Search Nevada County Historical Archive
Enter a name, company, place or keywords to search across this item. Then click "Search" (or hit Enter).
To search for an exact phrase, use "double quotes", but only after trying without quotes. To exclude results with a specific word, add dash before the word. Example: -Word.

Collection: Directories and Documents > Tanis Thorne Native Californian & Nisenan Collection

A Case Study of a Northern California Indian Tribe - Cultural Change to 1860 (1977) (109 pages)

Go to the Archive Home
Go to Thumbnail View of this Item
Go to Single Page View of this Item
Download the Page Image
Copy the Page Text to the Clipboard
Don't highlight the search terms on the Image
Show the Page Image
Show the Image Page Text
Share this Page - Copy to the Clipboard
Reset View and Center Image
Zoom Out
Zoom In
Rotate Left
Rotate Right
Toggle Full Page View
Flip Image Horizontally
More Information About this Image
Get a Citation for Page or Image - Copy to the Clipboard
Go to the Previous Page (or Left Arrow key)
Go to the Next Page (or Right Arrow key)
Page: of 109  
Loading...
plan called for the relocation of Indians by "simple agreement" to these reservations which would be continually relocated whenever immigrant population pressure made it necessary. Beale referred to the achievements in farming and ranching of the valley Nisenan tribes who labored at Sutter's Fort during the rancho-peonage period as evidence that California Indians could be made a source of profit for immigrants 154 Congress agreed to Beale's new plan and appropriated $250,000.00 for the creation of five Indian military reservations in California.-°° However, Beale channeled the entire congressional appropriation into the development of only one reservation at Fort Tejon, in southern California. The Grass Valley tribe was the only Nisenan people to be affected directly by the reservation system under Beale's superintendency. The tribe sent representatives to Fort Tejon to survey the reservation program and make recommendations on relocation. If the tribal representatives favored reservation life, federal and state officials expected many foothill Nisenan tribes in the Grass Valley area would relocate to Fort Tejon in the spring of ies4°° During the fall of 1853, while their tribal representatives were still at Fort Tejon, many foothill Nisenan in the Grass Valley area were starving because their rations of pinenuts, manazanita berries, and grasshoppers had been cut off. An Indian called Wad-lu-pe, who was not native to this area, took the survivors to the general store at the town of Grass Valley. Wad-lu-pe spoke to the owner. I have come with some of my adopted people to secure food on my word of honor without money. At present we have no gold, but when the rains of spring have washed the hillsides we will have gold to pay. Our women, mothers, sisters and daughters are starving. Our papooses cry and whimper in vain. Will the white merchant, who has an abundance in store help the poor Indians to live through the winter?15 Wad-lu-pe's speech was not a whining plea for charity but a business proposition, based on honor and tuteerions The merchant agreed to provide goods for the Grass Valley Nisenan village. In the spring, Wad-lu-pe returned to the general store with about three hundred Indians in the Grass Valley area. They paid their bill and bought other : store goods with the remaining gold. Wad-lu-pe was seen at intervals around Grass Valley for the next three years and was generally considered Chief of the Grass Valley 35