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Havasupai Indian Reservation

Havasupai Indian Reservation
Havsuw’ Baaja
Reservation
Flag of Havasupai Indian Reservation
Flag
Capital Supai
Government
 • Body Havasupai Tribal Council
 • Chairman Don E. Watahomigie
 • Vice Chairman Edmond Tilousi
Area
 • Total 763.22 km2 (294.68 sq mi)
Population (2010)
 • Total 639
 • Density 0.84/km2 (2.2/sq mi)
Time zone MST

The Havasupai Indian Reservation is a Native American reservation for the Havasupai people, surrounded entirely by the Grand Canyon National Park, in Coconino county in Arizona, United States. It is considered one of America's most remote Indian reservations. The reservation is governed by a seven-member tribal council, led by a chairman who is elected from among the members of the council. The capital of the reservation is Supai, situated at the bottom of Cataract Canyon, one of the tributary canyons of the Grand Canyon. Havasupai is a combination of the words Havasu (meaning "blue-green water") and pai (meaning "people"), thus meaning "people of the blue-green waters".

The Havasupai led a semi-nomadic life amongst the canyons and plateaus in and around Havasu Canyon for centuries. In 1882, President Rutherford B. Hayes created the Havasupai Indian Reservation, and restricted the tribe to 518 acres in Havasu Canyon. The rest of their ancestral lands were taken by the federal government for public use. According to reports, the Havasupai were completely unaware of the act for several years. The reduction of their lands led to a disruption on the tribe's way of life, and constant tension between the tribe and the U.S. Government.

With the creation of the Grand Canyon National Park in 1919 the reservation was completely surrounded by National Park lands. By agreement with the federal government, the reservation and the trails which led down to it remained sovereign to Havasupai tribe. The tribe continually lobbied the United States to restore more of their ancestral land to them, although to no avail. In the 1950s a superintendent of the Grand Canyon, John McLaughlin, proposed to take over the reservation, but he was rebuffed by the tribe.

Eventually the persistence of the tribe began to pay off. In 1968 the tribe won a case against the government with the Indian Claim Commission. The ruling stated that the lands had been taken illegally from the tribe in 1882, and that the tribe had the right to recover the lands by paying the government fair market value for the property. At a rate of 55 cents an acre, the value of the lands was sent at slightly more than one million dollars. However, the tribe still fought for having the lands returned to them, without having to pay for them. The tribe found support from the Nixon administration, and began to lobby for passage of congressional bill S. 1296, which would return the lands to the tribe. Finally, in 1975, the U.S. Congress passed the Grand Canyon National Park Enlargement Act, which was signed into law by President Gerald Ford on January 4, 1975. Among other things, the Act returned 188,077 acres (76,112 ha) of plateau and canyon lands to the Havasupai, which is what forms the reservation today.


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