Title: The%20Dawes%20Act
1The Dawes Act
- Transfer of Reservation Lands to Whites Through
the Political Process - AI_13_13
2Demand for Indian Land
- In 1890 the total Indian population was less
than 250,000, and the total area of reservations
in 1887 was roughly 138 million acres (about
two-and-one-half times the size of the state of
Georgia). - Although much Indian land was relatively arid, it
seemed to land-hungry westerners that Indians had
more land than they could ever use. - At the same time, an active reform movement in
the East sought to assimilate Indians into
mainstream society by promoting agriculture. - This influential group was made up of Protestant
religious reformers, educators, and government
officials.
3Dawes Act (1887)
- Congress tried to satisfy both westerners and
reformers by passing the General Allotment Act,
or Dawes Act, of 1887. - The humanitarian reformers who pushed for the
passage of the Dawes Act believed that dividing
reservations into privately owned farms would
break the hold of the chiefs over individual
Indians, encourage Indians to become farmers, and
hasten the assimilation of Indians into white
culture. - The Lake Mohonk Friends of the Indian led late
19th-century Indian reform on the ground that
allotment would promote the Jeffersonian ideal
among landed Indians, - This belief was based largely on an inaccurate
model of Indian societiescommunalthat was
popular among social scientists in the 1880s.
4Dawes Act
- Backers of the Allotment Act touted it as a
necessary step for improving the welfare of
Indians. - As Senator Dawes himself stated, "Till this
people will consent to give up their lands, and
divide them among their citizens so that each can
own the land he cultivates, they will not make
much progress."
5Allotments Surplus Lands
- The Dawes Act gave the president the authority to
survey reservations when he thought it was
appropriate. - Individuals who refused allotments could have
one assigned to them. - Before 1903 a tribe had to consent to have
surplus lands opened for settlement. - After that date, the courts ruled that the
federal government could sell surplus lands
without a tribe's consent and hold the receipts
in trust for members of the tribe.
6(No Transcript)
7Dawes Act Good Incentives?
- Allotted land was to be held in trust for the
Indians for 25 years, after which it would
convert to fee simple (homesteads became fee
simple in 5 years) - Allotments could be smaller if a reservation did
not have enough land to give each family 160
acres, and in some cases families actually got as
little as 10 acres. - Backers claimed that allotment would benefit
Indians by dividing up the reservation lands into
private ownership plots - create all of the good incentives that private
property rights generally create (see WSJ on
Argentina families) - facilitate assimilation of the Indians into
American culture
8Allotment 1887-1934
- After 1887 most Indian reservations were allotted
under terms of the Dawes Act, but some tribes,
especially in Oklahoma, received land allotted
under special legislation. - Reservations in desirable farming areas were
allotted first, whereas reservations in remote
or arid locations were sometimes never allotted. - Thus a number of tribes in the Southwest and
elsewhere were never allotted. - Most reservations were allotted between 1887 and
1910, but allotment work continued until 1934.
9Shrinking Indian Lands
- Congress saw allotment as the key to all other
programs, and it remained at the center of
federal Indian policy until 1934. - In all, over 41 million acres were allotted to
Indians under a variety of laws and treaties. - One consequence was that that the land base of
Indian tribes declined from 138 million acres in
1887 to 34,287,336 acres in 1934, including
additions to some reservations in the Southwest. - Moreover, another 17.8 million acres of land
allotted to individuals was still under federal
supervision. - Allotments no longer supervised by the federal
government had either been sold or the owners no
longer had restrictions on their land.
10Shrinking Indian Lands
- The results of this policy were far-reaching and
catastrophic for affected tribes. - A large number of the individual
allotmentsthough meant to establish Indian
family farms or ranchesdevolved to non-Indian
individuals and off-reservation governments
through encumbrances, tax liens, bankruptcy, and
outright swindles. - While the consequences of the allotment period
vary from reservation to reservation, in
aggregate the result was the passing of nearly
two-thirds of Indian lands90 million of 138
million acres
11(No Transcript)
12Special Interest Groups
- Given the importance that private ownership holds
in theories of economic development, one might
think that economists would cheer the goals of
the Allotment Act. - But doing so would ignore the lessons from
public choice economics which call for closer
scrutiny of the interest groups backing the
legislation. - At least two important interest groups involved
in the allotment process must be mentioned - Non-Indian settlers
- Office of Indian Affairs (BIA)
13Interest Group Politics and The Allotment of
Indian Lands
- Settlers and the bureaucracy (discussed below)
clearly benefited from the Allotment Act and the
resulting developments. - like the bootleggers and Baptists example
- settlers and bureaucrats were like the
bootleggers. - many people felt that "Americanization" was the
best way to help Indians - religious groups wanted to convert Indians to
Christianity - Friends of the Indians" (missionaries, clergy,
east coast and especially New York journalists
and educators, and government officials) was
organized to pursue full citizenship rights for
Indians
14Friends of the Indians, and other Political
Supporters of the Act
- also advocated breaking up the reservations by
dividing them into homesteads for the Indians,
and a government run education system for all
Indians in order to turn them into "good
Americans." - felt that the Indians had to give up their strong
communities, seeing them as communistic, and that
private property rights was the way to do this - strongly supported the Dawes act even though it
did not go as far as they wanted in some areas - BIA also supported the act
- contended that it was the means by which they
would ultimately allow the Indians to stand on
their own - Apparently wanted to put themselves out of work!
- no strong opposition to the Allotment Act
15Bootleggers Baptists
- The law passed with little opposition, since it
also allowed white farmers to purchase unallotted
lands (called surplus land). - Under the Dawes Act, reservations were to be
divided into 160-acre farms called allotments. - Each family's land was placed in trust for a
25-year period to prevent Indians from being
defrauded of their land. - But this also meant that the land could not be
sold or mortgaged without government permission.
16Policy Driven by BIA
- If land-hungry settlers were the main
beneficiaries of federal allotment policy, a
question immediately arises why didn't the
federal government either declare all
reservation land surplus and open it to
homesteading, or grant the Indians full land
title without trusteeship so that whites could
simply buy the Indian land and gain control more
rapidly? - Had the lands been given directly to Indians or
whites, what role would have remained for the BIA
beyond supplying Indians with agricultural
technology and advice? - The allotment system allowed the bureaucarcy to
increase its administrative costs by supervising
each allotted parcel.
17Actual Outcome of the Dawes Act
- A very complicated and heavily supervised
property rights allocation emerged from the
allotment process that - proved to be inefficient
- created a situation ripe for corruption.
- Inefficient because for most of the Indian
Reservations, 160 acres was not enough for a
subsistence farm - Homesteading was used to break up federal land in
the Midwest first, where the soil is rich and
there is substantial precipitation, so 160 acres
was a pretty efficient size
18Inefficient Sizes of Allotments
- 160 acres was much too small in the more arid
plains of the west, and the even more arid lands
of the southwest and inter-mountain area. - homesteaders found this out when they moved into
the plains only to discover that they could not
survive on the farms they got - same was clearly true for most of the
reservations. - In many cases, reservations were large enough so
that the Indians could have been given larger
tracts (they actually were in the extremely arid
areas where some Indian families got as much as
400 acres
19The Real Reason for Inefficiently Small Allotments
- Under the Dawes Act, Surplus reservation land
not allotted, was opened to white settlers - The Homestead Act was ultimately changed when it
became apparent that 160 acres was too small, but
where the reservation land was attractive to
whites, the Indian allotments were not changed - A primary purpose of the Allotment Act was to
make it possible for white settlers to obtain
reservation lands - not interested in Indian lands in extremely arid
areas, so those Indians were given more than 160
acres, but this did not happen with land
attractive to whites
20Land Rush
- Arriving for the Land Rush Yellowstone Valley,
Montana
211891 Amendment to the Dawes Act
- Allowed lease of allotted lands
- Much of the allotted land was not being shifted
into production, probably because the parcels
were too small to work efficiently - Parcels of land had to be combined somehow to
achieve the scale that was necessary. - By leasing allotted land, a farmer could expand
the size of an operating farm to achieve the
efficient scale of operation.
221891 Amendment
- By amending the Allotment Act in 1891 to allow
for the leasing of allotments that had not been
released from trusteeship, Congress allowed
whites access to the lands while preserving an
important role for the bureaucracy. - This gave BIA Indian agents even more power
because it was up to them to determine and
enforce the terms of leases.
23Whites Gain Control of Reservation Lands too
- Lease could be to other Indians or to whites
- Whites probably had comparative advantages in
agriculture over many Indians, at least outside
the 5 civilized tribes and a few others that had
substantial experience in agriculture before they
were put on reservations - Whites could pay more for use of the allotted
land than it was worth to the Indians (e.g.,
whites had access to credit markets and often
owned other land to use as collateral)
24Special Interest Theory The IRA (1934)
- From the special-interest theory of allotment,
two important hypotheses follow - 1. Allotment would occur first in those areas
where whites placed a higher value on the land
held by Indians. - 2. As the allotment process transferred millions
of acres out of the control of the BIA, the
bureaucracy would have lost nearly all of its
power had it not halted the process by retaining
trust authority under the Indian Reorganization
Act of 1934.
25Hypothesis 1
- The model predicts that a reservation in a state
like Arizona (less than 20 inches of rainfall)
would be allotted 10.2 years later than a
reservation in a state like Nebraska (more than
20 inches of rainfall). - The model predicts that a reservation in Michigan
(population density more than 16) would be
allotted 14.0 years earlier than a reservation
in Wyoming (population density less than 16) - These results support the theory that Indian
policy was heavily dominated by non-Indian
interest groups.
26Timing of Allotments
- Allotment did not occur immediately
- required substantial bureaucratic undertaking to
survey and allot the Indian lands - many reservations operated under their customary
systems of property rights well into the 1900s - Allotment was still going on into the 1930s, and
some reservations were never allotted at all
because the allotment process was finally ended. - timing of allotment was also politically driven
- reservations containing surplus lands that were
most desirable to white settlers were allotted
first, and those that were the least desirable
waited.
27Evidence of Political Influence
- Study by Carlson examines the timing of allotment
and provides evidence that the earliest
allotments were those in the most populated
states where the most land had been improved for
ag - within those states, the reservations that got
the most rainfall were allotted first. - allotment was ended in 1934
- by that time the average quality of Indian land
had clearly fallen as parts of the best land had
been transferred to whites while the worst land
remained in reservations - this process also meant that the size, power and
influence of the BIA increased dramatically since
it was in charge of the allotment process
28Indian Views Regarding the Dawes Act
- probably mixed
- Some were clearly going to be worse off, since,
within many of the agricultural areas the size of
the average farm under the Indian systems of
customary use rights was actually larger than 160
acres - there were also many Indians with smaller
holdings - Supporters were probably rare on reservations
where cultivation agriculture was not feasible - Indians who were on reservations that engaged in
open range ranching (e.g., Blackfeet) probably
would have opposed the process if they had any
political influence, but they did not.
29The Allotment Process
- Once allotment began on a reservation each adult
male was given four years to choose his land
parcel and if he failed or refused to do so, the
Interior Department (BIA) was to assign an
allotment to him. - After all eligible members of the tribe received
their allotments, the Act stated that any
remaining land was surplus, and therefore was to
be opened to "secure homes for actual settlers - government was suppose to pay the tribe for this
surplus land and the settlers were allowed to
take the land as homesteads
30Changes in the Process
- Under a 1900 Amendment to the Act, Whites were
allowed to buy the surplus and the federal
government acted as the agent for the Indians in
the sale - 1906 amendment authorized granting fee simple
title to any Indian immediately if the Indian was
deemed to be "competent and capable of managing
his or her own affairs." - BIA was under considerable pressure to issue such
titles, so the amount of fee simple land created
on reservations increased dramatically - One reason for this was that once land was fee
simple, it was no longer considered to be "Indian
Land", so whites could gain title without dealing
with the BIA, by buying it from the Indian with
fee simple rights
31Allotment Surplus
32(No Transcript)
33Effects of the Dawes Act
- If the objective of the allotment act was to
privatize land, then it was clearly a success. - If the objective was to increase land ownership
by individual Indians in order to encourage them
to engage in ag, it was a disaster. - as the 25 years for land being held in trust
ended, the land became fee simple, and the
Indians could sell it to whites, often those who
had been leasing it. - estimated 60 percent of the allotted lands ended
up being transferred to whites.
34Decline in Indian Farming
- The Dawes Act had a negative effect on Indian
farming, as it ended their communal holding of
property (with crop land often being privately
owned by families or clans) by which they had
ensured that everyone had a home and a place in
the tribe.
35Transfer of Indian Lands
- In 1881 there were 155,632,312 acres allocated to
tribes and to individual Indians on reservations - 1890 the total was down to 104,314,349
- by 1933 it reached 69,588,421
- in 1962 there were 50,557,234, less than a third
of what it had been 80 years earlier - Since then Indian lands have stabilized and even
increased through purchases. - some new reservations have been created
36Indian Reservations, 1875
37Indian Reservations, 1890
38Indian Reservations, 1930
39Wealth Transfer through The Political Process
- The Dawes Act and its amendments, let non-Indian
interests capture wealth originally allocated to
the Indians as reservation lands - result reflects special interest politics
- reservations were established at precisely the
same time that western land values for white
settlers were rising - Whites were excluded from access, and they had
incentives to find a way to obtain access - Dawes Act and its amendments did that, and the
result was one of the largest real estate
transfers through the political process in
American history.
40Political Constituencies
- Alston and Spiller found that the senators and
congressmen on the influential committees
responsible for these acts were self-selected - did not represent the interest of Indians.
- Indians had no political clout
- could not vote, and they had no money to offer
- already defeated so threats of fighting and other
sorts of disruption were not really credible
(there were occasional small scale revolts, such
as Wounded Knee, but the Indians simply had no
way of influencing policy).
41Constituencies, Continued
- The most powerful constituencies for the
congressmen in control of Indian policy were
those who wanted access to Indian lands. - Even those whites who believed that they were
advocates for the Indians, such as the Friends of
the Indian, mistakenly believed that the
allotment process was going to be good for
Indians - those who wanted to capture Indian lands through
the political process managed to get the act
structured in such a way that they would be able
to do so, perhaps to the surprise of those who
considered themselves to be advocates for Indians.
42BIA Interests
- Unlike regulatory bureaucracies that tend to get
captured by the Industry they regulate, the BIA
was not captured by the Indians. - Suppose to serve the Indians' interests, but in
reality they permitted almost no opportunities
for the Indians to influence bureau policy, and
did not systematically pursue the interests of
the Indians. - might ask why the bureaucracy would not have
resisted the transfer of Indian lands to whites,
since it meant that the bureaucracys domain was
being reduced, but in fact, the impact of
allotment on the BIA was quite positive - BIAs budget increased dramatically as did
employment by the bureau.
43BIA Interests, Continued
- If the lands had simply been given directly to
the Indians or to the whites the role of the
bureau would have been somewhat limited, although
the actually allocation process would have had to
have been supervised to make sure that it
complied with Congressional mandates - bureau was given the task of surveying the
reservations, assigning parcels to individual
Indians, and then teaching the Indians how to
become independent farmers - Many in the bureau and in Congress contended that
the bureau would ultimately disappear because of
the allotment process and the resulting self
sufficiency of the Indians, but the opposite
actually occurred
44BIA, Continued
- BIA continued to grow because allotment created a
lot of work for the bureau and justified its
growth - initial act required that allotted lands be held
in trust for 25 years, so the bureau had a major
administrative job to do. - 1891 amendment allowed the lease of allotted
lands, and as trustees the bureaus employees were
responsible for determining the procedures for
such transfers as well as the terms of leases,
and so on. - Not until 1906 that actual fee simple rights
could be granted, but then the bureau had to
determine if the Indian was "competent and
capable of managing his or her own affairs. - Each amendment meant more duties for the bureau.
45BIA Continued
- Other duties increased too
- as the Indians' incentives and abilities to
pursue economic activities such as ag declined
with the transfer of land to whites, Indians
actually became more and more dependent on the
Federal government for food, clothing, housing,
and so on - Between the allotment process and the other
policies of the bureau a very large population of
dependents was created that they had to care for
and supervise (an issue to be considered later)
46Hypothesis 2
- Passage of the Indian Reorganization Act (IRA) in
1934 provided the life-sustaining rationale for
the BIA. - The act set up a process for establishing tribal
governments and gave the BIA authority over this
process. - It also ended the allotment process and froze
most allotments for which fee patents had not
been issued into perpetual trusteeship.
47Indian Reorganization Act of 1934 and the End of
Allotment
- If allotment had continued, the reservations and
BIA would have ultimately become irrelevant as
land was transferred to whites - Allotment was ended by Congress in 1934,
- preserved what was still a large system of
reservations and a large number of dependents - One reason the best of the Indian lands had
already been allotted - Another the value of land had fallen
substantially (Great Depression), and ag prices
had dropped dramatically, unemployment was very
high, and few whites were interested in gaining
access to more Indian land
48Indian Reorganization Act, Continued
- Froze allotments for which fee simple had not
been granted into perpetual trusteeship. - BIA administers these trusts (discussed in detail
later) - Mandated that tribal governments be established
on the reservations. - would administer the tribal lands that remained
unalloted, but the bureau was to be responsible
for setting up and advising these governments. - The major lobbying effort to end allotment came
from the BIA which also sought a larger budget in
order for it to accomplish its new duties, duties
that it lobbied to get
49Why Didnt Whites Oppose IRA?
- If, as argued above, the Allotment Act gave
non-Indians access to Indian lands, then why did
non-Indian citizens and their representatives not
oppose the IRA? - After all, the act halted the issuance of
fee-simple title making it impossible for
settlers to purchase land directly from Indians. - McChesney explains that white opposition to the
IRA did not materialize because "the value of
Western land fell with the steep decline in
livestock and agricultural prices in the 1920s"
50Was Allotment a Success?
- Measured from the Indians' perspective regarding
the millions of acres transferred to non-Indians,
the allotment most certainly was a disaster. - Viewed from the perspective of non-Indian
settlers and Washington bureaucrats, allotment
was a resounding success. - Non-Indians ended up owning or leasing
substantial amounts of many reservations, and the
BIA flourished, by operating first as a real
estate agent for Indian lands and then as the
trustee overseeing Indian land management.
51Allotments Legacy
- As Carlson suggests, "the general program of
allotting land in severality was bent, pulled,
and shaped by non-Indian economic interests,"and
as McChesney explains, "Every change in the
sequence of allotment events from 1887 to 1934
led to an increase in the involvement of the
federal government in Indian affairs and each
change can be explained by its ability to
generate more work for the Indian bureaucracy".
52Other Transfers Cherokee Outlet
- Indian land did not necessarily have to be
allotted to be transferred. - Anderson describes the political process leading
to the opening of the Cherokee Outlet for
instance. - Provides another indication that the special
interest theory of government explains Indian
policy pretty well, and that for much of its
history, the Indians themselves had virtually no
influence over that policy - Under allotment those who did obtain fee simple
land were able to sell it and get something for
it - Indians got very little from surplus lands
homesteaded or sold by the government for the
tribes (BIA trust management is discussed later),
or for land that was simply taken (e.g., Cherokee
Outlet)
53Cherokee Outlet
- It was a 60 mile wide strip of land south of the
Oklahoma-Kansas border between the 96th and
100th meridians. - It was about 225 miles long and in 1891 contained
8,144,682.91 acres (1836). - The US negotiated a new treaty (due to Cherokee
Nations alliance with the Confederacy) in 1866. - Allowed the government to dispose of the land in
the Cherokee Outlet The United States may
settle friendly Indians in any part of the
Cherokee country west of 96 sale proceeds to
be paid for to the Cherokee Nation.
54Cherokee Strip Livestock Association
- The CSLA offered 30 million for the outright
purchase of the outlet, but the Cherokees refused
(1889). - Later the government
- paid 8.6 million for
- the Outlet (1991).
55Reductions in the Hidatsa Lands
56Hidatsa Reservation Today
57Ute Territory Before Reservations Were Created
58Ute Reservation, 1868
59Ute Reservation, 1873
60Current Ute Reservations
61Indians Subject to Congressional and BIA
Supervision
- The result of Indian policy as it developed
through the last couple of decades of the 19th
century and the first 3 or 4 decades of the 20th
century, was not the establishment of
self-reliant and self-determined Indians, as so
many advocates claimed it would be. - Instead, reservation Indians found themselves
becoming increasingly dependent wards of the
state entangled in what Anderson describes as a
bureaucratic quagmire
62Apache Receiving Cloth Commodities
63Apache Women Receiving Commodities
64Geronimo and Family, Fort Sill, OK, Pumpkin Patch
65Indian Claims Commission
- In 1946, the federal government established the
Indian Claims Commission as an official venue for
certain tribes to seek monetary settlements for
land loss and other wrongs dating back to
original treaty violations. - Over 370 claims were filed by eligible tribes
over the 32 years of the commission's existence,
mostly concerning land. - By accepting the government's monetary offer, the
aggrieved tribe abdicated any right to raise
their claim again in the future, and on occasion
gave up their federal status as a tribe after
accepting compensation.
66Awards
- Awarding money based upon a net acreage figure of
lost lands times the monetary market value of an
acre at the time of taking. - In a few instances, by way of settlement acts,
tribes gained some monetary funds to buy acreage
(as with the Penobscot and Passamoddy of Maine
and the Catawba of the Carolinas). - Special acts on occasion did restore some acreage
as with the Havasupai at the Grand Canyon. - Some significant monetary awards were made, but
Native nations soon learned that filing a claim
did not guarantee compensation and that the
federal policy did not actually support the
reinstatement of lost land to Native title.
67Termination
- In the 1950s, the federal policy of tribal
termination presented a further threat to the
lands of Native nations as the federal government
attempted to eliminate its trustee role. - House Concurrent Resolution 108 of 1953
identified tribes deemed immediately capable of
doing without federal services. - These included the Klamath, Menominee, and those
within certain states such as California, Texas,
Florida, and New York. - Legislation over the next two decades terminated
many of these tribes as federally recognized
sovereigns, removing tribal land protections and
dividing parcels among tribal members. - Much of such land ended up in non-Indian
possession. - Over 1 million acres of tribal land were lost due
to termination.
68Passamaquoddy Tribe
- During the civil rights era, the drive for
self-determination renewed Native efforts to
regain control of historic tribal lands. - In 1972, the Passamaquoddy Tribe and the
Penobscot Indian Nation sued for 25 billion and
12.5 million acres in Maine and won a landmark
ruling from the U.S. District Court. - An ensuing monetary settlement was reached in
1980 with the U.S. government. The settlement
resulted in no direct return of land but provided
monetary compensation of 81.5 million. More than
54 million of this was set aside as a fund for
land acquisition.
69Indian Lands Today
- The long, chaotic history of settlement, federal
policy, court cases, and legislation relating to
Indian lands has created an exceptionally
complicated property rights legacy. - Each Native nation has a unique land situation
based on the particular circumstances of its
past. - Some reservations were heavily allotted, others
not at all. - Some tribal governments have jurisdiction over
large and contiguous tracts of land, others
contend with reservations heavily divided between
Indian and non-Indian interests, and still others
have no specific land base.