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Document:
Hell Gate Treaty, 1855
Articles of agreement and convention made and concluded at the
treatyground at Hell Gate, in the Bitter Root Valley, this sixteenth
day of July, in the year one thousand eight hundred and fifty-five, by
and between Isaac I. Stevens, governor and superintendent of Indian
affairs for the Territory of Washington, on the part of the United
States, and the undersigned chiefs, head-men, and delegates of the
confederated tribes of the Flathead, Kootenay, and Upper Pend
d'Oreilles Indians, on behalf of the acting for said confederated
tribes, and being duly authorized thereto by them. It being understood
and agreed that the said confederated tribes do hereby constitute a
nation, under the name of the Flathead Nation, with Victor, the head
chief of the Flathead tribe, as the head chief of the said nation, and
that the several chiefs, head-men, and delegates, whose names are
signed to this treaty, do hereby, in behalf of their respective tribes,
recognise Victor as said head chief.
ARTICLE 1. The said confederated tribe of Indians hereby cede,
relinquish, and convey to the United States all their right, title, and
interest in and to the country occupied or claimed by them, bounded and
described as follows, to wit:
Commencing on the main ridge of the Rocky Mountains at the
forty-ninth (49th) parallel of latitude, thence westwardly on that
parallel to the divide between the Flat-bow or Kootenay River and
Clarke's Fork, thence southerly and southeasterly along said divide to
the one hundred and fifteenth degree of longitude, (115 degrees,)
thence in a southwesterly direction to the divide between the sources
of the St. Regis Borgia and the Coeur d'Alene Rivers, thence
southeasterly and southerly along the main ridge of the Bitter Root
Mountains to the divide between the head-waters of the Koos-koos-kee
River and of the southwestern fork of the Bitter Root River, thence
easterly along the divide separating the waters of the several
tributaries of the Bitter Root River from the waters flowing into the
Salmon and Snake Rivers to the main ridge of the Rocky Mountains, and
thence northerly along said main ridge to the place of beginning.
ARTICLE 2. There is, however, reserved from the lands above ceded,
for the use and occupation of the said confederated tribes, and as a
general Indian reservation, upon which may be placed other friendly
tribes and bands of Indians of the Territory of Washington who may
agree to be consolidated with the tribes parties to this treaty, under
the common designation of the Flathead Nation, with Victor, head chief
of the Flathead tribe, as the head chief of the nation, the tract of
land included within the following boundaries, to wit:
Commencing at the source of the main branch of the Jocko River;
thence along the divide separating the waters flowing into the Bitter
Root River from those flowing into the Jocko to a point on Clarke's
Fork between the Camash and Horse Prairies; thence northerly to, and
along the divide bounding on the west the Flathead River, to a point
due west from the point half way in latitude between the northern and
southern extremities of the Flathead Lake; thence on a due east course
to the divide whence the Crow, the Prune, the So-ni-el-em and the Jocko
Rivers take their rise, and thence southerly along said divide to the
place of beginning.
All which tract shall be set apart, and, so far as necessary,
surveyed and marked out for the exclusive use and benefit of said
confederated tribes as an Indian reservation. Nor shall any white man,
excepting those in the employment of the Indian department, be
permitted to reside upon the said reservation without permission of the
confederated tribes, and the superintendent and agent. And the said
confederated tribes agree to remove to and settle upon the same within one
year after the ratification of this treaty. In the meantime it shall be
lawful for them to reside upon any ground not in the actual claim and
occupation of citizens of the United States, and upon any ground
claimed or occupied, if with the permission of the owner or claimant.
Guaranteeing however the right to all citizens of the United States
to enter upon and occupy as settlers any lands not actually occupied
and cultivated by said Indians at this time, and not included in the
reservation above named. And provided, That any substantial
improvements heretofore made by any Indian, such as fields enclosed and
cultivated and houses erected upon the lands hereby ceded, and which he
may be compelled to abandon in consequence of this treaty, shall be
valued under the direction of the President of the United States, and
payment made therefor in money, or improvements of an equal value be
made for said Indian upon the reservation; and no Indian will be
required to abandon the improvements aforesaid, now occupied by him,
until their value in money or improvements of an equal value shall be
furnished him as aforesaid.
ARTICLE 3. And provided, That if necessary for the public
convenience roads may be run through the said reservation; and, on the
other hand, the right of way with free access from the same to the
nearest public highway is secured to them, as also the right in common
with citizens of the United States to travel upon all public highways.
The exclusive right of taking fish in all the streams running
through or bordering said reservation is further secured to said
Indians; as also the right of taking fish at all usual and accustomed
places, in common with citizens of the Territory, and of erecting
temporary buildings for curing; together with the privilege of
hunting, gathering roots and berries, and pasturing their horses and
cattle upon open and unclaimed land.
ARTICLE 4. In consideration of the above cession, the United States
agree to pay to the said confederated tribes of Indians, in addition to
the goods and provisions distributed to them at the time of signing
this treaty the sum of one hundred and twenty thousand dollars, in the
following manner - - that is to say: For the first year after the
ratification hereof, thirty-six thousand dollars, to be expended under
the direction of the President, in providing for their removal to the
reservation, breaking up and fencing farms, building houses for them,
and for such other objects as he may deem necessary. For the next four
years, six thousand dollars each year; for the next five years, five
thousand dollars each year; for the next five years, four thousand
dollars each year; and for the next five years, three thousand dollars
each year.
All which said sums of money shall be applied to the use and benefit
of the said Indians, under the direction of the President of the United
States, who may from time to time determine, at his discretion, upon
what beneficial objects to expend the same for them, and the
superintendent of Indian affairs, or other proper officer, shall each
year inform the President of the wishes of the Indians in relation
thereto.
ARTICLE 5. The United States further agree to establish at suitable
points within said reservation, within one year after the ratification
hereof, an agricultural and industrial school, erecting the necessary
buildings, keeping the same in repair, and providing it with furniture,
books, and stationery, to be located at the agency, and to be free to
the children of the said tribes, and to employ a suitable instructor or
instructors. To furnish one blacksmith shop, to which shall be
attached a tin and gun shop; one carpenter's shop; one wagon and
ploughmaker's shop; and to keep the same in repair, and furnished with
the necessary tools. To employ two farmers, one blacksmith, one tinner,
one gunsmith, one carpenter, one wagon and plough maker, for the
instruction of the Indians in trades, and to assist them in the same.
To erect one saw-mill and one flouring-mill, keeping the same in repair
and furnished with the necessary tools and fixtures, and to employ two
millers. To erect a hospital, keeping the same in repair, and provided
with the necessary medicines and furniture, and to employ a physician;
and to erect, keep in repair, and provide the necessary furniture the
buildings required for the accommodation of said employees. The said
buildings and establishments to be maintained and kept in repair as
aforesaid, and the employees to be kept in service for the period of
twenty years.
And in view of the fact that the head chiefs of the said
confederated tribes of Indians are expected and will be called upon to
perform many services of a public character, occupying much of their
time, the United States further agree to pay to each of the Flathead,
Kootenay, and Upper Pend d'Oreilles tribes five hundred dollars per
year, for the term of twenty years after the ratification hereof, as a
salary for such persons as the said confederated tribes may select to
be their head chiefs, and to build for them at suitable points on the
reservation a comfortable house, and properly furnish the same, and to
plough and fence for each of them ten acres of land. The salary to be
paid to, and the said houses to be occupied by, such head chiefs so
long as they may be elected to that position by their tribes, and no
longer.
And all the expenditures and expenses contemplated in this article
of this treaty shall be defrayed by the United States, and shall not be
deducted from the annuities agreed to be paid to said tribes. Nor
shall the cost of transporting the goods for the annuity payments be a
charge upon the annuities, but shall be defrayed by the United States.
ARTICLE 6. The President may from time to time, at his discretion,
cause the whole, or such portion of such reservation as he may think
proper, to be surveyed into lots, and assign the same to such
individuals or families of the said confederated tribes as are willing
to avail themselves of the privilege, and will locate on the same as a
permanent home, on the same terms and subject to the same regulations
as are provided in the sixth article of the treaty with the Omahas, so
far as the same may be applicable.
ARTICLE 7. The annuities of the aforesaid confederated tribes of
Indians shall not be taken to pay the debts of individuals.
ARTICLE 8. The aforesaid confederated tribes of Indians acknowledge
their dependence upon the Government of the United States, and promise
to be friendly with all citizens thereof, and pledge themselves to
commit no depredations upon the property of such citizens. And should
any one or more of them violate this pledge, and the fact be
satisfactorily proved before the agent, the property taken shall be
returned, or, in default thereof, or if injured or destroyed,
compensation may be made by the Government out of the annuities. Nor
will they make war on any other tribe except in self-defence, but will
submit all matters of difference between them and other Indians to the
Government of the United States, or its agent, for decision, and abide
thereby. And if any of the said Indians commit any depredations on any
other Indians within the jurisdiction of the United States, the same
rule shall prevail as that prescribed in this article, in case of
depredations against citizens. And the said tribes agree not to
shelter or conceal offenders against the laws of the United States, but
to deliver them up to the authorities for trial.
ARTICLE 9. The said confederated tribes desire to exclude from
their reservation the use of ardent spirits, and to prevent their
people from drinking the same; and therefore it is provided that any
Indian belonging to said confederated tribes of Indians who is guilty
of bringing liquor into said reservation, or who drinks liquor, may have
his or her proportion of the annuities withheld from him or her for such
time as the President may determine.
ARTICLE 10. The United States further agree to guaranty the
exclusive use of the reservation provided for in this treaty, as
against any claims which may be urged by the Hudson Bay Company under
the provisions of the treaty between the United States and Great
Britain of the fifteenth of June, eighteen hundred and forty-six, in
consequence of the occupation of a trading-post on the Pru-in River by
the servants of that company.
ARTICLE 11. It is, moreover, provided that the Bitter Root Valley,
above the Loo-lo Fork, shall be carefully surveyed and examined, and if
it shall prove, in the judgment of the President, to be better adapted
to the wants of the Flathead tribe than the general reservation
provided for in this treaty, then such portions of it as may be
necessary shall be set apart as a separate reservation for the said
tribe. No portion of the Bitter Root Valley, above the Loo-lo Fork,
shall be opened to settlement until such examination is had and the
decision of the President made known.
ARTICLE 12. This treaty shall be obligatory upon the contracting
parties as soon as the same shall be ratified by the President and
Senate of the United States.
In testimony whereof, the said Isaac I. Stevens, governor and
superintendent of Indian affairs for the Territory of Washington, and
the undersigned head chiefs, chiefs and principal men of the Flathead,
Kootenay, and Upper Pend d'Oreilles tribes of Indians, have hereunto
set their hands and seals, at the place and on the day and year
hereinbefore written.
Isaac I. Stevens, (L.S.)
Governor and Superintendent Indian Affairs W.T.
Victor, head chief of the Flathead Nation, his x mark. (L.S.)
Alexander, chief of the Upper Pend d'Oreilles, his x mark. (L.S.)
Michelle, chief of the Kootenays, his x mark. (L.S.)
Ambrose, his x mark. (L.S.)
Pah-soh, his x mark. (L.S.)
Bear Track, his x mark. (L.S.)
Adolphe, his x mark. (L.S.)
Thunder, his x mark. (L.S.)
Big Canoe, his x mark. (L.S.)
Kootel Chah, his x mark. (L.S.)
Paul, his x mark. (L.S.)
Andrew, his x mark. (L.S.)
Michelle, his x mark. (L.S.)
Battiste, his x mark. (L.S.)
Kootenays
Gun Flint, his x mark. (L.S.)
Little Michelle, his x mark. (L.S.)
Paul See, his x mark. (L.S.)
Moses, his x mark. (L.S.)
James Doty, secretary.
R. H. Lansdale, Indian Agent.
W. H. Tappan, sub Indian Agent.
Henry R. Crosire,
Gustavus Sohon, Flathead Interpreter.
A. J. Hoecken, sp. mis.
William Craig.
Ratified Mar. 8, 1859.
Proclaimed Apr. 18, 1859.
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