute Tribe
567 Yellow Jacket Road
Benton, CA 93512
Ph. 1-760-933-2321
Fax 1-760-933-2412

History

Brief Timeline

  • 1776: Spanish explorers, Francisco Atanasio Dominquez and Silvestre Veles de Escalante
  • 1878: Bannock War
  • 1825: Contact with Jedediah Smith - fur trapper and trader
  • 1827: Peter Skene Ogden- fur trapper and trader
  • 1833: Joseph Walker
  • 1849: Gold discovered in California
  • 1858-1859:Coeur d'Alene War The Northern Paiute were allies of the Coeur d'Alene
  • 1860: Paiute War or Pyramid Lake War, the Indians routed an estimated 400 whites.
  • 1861: Battle Mountain second major encounter with federal troops
  • 1863: Western Shoshone and Northern PPaiutes were assigned to reservations
  • 1866-67: Snake War
  • Some members of the tribe Settled on the Malheur Reservation in Oregon
  • 1881- 1888: Paiute Indians in California, Nevada, Oregon and the Territory of Washington, migration to reservations at: Malheur River in Oregona and Fort McDermitt and Pyramid Lake in Nevada.
  • 1888-89: Jack Wilson (Wovoka), a Northern Paiute proclaimed a religion called the Ghost Dance; influenced by Wodziwob of the Walker River Reservation, who began practicing his version of the Ghost Dance in 1870. The Ghost Dance Religion spread to tribes all over the West.
  • 1957: Paiute Indians of Utah terminated, Tribal Membership 232, Tribal land 42,839
  • 1980: Paiute Indians of Utah Restoration Act "established the Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah as the federally recognized Tribe comprising five constituent bands (Cedar, Indian Peaks, Kanosh, Koosharem, and Shivwits)."[1]
  • 1992: population 11,045, (7,323 Northern Paiute; 2,266 Owens Valley Paiute; and 1,456 Southern Paiute)

Additional References

Ruth Hermann. The Paiutes of Pyramid Lake. San Jose, CA. Harlan-Young Press, 1972. FS Library Book 970.3 P166h

Agencies

Fort Bidwell Agency

Nevada Agency

Western Navaho

Bishop Agency

Reservations

Malheur Reservation

Walker River Reservation

Superintendencies

Nevada Superintendency

Utah Superintendency

Oregon Superintendency

Additional References

Bands and Groups

The term or designation of Paiute Indians is a very broad categorization of several bands and/or federally recognized tribes within the group so named. They are sometimes divided into Northern Paiute and Southern Paiute, and are sometimes grouped together with other tribes such as the Shoshone or Bannock Indians. For the most part, they have historically lived in the Great Basin area, and have ranged from Oregon and Idaho on the north to Arizona and southern California on the south, and from Utah on the east to northern California on the west. Some of the tribes, bands, or groups of Paiutes, with their colonies or reservations, include:

Records

Allotment

Alphabetical List of Paiute and Washoe Indian Allottes: Carson City Series, and Public Domain Shoshones and Others of Elko Series in Nevada. FS Library Book 970.1 Al #5

Correspondence and Census

Tribe Agency Location of Original Records

Pre-1880 Correspondence

M234 RG 75 Rolls 962

Roll Number

FS Library

Film

Number

Post-1885 Census

M595 RG 75 Rolls 693

Roll Number

FS Library

Film

Number

Paiute Fort Bidwell Agency, 1910-31 San Francisco - - 224-28, 330-34, 640-45

FS Library 576492

and 579740-579744

Paiute Nevada Agency, 1886-1905 San Francisco - - 288 FS Library 579698-579699


Paiute Western Navajo Agency, 1902-17 Los Angeles - 12, 18-19, 104,137, 149, 167, 199, 227-28, 252,268,288-89, 330-34, 410, 460, 615, 629-48 -

FS Library

583099-583104

Paiute Bishop Agency, 1916 Washington D.C. - - 2 FS Library 573848 Film
Paiute Fallon (Lovelocks) School, 1909-24 San Francisco - - 104, 252 FS Library 575796

Vital Records

Important Websites

General

References

  1. Paiute Tribe of Utah, (accessed 11 October 2024).