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Native American jewelry for Valentine's Day


Yankton Sioux Reservation

Tribal Headquarters:  Marty
Number of enrolled members:  7,500+
Reservation Population:  3,800
Trust Area:  36,561.65 Acres

The Yankton Sioux Reservation is located in the south central part of South Dakota, occupying the eastern half of Charles Mix County. The Yankton Service Unit is comprised of six counties; Bon Homme, Charles Mix, Douglas, and Hutchinson, South Dakotaand Boyd and Knox, Nebraska.

Struck By The Ree was a highly respected Yankton Chief.

Struck By The Ree was a highly respected Yankton Chief. His grave is located near Greenwood. Legend has it that when Lewis and Clark passed through his village, Lewis swaddled the baby (Struck By The Ree) in a U.S. flag and baptized him as an American.

The reservation is mostly farmland with some small areas of timber. The remainder is rolling hills and prairie suitable for grazing. The Missouri River is the southern border of the reservation. Fort Randall Dam on the Missouri River creates Lake Francis Case which is on the southwestern part of the reservation. The land around the lake area is high rolling hills with wooded coulees providing drainage into the lake.

The Yanktons, a Sioux tribe from the Mississippi Region, settled into South Dakota and Minnesota in the 18th century. The Yanktons ceded 2.2 million acres to Iowa between 1830 and 1837. In 1858 the Tribe ceded another 11 million acres. By 1860, it had turned over almost all of its remaining land to the U.S. government, and most Yanktons moved to the Yankton Reservation in South Dakota. On establishment, the Reservation had 435,000 acres, but homesteading by white settlers starting in 1887 withdrew much of the Reservation from tribal control.

"Our Story" is performed in an outdoor setting of drama and debate in the historical context of of the Yankton Sioux's meeting with Lewis and Clark.

"Our Story" is performed by tribal members, actors, local community members and children, in an outdoor setting of drama and debate in the historical context of of the Yankton Sioux's meeting with Lewis and Clark.

The Yanktons are known as the "Ihanktonwan Dakota Oyate" or "People of the End Villiage". Although many of the Yankton refer to themselves as Dakota, they are actually a group of the Middle Sioux division also known as Nakota. There are also members of the Northern Ponca and Santee Sioux Tribes, both from Nebraska, residing in the Yankton Sioux area.

Today, the major employers of the Yankton Sioux Tribe are the Fort Randall Casino, Marty Indian School, Yankton Sioux Housing Authority, Yankton Sioux Substance Abuse Program facilites and Indian Health Services.

The governing body of the Yankton Sioux Tribe is the Tribal Business and Claims Committee. The committee is comprised of nine elected members.

Cheyenne River

Crow Creek

Flandreau Santee

Pine Ridge

Lower Brule

Rosebud

Standing Rock

Sisseton Wahpeton

Sources and more information:

  • Mnisose.org
  • Yanktonsioux.com

 


 



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