Book

The White Earth tragedy: ethnicity and dispossession at a Minnesota Anishinaabe Reservation, 1889-1920

University of Nebraska PressLincoln • Published In 1994 • Pages:

By: Meyer, Melissa L. (Melissa Lee).

Abstract
The White Earth tragedy is the Ojibwa 'Trail of Tears.' It begins with the Ojibwa, or Anishinaabeg, removal to the White Earth Reservation in northern Minnesota, following the assassination of their leader, Hole in the Day, in 1868. The concentration of Anishinaabeg on the reservation would serve the interests of Métis middlemen and traders, and free up northern Minnesota's natural resources. The 1889 Nelson Act (Minnesota's version of the Dawes Act) privatized reservation land. Well-intentioned assimilationists sought to transform the Anishinaabeg into Yeoman farmers, however, unscrupulous Métis sought to defraud the Anishinaabeg of their land in collusion with state politicians and the lumber industry. Although the property of 'full-blooded' Indians was supposedly protected under a twenty-five-year trust period, that of 'mixed-bloods' was up for grabs. A carefully documented genealogical roll identifying 'full-bloods' was nullified by a 'scientific' study by anthropologists to show mixed phenotypes. Although the Nelson Act conferred property rights to individual Anishinaabeg, most did not receive due process under the law, in a clear case of fraud and racism.
Subjects
Real property
Ethnic stratification
External relations
Public welfare
Political parties
Property offenses
culture
Ojibwa
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
North America
Sub Region
Arctic and Subarctic
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Historian
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1998
Field Date
Not Specified
Coverage Date
1867-1986
Coverage Place
White Earth Reservation, Minnesota, United States
Notes
Melissa L. Meyer
Includes bibliographical references (p. 297-313) and index
LCCN
93023456
LCSH
Ojibwa Indians