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{{Short description|Indigenous people of the Great Basin in the United States}}
{{infobox ethnic group|
{{Infobox ethnic group
|group=Ute
| group = Ute
|image=[[File:Utes chief Severo and family, 1899.jpg|250px]]
| native_name = Núuchi
|caption=Chief Severo and family, ca. 1899
| native_name_lang =
|poptime=4,800<ref name=ethno/>–10,000<ref>[http://www.census.gov/statab/www/sa04aian.pdf American Indian, Alaska Native Tables from the Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004–2005], [[US Census Bureau]], USA.</ref>
| flag =
|popplace={{Flag|United States}} ([[Arizona]], [[Colorado]], [[Nevada]], and [[Utah]])<ref name=ethno/>
| image = [[File:Utes chief Severo and family, 1899.jpg|250px]]
|rels= [[Native American Church]], traditional tribal religion, and [[Christianity]]
| caption = Chief Severo and family, c. 1899
|langs=[[English language|English]], [[Ute language|Ute]]<ref name=ethno>[http://www.ethnologue.com/language/UTE "Ute-Southern Paiute."] ''Ethnologue.'' Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.</ref>
| population = 4,800<ref name=ethno/>–10,000<ref>[https://www.census.gov/statab/www/sa04aian.pdf "American Indian, Alaska Native Tables from the Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004–2005"] ({{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121004035454/http://www.census.gov/statab/www/sa04aian.pdf |date=2012-10-04 }}). [[US Census Bureau]], USA.</ref>
|related=[[Chemehuevi]] and [[Southern Paiute people]]<ref name=ethno/>
| popplace = [[United States]] ([[Colorado]], [[Utah]])<ref name=pritzker242/>
| rels = [[Native American Church]], [[Indigenous religion]], and [[Christianity]]
| langs = [[English language|English]], [[Spanish language|Spanish]], [[Ute dialect|Ute]] (Núuchi-u)<ref name=ethno>[http://www.ethnologist.com/language/UTE "Ute-Southern Paiute"]. ''[[Ethnologue]]''. Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.</ref>
| related = [[Shoshone]], [[Southern Paiute]], and [[Chemehuevi]]<ref name=Bakken/>
}}
}}


'''Ute''' ({{IPAc-en|'|j|uː|t}}) are an [[Indigenous peoples of the Great Basin|Indigenous people of the Great Basin]] and [[Colorado Plateau]] in present-day [[Utah]], western [[Colorado]], and northern [[New Mexico]].<ref name="denison13">{{cite book |last1=Denison |first1=Brandi |title=Ute Land Religion in the American West, 1879–2009 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |location=Lincoln |isbn=9781496201416 |page=13 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zuYlDwAAQBAJ}}</ref><ref name=pritzker242>Pritkzer, [https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Native_American_Encyclopedia/ZxWJVc4ST0AC ''A Native American Encyclopedia''], p. 242</ref> Historically, their territory also included parts of Wyoming, eastern Nevada, and Arizona.
'''Ute people''' {{IPAc-en|ˈ|juː|t}} are an [[indigenous people of the Great Basin]], now living primarily in [[Utah]] and [[Colorado]]. There are three Ute tribal [[Indian reservation|reservations]]: [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uintah-Ouray]] in northeastern Utah (3,500 members); [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation|Southern Ute]] in Colorado (1,500 members); and [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain]] which primarily lies in Colorado, but extends to Utah and New Mexico (2,000 members). The name of the state of Utah was derived from the name ''Ute''. The word ''Ute'' means "Land of the sun" in their language.<ref>http://www.uteindian.com</ref> "Ute" possibly derived from the Western Apache word "yudah", meaning "high up". This has led to the misconception that "Ute" means people high up or mountain people.


Their [[Ute dialect]] is a [[Colorado River Numic language]], part of the [[Uto-Aztecan language family]]<ref name="iyuba">{{cite web |last1=Iyuba |title=Book of the Week — A Few Words in the Utah and Sho-sho-ne Dialects… |url=https://blog.lib.utah.edu/book-of-the-week-a-few-words-in-the-utah-and-sho-sho-ne-dialects/ |website=J. Willard Marriott Library |publisher=University of Utah |access-date=5 October 2024 |date=15 November 2021}}</ref>
==Language==
The people speak the [[Ute language]], which is related to the [[Southern Paiute language]] and belong to the [[Numic languages|Numic]] branch of the [[Uto-Aztecan language]] family. A dictionary and grammar have been written for the language, and the Bible has been translated into Ute. Several different [[orthographies]] exist, but the language is written in the [[Latin script]].<ref name=ethno/>


Historically, the Utes belonged to almost a dozen nomadic bands, who came together for ceremonies and trade. They also traded with neighboring tribes, including [[Pueblo peoples]]. The Ute had settled in the [[Four Corners]] region by 1500 CE.<ref name="musnaz">{{cite web |title=Southern Ute |url=https://musnaz.org/on-view/native-peoples-of-the-colorado-plateau/ute/ |website=Museum of Northern Arizona |access-date=5 October 2024}}</ref>
==History==
{{Further|Ute Wars}}
[[File:California1838.jpg|right|thumb|Map dated 1838 showing the "Youta" people. From Britannica 7th edition.]]
Prior to the arrival of Mexican settlers, the Utes occupied significant portions of what are today eastern Utah, western Colorado,<ref>[http://www.native-languages.org/colorado.htm Native American Tribes of Colorado]</ref> including the [[San Luis Valley]], and parts of [[New Mexico]] and [[Wyoming]]. The Utes were never a unified group within historic times; instead, they consisted of numerous nomadic bands that maintained close associations with other neighboring groups. The 17 largest known groups were the [[Capote Band of Utes|Capote]], [[Cumumba]], [[Moache]], [[Moanumts]], [[Pah Vant]], [[Parianuche]], [[San Pitch]], [[Sheberetch]], [[Taviwach]], [[Timanogots]], [[Tumpanawach]], [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation|Uinta]], [[Uncompahgre tribe|Uncompahgre]], [[White River Utes|White River]], [[Weeminuche]], and [[Yamperika]]. The original homeland of the [[Uto-Aztecan languages]] is generally considered to have existed along the border between the United States and Mexico, perhaps in the area of Arizona and New Mexico, as well as part of the Northern Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora. From this area, speakers of Uto-Aztecan languages gradually diffused northward and southward, to include tribes such as the Shoshone and Comanche on the north and east, and the Aztecs in the south. Unlike many other tribal groups in this region, the Utes have no tradition or evidence of historic migration to the areas now known as Colorado and Utah—and ancestors of the Ute appear to have occupied this area or nearby areas for at least a thousand years. The last partial migration of the Utes within this area was in the year 1885.


The Utes' first contact with Europeans was with the Spanish in the 18th century.<ref name=denison13/> The Utes had already acquired horses from neighboring tribes by the late 17th century. They had limited direct contact with the Spanish but participated in regional trade.<ref name=denison13/>
===Treaties between the United States and the Utes===
Following acquisition of Ute territory from Mexico by the Treaty of Guadelupe-Hidalgo the United States made a series of treaties with the Ute:


Sustained contact with Euro-Americans began in 1847 with the arrival of the [[Mormons]] to the [[American West]] and the [[gold rush]]es of the 1850s.<ref name=denison13/> Utes fought to protect their homelands from invaders, and [[Brigham Young]] convinced U.S. President [[Abraham Lincoln]] to forcibly remove Utes in Utah to an [[Indian Reservation]] in 1864.<ref name=denison13/> Colorado Utes were forced onto a reservation in 1881.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Denison |first1=Brandi |title=Ute Land Religion in the American West, 1879–2009 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |location=Lincoln |isbn=9781496201416 |pages=13–14 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zuYlDwAAQBAJ}}</ref><ref name=pritzker242>Pritkzer, [https://www.google.com/books/edition/A_Native_American_Encyclopedia/ZxWJVc4ST0AC ''A Native American Encyclopedia''], p. 242</ref>
* 1849 treaty of peace
* 1863 treaty relinquishing the San Luis Valley
* Treaty with The Ute March 2, 1868 by which the Ute retained all of Colorado Territory west of longitude 107° west and relinquished all of Colorado Territory east of longitude 107° west.<ref>{{cite web|title=Treaty with The Ute March 2, 1868|url=http://www.firstpeople.us/FP-Html-Treaties/TreatyWithTheUte1868.html|accessdate=July 4, 2011|location=Washington, D.C.|date=March 2, 1868}}</ref>
* Treaty with the Capote, Muache, and Weeminuche Bands establishing the Southern Ute Reservation and the Mountain Ute Reservation.<ref>{{cite web|title=Agreement with the Capote, Muache, and Weeminuche Utes|url=http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/CommRep/AnnRep79/reference/history.annrep79.i0026.pdf|accessdate=July 4, 2011|location=Pagosa Springs, Colorado|format=PDF|date=November 8, 1878}}</ref>


Today, there are three [[federally recognized tribes]] of Ute people:
===Enemies and Warrior Culture===
* [[Southern Ute Indian Tribe of the Southern Ute Reservation]], Colorado
[[File:Ute and Cheyenne battle ledger drawing.jpg|thumb|Ledger drawing of a battle between a Ute warrior and mounted Cheyenne warrior. ca. 1880s]]
* [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation]], Utah
Like other Plains Indian tribes the Utes were skilled warriors who specialized in horse mounted combat. War with neighboring tribes was mostly fought for gaining prestige, stealing horses, and revenge. Prior to a raid warriors would organize themselves into war parties made up of warriors, medicine men, and a war chief which led the party. To prepare themselves for battle Ute warriors would often fast, participate in sweat lodge ceremonies, and paint their faces and horses for special symbolic meanings. The Utes were master horsemen and could execute daring maneuvers on horseback while in battle. Unlike other plains people the Ute did not have warrior societies with the exception of the Southern Utes which developed them late and were dissolved after they went onto reservations. Warriors were mostly men but women often followed behind war parties to help gather loot, sing songs, and may even be part of the war party as warriors themselves. Women also preformed the Lame Dance to symbolize having to pull or carry heavy loads of loot after a raid.<ref>Simmons, Virginia McConnell. ''Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico''. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.</ref> The Utes used a variety of weapons including lances, bows, tomahawks, war clubs, and knives, as well as rifles, shotguns, and pistols which were obtained through raiding or trading.
* [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]], Colorado


These three tribes maintain reservations: [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uintah-Ouray]] in northeastern Utah (3,500 members); [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation|Southern Ute]] in Colorado (1,500 members); and [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain]] which primarily lies in Colorado, but extends to Utah and New Mexico (2,000 members).{{citation needed|date=October 2024}}
The enemies of the Ute included the [[Cheyenne people|Cheyenne]], [[Crow Nation|Crow]], [[Shoshone people|Shoshone]], [[Blackfoot Confederacy|Blackfoot]], and [[Arapaho]] to the north of Ute territory. East and southeast of Ute territory they fought with the [[Sioux]], [[Pawnee people|Pawnee]], [[Osage people|Osage]], [[Kiowa people|Kiowa]], [[Comanche]], and [[Plains Apache]]. To the west and south they encountered [[Navajo people|Navajo]], [[Paiute people|Paiute]], and Western Shoshone. The Utes traded with various [[Puebloan peoples]] such as the [[Taos Pueblo|Taos]] and were close allies with the [[Jicarilla Apache|Jicarilla]] who shared much of the same territory.
{{TOC limit|3}}


== Name ==
===Contact with Spanish explorers===
The origin of the word ''Ute'' is unknown; it is first attested as ''Yuta'' in Spanish documents. The Utes' self-designation is ''Núuchi-u'', meaning 'the people'.<ref name="Givón pp. 1-2" />
The Utes' first contact with Europeans was with early Spanish explorers in the 1630s. They adopted the horse, obtaining mounts through trading with the [[New Mexico#Spanish colonization|Spanish colonists in New Mexico]] or theft from those settlements. As a result of the new mobility, Ute culture changed dramatically in ways that paralleled the [[Plains Indian]] cultures of the [[Great Plains]]. The social upheaval resulted in various degrees of consolidation, political realignment and tension between the various Ute groups. The Utes were for the most part enemies of the Spanish and the conquered [[Pueblo]] towns. They engaged in a long series of wars, in some cases three-sided, with the [[Navajo people|Navajo]], various other [[Apache]] tribes, and the Comanche, especially in the plains of eastern Colorado and northeastern New Mexico.

== Language ==
[[File:Northern-UA-languages.png|thumb|upright=1.35|Distribution of Uto-Aztecan languages in present-day Western United States at the time of first European contact/invasion]]

Ute people speak the [[Ute dialect]] of the [[Colorado River Numic language]], which is closely related to the [[Shoshone language]].<ref name=iyuba/>

Their language is from the Southern subdivision of the [[Numic language]] branch of the [[Uto-Aztecan language family]]. This language family is found almost entirely in the [[Western United States]] and [[Mexico]],<ref name="Givón pp. 1-2">{{cite book|last=Givón |first=Talmy |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dckjvixbp9EC&pg=PA1|title=Ute Reference Grammar |date=January 1, 2011|publisher=John Benjamins Publishing|isbn=978-90-272-0284-0 |pages=1–3}}</ref> stretching from southeastern California, along the [[Colorado River]] to Colorado and extending south the [[Nahuan languages]] in central Mexico.<ref name="Givón pp. 1-2" /><ref>{{cite book |title=The Masterkey |year=1985|publisher=Southwest Museum |page=11}}</ref>

The Numic language group likely originated near the present-day border of Nevada and California, then spread north and east.<ref>Catherine Louise Sweeney Fowler. 1972. ''"Comparative Numic Ethnobiology".'' University of Pittsburgh. PhD dissertation.</ref> By about 1000 CE, hunters and gatherers in the [[Great Basin]] spoke Uto-Aztecan. They are the likely ancestrors of the Ute, [[Shoshone]], [[Paiute]], and [[Chemehuevi]] peoples.<ref name="Bakken" /> Linguists believe that the Southern Numic speakers (Ute and [[Southern Paiute]]), left the Numic homeland first and that the Central and then the Western subgroups later migrated east and north.<ref>David Leedom Shaul. 2014. ''A Prehistory of Western North America, The Impact of Uto-Aztecan Languages''. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.</ref> The Southern [[Numic]]-speaking tribes, the Ute, Shoshone, [[Southern Paiute]], and [[Chemehuevi]], all share many cultural, genetic, and linguistic characteristics.<ref name="Bakken" />

== Territory ==
[[File:Old Spanish Trail - Early Exploration.png|thumb|upright=1.2|The Ute Trail, later called the [[Old Spanish Trail (trade route)|Old Spanish Trail]], was a trade route between Santa Fe and California, through Colorado and Utah. It was later used by European explorers of the west.]]
There were ancestral Utes in southwestern [[Colorado]] and southeastern [[Utah]] by 1300, living a [[hunter-gatherer]] lifestyle.<ref name="Bakken" /><ref name=CC-PostPueblo>[http://www.crowcanyon.org/EducationProducts/peoples_mesa_verde/post_pueblo_overview.asp ''The Post-Pueblo Period: A.D. 1300 to Late 1700s.''] Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. 2011. Retrieved June 16, 2018.</ref> The Ute occupied much of the present state of Colorado by the 1600s. The Comanches from the north joined them in eastern Colorado in the early 1700s. In the 19th century, the Arapaho and Cheyenne invaded southward into eastern Colorado.<ref name=UNC-IC>[http://hewit.unco.edu/dohist/teachers/essays/indians.htm ''Indians of Colorado.''] The William E. Hewitt Institute for History and Social Science Education. University of Northern Colorado. Retrieved June 16, 2018.</ref>

The Utes came to inhabit a large area including most of Utah,<ref name="Pritzker2000">{{cite book|last=Pritzker|first=Barry|title=A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples|url=https://archive.org/details/nativeamericanen0000prit|url-access=registration|year=2000|publisher=[[Oxford University Press]]|isbn=978-0-19-513877-1|pages=[https://archive.org/details/nativeamericanen0000prit/page/242 242]–246|chapter=Utes}}</ref> western and central Colorado, and south into the [[San Juan River (Colorado River tributary)|San Juan River]] watershed of New Mexico.<ref name="Hodge p. 874">{{cite book|last=Hodge|first=Frederick Webb|title=Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico: N-Z|url=https://archive.org/details/handbookofameric02hodg|year=1912|publisher=U.S. Government Printing Office|page=[https://archive.org/details/handbookofameric02hodg/page/874 874]–875}}</ref> Some Ute bands stayed near their home domains, while others ranged further away seasonally.<ref name="Bakken" /> Hunting grounds extended further into Utah and Colorado, as well as into Wyoming, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico.<ref name="Bakken">{{cite book|last1=Bakken|first1=Gordon Morris|last2=Kindell|first2=Alexandra|title=Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I6Q5DQAAQBAJ&pg=PT740|date=February 24, 2006|publisher=SAGE|isbn=978-1-4129-0550-3|chapter=Utes}}</ref> Winter camps were established along rivers near the present-day cities of [[Provo, Utah|Provo]] and [[Fort Duchesne, Utah|Fort Duchesne]] in Utah and [[Pueblo, Colorado|Pueblo]], [[Fort Collins, Colorado|Fort Collins]], [[Colorado Springs, Colorado|Colorado Springs]] of Colorado.<ref name="Bakken" />

===Colorado===
[[File:Ute camp, Henry Chapman Ford, by 1894.jpg|thumb|left|[[Henry Ford (illustrator)|Henry Chapman Ford]], ''Ute camp'', by 1894]]
Aside from their home domain, there were sacred places in present-day Colorado. The [[Tabeguache]] Ute's name for [[Pikes Peak]] is ''Tavakiev'', meaning sun mountain. Living a nomadic [[hunter-gatherer]] lifestyle, summers were spent in the Pikes Peak area mountains, which was considered by other tribes to be the domain of the Utes.<ref name="CSPM Utes" /> Pikes Peak was a sacred ceremonial area for the band.<ref name="PPM">{{Cite web |url=http://www.pikespeakhsmuseum.org/indians/ |title=Ute Indians |website=Pikes Peak Historical Society|date=17 May 2014 |access-date=June 14, 2018}}</ref> The [[Manitou Mineral Springs#History|mineral springs at Manitou Springs]] were also sacred and Ute and other tribes came to the area, spent winters there, and "share[d] in the gifts of the waters without worry of conflict."<ref name="History Colorado">[http://www.historycolorado.org/sites/default/files/files/OAHP/crforms_edumat/pdfs/641.pdf Manitou Springs Historic District Nomination Form]. History Colorado. Retrieved May 3, 2013.</ref><ref name="Guide p. 6">{{ cite book | title=Historic Manitou Springs, Colorado - 2013 Visitors Guide | publisher=The Manitou Springs Chamber of Commerce, Visitors Bureau & Office of Economic Development | page=6 | year=2013 }}</ref><ref name="Best of Colorado">{{cite book|title=Best of Colorado|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BOTa5gUx4x0C&pg=PT82|access-date=May 4, 2013|date=1 September 2002|publisher=Big Earth Publishing|isbn=978-1-56579-429-0|page=82}}</ref><ref name="Mineral Springs">[http://manitousprings.org/mineral-springs/ ''About.''] Manitou Springs. Retrieved May 4, 2013.</ref> Artifacts found from the nearby Garden of the Gods, such as grinding stones, "suggest the groups would gather together after their hunt to complete the tanning of hides and processing of meat."<ref name="CSPM Utes">{{cite web | url=http://www.cspm.org/learn/regional-history/native-americans/ute-indians-of-colorado/ | title=Ute Indians of Colorado | publisher=[[Colorado Springs Pioneers Museum]] | access-date=May 24, 2013 }}</ref><ref name="City of Colorado Springs - First People">{{cite web|url=http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=2060 |title=The First People of the Cañon and the Pikes Peak Region |publisher=City of Colorado Springs |access-date=May 24, 2013 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140703103919/http://www.springsgov.com/Page.aspx?NavID=2060 |archive-date=July 3, 2014 |df=mdy-all }}</ref>

The old Ute Pass Trail went eastward from [[Monument Creek (Arkansas River tributary)|Monument Creek]] (near [[Roswell, Colorado|Roswell]]) to [[Garden of the Gods]] and [[Manitou Springs, Colorado|Manitou Springs]] to the [[Rocky Mountains]].<ref name=Howbert>{{Cite book |last=Howbert |first=Irving |year=1970 |orig-year=1925/1914 |title=Memories of a Lifetime in the Pike's Peak Region |url=http://davehugheslegacy.net/files/Howbert_Memoriesof_a_Lifetime_in_the_Pikes_Peak_Region_PDF.pdf |publisher=The Rio Grande Press |via=DaveHughesLegacy.net |lccn=73115107 |isbn=0-87380-044-3 |access-date=June 17, 2018 }}</ref> From Ute Pass, Utes journeyed eastward to hunt buffalo. They spent winters in mountain valleys where they were protected from the weather.<ref name="CSPM Utes" /><ref name="City of Colorado Springs - First People" /> The North and Middle Parks of present-day Colorado were among favored hunting grounds, due to the abundance of game.<ref>{{cite book|author=William B. Butler|title=The Fur Trade in Colorado|year=2012|publisher=Western Reflections Publishing Company|isbn=978-1-937851-02-6|page=4}}</ref>

[[File:CPSheild.JPG|thumb|[[Cañon Pintado]], south of [[Rangely, Colorado|Rangely]] in [[Rio Blanco County, Colorado]]]]
[[Cañon Pintado]], or painted canyon, is a prehistoric site with rock art from [[Fremont people]] (650 to 1200) and Utes. The Fremont art reflect an interest in agriculture, including corn stalks and use of light at different times of the year to show a planting calendar. Then there are images of figures holding shields, what appear to be battle victims, and spears. These were seen by the [[Domínguez–Escalante expedition]] (1776). Utes left images of firearms and horses in the 1800s. The Crook's Brand Site depicts a horse with a brand from George Crook's regiment during the Indian Wars of the 1870s.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.coloradolifemagazine.com/Canyon-Pintados-Rock-Art/ |title=Canyon Pintado's Rock Art |date=July–August 2014 |website=Colorado Life Magazine |access-date=June 21, 2018}}</ref>

===Utah===
Public land surrounding the [[Bears Ears]] buttes in southeastern Utah became the [[Bears Ears National Monument]] in 2016 in recognition for its ancestral and cultural significance to several Native American tribes, including the Utes. Members of the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Ute]] and [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation|Uintah and Ouray Reservations]] sit on a five-tribe coalition to help co-manage the monument with the [[Bureau of Land Management]] and [[United States Forest Service]].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/12/28/us/politics/obama-national-monument-bears-ears-utah-gold-butte.html|title=Obama Designates Two New National Monuments, Protecting 1.65 Million Acres|last=Davenport|first=Coral|newspaper=[[The New York Times]]|date=December 28, 2016|access-date=June 17, 2018}}</ref><ref name="usfs fact sheet">{{cite web|url=https://www.fs.fed.us/sites/default/files/bear-ears-fact-sheet.pdf|title=Bears Ears national Monument: Questions & Answers|publisher=[[United States Forest Service]]|access-date=December 31, 2016|archive-date=January 1, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170101161324/https://www.fs.fed.us/sites/default/files/bear-ears-fact-sheet.pdf|url-status=dead|df=mdy-all}}</ref>

[[Image:Horse Rider Ute Tribal Rock Art at Arches National Park.jpg|thumb|Ute petroglyphs at [[Arches National Park]]]]
The Ute appeared to have hunted and camped in an ancient [[Ancestral Puebloans]] and [[Fremont people]] campsite in near what is now [[Arches National Park]]. At a site near natural springs, which may have held spiritual significance, the Ute left petroglyphs in rock along with rock art by the earlier peoples. Some of the images are estimated to be more than 900 years old. The Utes petroglyphs were made after the Utes acquired horses, because they show men hunting while on horseback.<ref>{{cite book|last=Sullivan|first=Gordon|title=Roadside Guide to Indian Ruins & Rock Art of the Southwest|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Pe63GNBl5QoC&pg=PA47|year=2005|publisher=Westcliffe Publishers|isbn=978-1-56579-481-8|pages=48–49}}</ref>

==Historic Ute bands==
[[File:Ute bands of CO, UT, NM, AZ.jpeg|thumb|upright=1.2|Distribution of Ute Indian bands: 1. [[Pahvant]], 2. [[Moanunt]], 3. [[San Pitch Utes|Sanpits]], 4. [[Timpanogos|Timpanogots]], 5. [[Uintah tribe|Uintah]], 6. [[Seuvarits Utes|Seuvarits (Sheberetch)]], 7. [[Yampa Utes|Yampa]], 8. [[Parianuche]], 8a. [[Sabuagana]], 9. [[Tabeguache]], 10. [[Weeminuche]], 11. [[Capote Ute|Capote]], 12. [[Muache]]. University Press of Colorado.]]
The Ute were divided into several nomadic and closely associated bands, which today mostly are organized as the Northern, Southern, and Ute Mountain Ute Tribes.

Hunting and gathering groups of extended families were led by older members by the mid-17th century. Activities, like hunting buffalo and trading, may have been organized by band members. Chiefs led bands when structure was required with the introduction of horses to plan for defense, buffalo hunting, and raiding. Bands came together for tribal activities by the 18th century.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />

Multiple bands of Utes that were classified as Uintahs by the U.S. government when they were relocated to the [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation]].<ref name="SUH" /> The bands included the [[San Pitch Utes|San Pitch]], [[Pahvant]], Seuvartis, [[Timpanogos]] and [[Cumumba]] Utes. The Southern Ute Tribes include the [[Muache]], [[Capote Ute|Capote]], and the [[Weeminuche]], the latter of which are at [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain]].<ref name="Bakken" />
{| class="wikitable sortable"
|-
! # !! Tribe !! Ute Name !! Home<br />state !! Home<br />locale !! Current<br /> name !! Tribe Grouping !! Reservation
|-
| 1 || [[Pahvant]] || || Utah ||West of the Wasatch Range in the [[Pavant Range]] towards the Nevada border along the Sevier River in the desert around [[Sevier Lake]] and [[Fish Lake (Utah)|Fish Lake]] ||[[Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah|Paiute]] ||Northern || Paiute<ref name="The Northern Utes of Utah">{{cite web|url=http://historytogo.utah.gov/people/ethnic_cultures/the_history_of_utahs_american_indians/chapter5.html|title=Chapter Five - The Northern Utes of Utah|work=utah.gov}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.utefans.net/home/ancient_ute/utetribe.html|title=Ute Memories|work=utefans.net}}</ref><ref name="Paiute ref">D'Azevedo, Warren L., Volume Editor. ''Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11: Great Basin''. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1986. {{ISBN|978-0-16-004581-3}}.</ref>
|-
| 2 || [[Moanunt]] || || Utah || Upper Sevier River Valley in central Utah, in the Otter Creek region south of [[Salina, Utah|Salina]] and in the vicinity of Fish Lake || Paiute|| Northern || Paiute<ref name="Paiute ref" />
|-
| 3 || [[San Pitch Utes|Sanpits]] || || Utah || [[Sanpete Valley]] and [[Sevier River|Sevier River Valley]] and along the [[San Pitch River]] || [[San Pitch Utes|San Pitch]] || Northern || Uintah and Ouray<ref name="SUH">{{Cite web |url=https://www.southernute-nsn.gov/history/ |title=History of the Southern Ute |website=Southern Ute Indian Tribe |access-date=June 18, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Simmons|first=Virginia McConnell|title=The Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=UR3jCwAAQBAJ&pg=PT33|date=September 15, 2001|publisher=University Press of Colorado|isbn=978-1-60732-116-3|page=PT33}}</ref>
|-
| 4 || [[Timpanogos|Timpanogots]] || Timpanogots Núuchi || Utah || [[Wasatch Range]] around [[Mount Timpanogos]], along the southern and eastern shores of [[Utah Lake]] of the [[Utah Valley]], and in Heber Valley, [[Uinta Basin]] and Sanpete Valley || Timpanogots || Northern || Uintah and Ouray<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.timpanogostribe.com/ |title=The Timpanogos Nation: Uinta Valley Reservation |website=www.timpanogostribe.com |access-date=June 18, 2018}}</ref>
|-
| 5 || [[Uintah tribe|Uintah]] || Uintah Núuchi || Utah || [[Utah Lake]] to the [[Uintah Basin]] of the Tavaputs Plateau near the Grand-[[Colorado River]]-system ||Uintah ||Northern || [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation|Uintah and Ouray]]<ref name="SUH" />
|-
| 6 || [[Seuvarits Utes|Seuvarits (Sahyehpeech / Sheberetch)]] || Seuvarits Núuchi || Utah || [[Moab, Utah|Moab]] area || ||Northern || Uintah and Ouray<ref name="SUH" /><ref name="Bakken" />
|-
| 7 || [[Yampa Utes|Yampa]] || 'Iya-paa Núuchi || Colorado || [[Yampa River]] Valley area || [[White River Utes]] || Northern|| Uintah and Ouray<ref name="SUH" />
|-
| 8 || [[Parianuche]] || Pariyʉ Núuchi || Colorado and Utah ||[[Colorado River]] (previously called the Grand River) in western Colorado and eastern Utah || White River Ute|| Northern|| Uintah and Ouray<ref>{{cite book|last1=Bakken|first1=Gordon Morris|last2=Kindell|first2=Alexandra|title=Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I6Q5DQAAQBAJ&pg=PT740|date=February 24, 2006|publisher=SAGE|isbn=978-1-4129-0550-3|page=PT740}}</ref><ref name="SUH" /><ref>{{cite book|last1=Bradford|first1=David|last2=Reed|first2=Floyd|last3=LeValley|first3=Robbie Baird|title=When the grass stood stirrup-high: facts, photographs and myths of West-Central Colorado|year=2004|publisher=Colorado State University|page=4}}</ref>
|-
| 8a || [[Sabuagana|Sabuagana (Saguaguana / Akanaquint)]] || || Colorado || Colorado River in western and central Colorado || ||Northern || <ref>{{cite book|last=Carson|first=Phil|title=Across the Northern Frontier: Spanish Explorations in Colorado|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mVBHtYDTwTMC&pg=PA103|year=1998|publisher=Big Earth Publishing|isbn=978-1-55566-216-5|page=103}}</ref>
|-
| 9 || [[Tabeguache]] || Tavi'wachi Núuchi || Colorado and Utah || [[Gunnison River|Gunnison]] and [[Uncompahgre River]] valleys || [[Uncompahgre Ute|Uncompahgre]] || Northern || Uintah and Ouray<ref name="NPS Fronter ch. 5">{{Cite web |url=https://www.nps.gov/parkhistory/online_books/blm/co/10/chap5.htm |title=Frontier in Transition: A History of Southwestern Colorado (Chapter 5) |website=National Park Service |access-date=June 18, 2018}}</ref>
|-
| 10 || [[Weeminuche]] || Wʉgama Núuchi || Colorado and Utah || In the [[Abajo Mountains]], in the Valley of the [[San Juan River (Colorado River)|San Juan River]] and its northern tributaries and in the [[San Juan Mountains]] including eastern Utah.
|| Weeminuche || Ute Mountain|| [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain]]<ref>{{cite book|title=Oil and Gas Development on the Southern Ute Indian Reservation: Environmental Impact Statement|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rRMyAQAAMAAJ&pg=SL11-PA43|year=2002|page=43}}</ref>
|-
| 11 || [[Capote Ute|Capote]] || Kapuuta Núuchi || Colorado || East of the [[Continental Divide of the Americas|Great Divide]], south of the [[Conejos River]], and east of the [[Rio Grande]] towards the west site of the [[Sangre de Cristo Mountains]], they were also living in the [[San Luis Valley]], along the headwaters of the Rio Grande and along the [[Animas River]] || Capote || Southern || [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation|Southern]]<ref name="The Northern Utes of Utah"/>
|-
| 12 || [[Muache]] || Moghwachi Núuchi || Colorado || Eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains from [[Denver]], Colorado in the north to [[Las Vegas, New Mexico|Las Vegas]], New Mexico in the south || Muache || Southern || Southern<ref name="SUH" />
|-
|}

This is also a half-Shoshone, half-Ute band of [[Cumumba]]s who lived above [[Great Salt Lake]], near what is now [[Ogden, Utah]]. There are also other half-Ute bands, some of whom migrated seasonally far from their home domain.<ref name="Bakken" />

== History ==
=== Relationships with neighboring tribes ===
The Utes traded with [[Rio Grande River]] [[Pueblo peoples]] at annual trade fairs or ''rescates'' held in at the [[Taos Pueblo|Taos]], [[Santa Clara Pueblo|Santa Clara]], [[Pecos Pueblo|Pecos]] and other pueblos.<ref name="Butler p. 70">{{cite book|author=William B. Butler|title=The Fur Trade in Colorado |year=2012 |publisher=Western Reflections Publishing Company|isbn=978-1-937851-02-6|pages=27, 40–41, 45, 65, 67, 70–71}}</ref> The Ute also traded with [[Navajo]], [[Havasupai]], and [[Hopi]] peoples for woven blankets.<ref>{{cite book|author=William B. Butler|title=The Fur Trade in Colorado|year=2012|publisher=Western Reflections Publishing Company|isbn=978-1-937851-02-6|page=49}}</ref>

The Utes were closely allied with the [[Jicarilla Apache]] who shared much of the same territory and intermarried. They also intermarried with Paiute, [[Bannock people|Bannock]] and Western Shoshone peoples.<ref name="Hodge p. 874" /> There was so much intermarriage with the Paiute, that territorial borders of the Utes and the Southern Paiutes are difficult to ascertain in southeast Utah.<ref name="Bakken" /> Until the Ute acquired horses, any conflict with other tribes was usually defensive. They had generally poor relations with Northern and Eastern Shoshone.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />

=== Contact with the Spanish ===
In 1637, the Spanish fought with the Utes, 80 of whom were captured and enslaved. Three people escaped with horses.<ref name="Bakken" /> Their lifestyle changed with the acquisition of horses by 1680. They became more mobile, more able to trade, and better able to hunt large game. Ute culture changed dramatically in ways that paralleled the [[Plains Indian]] cultures of the [[Great Plains]]. They also became involved in the horse and slave trades and respected warriors.<ref name="USHS" /> Horse ownership and warrior skills developed while riding became the primary status symbol within the tribe and horse racing became common. With greater mobility, there was increased need for political leadership.<ref name="Bakken" />

The Utes had direct trade with the Spanish at least by 1765 and possibly earlier.<ref name="weber25">{{cite book |last1=Weber |first1=David J. |title=The Taos Trappers: The Fur Trade in the Far Southwest, 1540-1846 |date=1980 |publisher=University of Oklahoma Press |location=Norman |isbn=9780806117027 |page=25 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FRoIDsG_1uEC}}</ref> The Utes had already acquired horses from neighboring tribes by the late 17th century.<ref name=denison13/>
During this time, few Europeans entered Ute territory. Exceptions to this include the Spanish [[Domínguez–Escalante expedition]] of 1776.<ref name=denison13/>

The Utes traded with other tribes who were part of the deerskin and fur trade with the Spanish in New Mexico in the 18th century. The Utes, the main trading partners of the Spanish residents of New Mexico, were known for their soft, high-quality tanned deerskins, or chamois, and they also traded meat, buffalo robes, and Indian and Spanish captives taken by the Comanche. The Utes traded their goods for cloth, blankets, guns, horses, maize, flour, and ornaments. Several Ute learned Spanish through trading. The Spanish "seriously guarded" trade with the Utes, limiting it to annual caravans, but by 1750 they were reliant on the trade with the Utes, their deerskin being a highly sought commodity. The Utes also traded in enslaved women and children captives from Apache, Comanche, Paiute and Navajo tribes.<ref name="Butler p. 70" />

French trappers passed through Ute territory and established trading posts beginning in the 1810s.<ref name="USHS" /> The French expedition recorded meeting members of the [[Moanunts]] and [[Pahvant]] bands.<ref name="Bakken" />

=== Horse culture ===
[[File:Utes along White River - Jack Hillers - 1873.jpg|thumb|[[John Wesley Powell]] first became acquainted with the Utes along the White River in northwestern Colorado in the fall of 1868. During his expedition five years later, his photographer, Jack Hillers, captured this photograph of a young girl accompanied by a warrior, whose body, painted with yellow and black stripes, is marked for battle.]]

After the Utes acquired horses, they started to raid other Native American tribes. While their close relatives, the [[Comanches]], moved out from the mountains and became [[Plains Indians]] as did others including the [[Cheyenne]], [[Arapaho]], [[Kiowa]], and [[Plains Apache]], the Utes remained close to their ancestral homeland.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> The south and eastern Utes also raided Native Americans in New Mexico, Southern Paiutes and Western Shoshones, capturing women and children and selling them as slaves in exchange for Spanish goods. They fought with [[Plains Indians]], including the Comanche, who had previously been allies. The name "Comanche" is from the Ute word for them, ''kɨmantsi'', meaning enemy.<ref>{{cite book|editor=Bright, William |title=Native American Placenames of the United States|date=2004| publisher=[[University of Oklahoma Press]]}}</ref> The [[Pawnee people|Pawnee]], [[Osage Nation|Osage]] and [[Navajo]] also became enemies of the Plains Indians by about 1840.<ref>{{cite book|last=Jordan|first=Julia A.|title=Plains Apache Ethnobotany|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=A3oCBQAAQBAJ&pg=PA209|date=October 22, 2014|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|isbn=978-0-8061-8581-1|page=209}}</ref> Some Ute bands fought against the Spanish and Pueblos with the Jicarilla Apache and the Comanche. The Ute were sometimes friendly but sometimes hostile to the Navajo.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />

The Utes were skilled warriors who specialized in horse mounted combat. War with neighboring tribes was mostly fought for gaining prestige, stealing horses, and revenge. Men would organize themselves into war parties made up of warriors, medicine men, and a war chief who led the party. To prepare themselves for battle Ute warriors would often fast, participate in sweat lodge ceremonies, and paint their faces and horses for special symbolic meanings. The Utes were master horsemen and could execute daring maneuvers on horseback while in battle. Most plains Indians had [[warrior societies]], but the Ute generally did not - the Southern Utes developed such societies late, and soon lost them in reservation life. Warriors were exclusively men but women often followed behind war parties to help gather loot and sing songs. Women also performed the Lame Dance to symbolize having to pull or carry heavy loads of loot after a raid.<ref>Simmons, Virginia McConnell. ''Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico''. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.</ref> The Utes used a variety of weapons including bows, spears and buffalo-skin shields,<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> as well as rifles, shotguns and pistols which were obtained through raiding or trading.


===Contact with other European settlers===
===Contact with other European settlers===
The Ute people traded with Europeans by the early 19th century including at encampments in the [[San Luis Valley]], [[Wet Mountains]], and the Upper Arkansas Valley and at the annual [[Rocky Mountain Rendezvous]]. Native Americans also traded at annual trade fairs in New Mexico, which were also ceremonial and social events lasting up to ten days or more. They involved the trading of skins, furs, foods, pottery, horses, clothing, and blankets.<ref name="Butler p. 40" />
[[Image:Ute delegation.jpg|thumb|left|Delegation of Ute Indians in Washington, D.C. in 1880. Background: Woretsiz and general [[Charles Adams (Colorado)]] are standing. Front from left to right: Chief Ignatio of the Southern Utes; [[Carl Schurz]] US Secretary of the Interior; [[Chief Ouray]] and his wife ''Chipeta'']]


In Utah, Utes began to be impacted by European-American contact with the 1847 arrival of [[Mormon pioneers|Mormon settlers]]. After initial settlement by the Mormons, as they moved south to the Wasatch Front, Utes were pushed off their land.<ref name="USHS" />
The Ute experience with European-American settlers is similar to that of many other Native American groups: competition, confrontation and eventual coerced relocation to [[Indian reservation|reservations]]. Of particular interest are the [[Walker War]] (1853–54) and [[Black Hawk War (Utah)|Black Hawk War]] (1865–72) in Utah.


{{Campaignbox Ute Wars|state=expanded}}
Over the years, friction between recently arrived white settlers and goldseekers in Utah and Colorado and local Ute groups resulted in several skirmishes and incidents. In the same period, the Ute sometimes allied with the United States in its wars with the Navajo, for example in 1863, and with the Apache.
Wars with settlers began about the 1850s when Ute children were captured in New Mexico and Utah by Anglo-American traders and sold in New Mexico and California.<ref name="Butler p. 40">{{cite book|author=William B. Butler|title=The Fur Trade in Colorado|year=2012|publisher=Western Reflections Publishing Company|isbn=978-1-937851-02-6|pages=40–41, 46}}</ref> The rush of Euro-American settlers and prospectors into Ute country began with [[Pike's Peak Gold Rush|an 1858 gold strike]]. The Ute allied with the United States and Mexico in its war with the Navajo during the same period.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />


Mormons continued to push the Utah Utes off their homelands,<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> which escalated into the [[Walker War]] (1853–54).<ref name="USHS" /> By the mid-1870s, the U.S. federal government forced Utes in Utah onto a reservation, less than 9% of their former land.<ref name="USHS" /> The Utes found it to be very inhospitable and tried to continue hunting and gathering off the reservation.<ref name="USHS" /><ref name="Barton" /> In the meantime, the [[Black Hawk War (Utah)|Black Hawk War]] (1865–72) occurred in Utah.<ref name="USHS" />
A series of treaties established a small [[Indian reservation|reservation]] in 1864 in northeast Utah, and a reservation in 1868, which included the western third of modern Colorado. The latter included land claimed by other tribes. Their lands were whittled away until only the modern reservations were left: a large cession of land in 1873 transferred the gold-rich San Juan area, which was followed in 1879 by the loss of most of the remaining land after the "[[Meeker Massacre]]".<ref>http://www.uintahbasin.usu.edu/johnbarton/files/chipeta.pdf{{Dead link|date=June 2013}}</ref>

In 1868, the U.S. federal government established reservation in Colorado.<ref name="USHS" /><ref name="Barton" /> Indian agents tried to get the Utes to farm, a dramatic lifestyle change which lead to starvation due to crop failures.<ref name="USHS" /> Their lands were whittled away until only the modern reservations were left. A large cession of land in 1873 transferred the gold-rich [[San Juan Mountains|San Juan]] area, which was followed in 1879 by the loss of most of the remaining land after the "[[Meeker Massacre]]".<ref name="USHS" /><ref name="Barton">{{cite web|url=http://www.uintahbasin.usu.edu/johnbarton/files/chipeta.pdf |title=Chipeta|access-date=April 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110720102912/http://www.uintahbasin.usu.edu/johnbarton/files/chipeta.pdf |archive-date=July 20, 2011 }}</ref> Utes were later put on a reservation in Utah, [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation]],<ref name="Burke">{{cite web|title=Chief Ouray|url=http://www.sanjuansilverstage.com/07heritage/native/ute/ute_chief_ouray.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305100609/http://www.sanjuansilverstage.com/07heritage/native/ute/ute_chief_ouray.html|archive-date=March 5, 2016|author=Kathryn R. Burke|publisher=San Juan Silver Stage}}</ref> as well as two reservations in Colorado, [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]] and [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation]].<ref>{{cite book|last1=Greif|first1=Nancy S.|last2=Johnson|first2=Erin J.|title=The Good Neighbor Guidebook for Colorado: Necessary Information and Good Advice for Living in and Enjoying Today's Colorado|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dXPklwSEocoC&pg=PA185|year=2000|publisher=Big Earth Publishing|isbn=978-1-55566-262-2|page=185}}</ref>


Eventually, the various bands of Utes were consolidated onto three reservations. Several of these bands maintain separate identities as part of the Ute tribal organizations. Although initially large and located in areas that white settlers deemed undesirable (occupying parts of Utah and most of western Colorado), the territory of the reservations was repeatedly reduced by various government actions, and encroachment by white settlers and [[mining]] interests. In the 20th century, several U.S. federal court decisions restored portions of the original reservation land to the Ute Tribes' jurisdiction and awarded monetary compensations for losses.
{{clear}}
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== Northern Ute culture ==
== Treaties with the United States ==
[[Image:Ute delegation.jpg|thumb|Delegation of Ute Indians in Washington, D.C., in 1880. Background: Woretsiz and general [[Charles Adams (Colorado Indian agent)]] are standing. Front from left to right: [[Chief Ignacio]] of the Southern Utes; [[Carl Schurz]] US Secretary of the Interior; [[Chief Ouray]] and his wife [[Chipeta]].]][[File:Territori Ute 1868.PNG|thumb|Territory from Treaty of 1868, relinquishing land east of the Contintental Divide, including Pikes Peak and San Luis Valley sacred and hunting grounds]][[File:Mapa Utes.png|thumb|Map of present-day reservations]]
[[Image:UteHideArt3.jpg|left|thumb|An [[Ute Tribe|Uncompaghre Ute]] Shaved Beaver Hide Painting. The Northern Ute would trap beavers, shave images into the animals' stretched and cured hides, and use them to decorate their personal and ceremonial dwellings.]]
Following acquisition of Ute territory from Mexico by the [[Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo]] 1848, the United States made a series of treaties with the Ute and executive orders that ultimately culminated with relocation to reservations:


*On December&nbsp;30, 1849, Quixiachigiate and 27 other chiefs of the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Capote|Capote]] and [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Mouache|Mouache Utes]] and signed the Peace Treaty of Abiquiú<ref name=Abiquiú>{{cite web|url=http://resources.utulsa.edu/law/classes/rice/Treaties/09_Stat_984_Utah.htm|title=Treaty with the Utah|author=The [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Capote|Capote]] and [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Mouache|Mouache Utes]]|date=December 30, 1849|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> at [[Abiquiú, New Mexico|Abiquiú (New Mexico)]] with new U.S. Indian Commissioner [[James Calhoun (politician, born 1802)|James S. Calhoun]].
The Northern Utes, consisting of the Whiteriver, Uintah, and Uncompahgre bands, are exceptional artists and produced extraordinary examples of religious and ceremonial beadwork, unusual art forms, and designed and decorated weapons of war in their traditional culture. The Ute obtained glass beads and other trade items from early trading contact with Europeans and rapidly incorporated their use into religious, ceremonial, and spartan objects.
*On October 3, 1861, [[President of the United States|U.S. President]] [[Abraham Lincoln]] signed an executive order reserving the [[Uinta River|Uinta River Valley]] in the [[Territory of Utah]] for [[Native Americans in the United States|American Indians]].
*On October&nbsp;7, 1863, leaders of the [[Uncompahgre Ute#Tabeguache|Tabeguache Utes]] signed the Tabeguache Treaty<ref name=Tabeguache_Treaty>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c38/llsl-c38.pdf|page=673|title=Treaty between the United States of America and the Tabeguache Band of Utah Indians, concluded October 7, 1863; Ratification advised, with Amendments, by the Senate, March 25, 1864; Amendments assented to, October 8, 1864; Proclaimed by the President of the United States, December 14, 1864|author=The [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[Uncompahgre Ute#Tabeguache|Tabeguache Utes]]|date=October 7, 1863|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> at the [[Conejos, Colorado|Tabaquache Agency at Conejos]] in [[San Luis Valley]]. The Tabeguache relinquished all land east of the [[Continental Divide of the Americas|Continental Divide]] and [[Middle Park (Colorado basin)|Middle Park]]. Unfortunately, this included land occupied by the Capote Utes.
*On May&nbsp;5, 1864, President Lincoln signed "An Act to vacate and sell the present Indian Reservations in Utah Territory, and to settle the Indians of said Territory in the Uinta Valley",<ref name=Uinta_Valley>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c38/llsl-c38.pdf|page=673|title=An Act to vacate and sell the present Indian Reservations in Utah Territory, and to settle the Indians of said Territory in the Uinta Valley|author=[[38th United States Congress|Thirty-eighth United States Congress]]|date=May 5, 1864|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> unilaterally removing all Indians in the [[Territory of Utah]] to the [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uinta Valley Reservation]]. On February&nbsp;23, 1865, President Lincoln signed "An Act to extinguish the Indian Title to Lands in the Territory of Utah suitable for agricultural and mineral Purposes",<ref name=Utah_expropriation>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c38/llsl-c38.pdf|page=432|title=An Act to extinguish the Indian Title to Lands in the Territory of Utah suitable for agricultural and mineral Purposes|author=[[38th United States Congress|Thirty-eighth United States Congress]]|date=February 23, 1865|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> expropriating Indian lands in the Territory of Utah outside of the Uinta Valley Reservation.
*On March&nbsp;2, 1868, leaders of the seven bands of the [[Ute Nation]] signed the Ute Treaty of 1868<ref name=Ute_Treaty_of_1868>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c40/llsl-c40.pdf|page=619|title=Treaty between the United States of America and the Tabeguache, Muache, Capote, Weeminuche, Tampa, Grand River, and Uintah Bands of Ute Indians|author=The [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[Ute Nation]]|publisher=[[40th United States Congress|Fortieth United States Congress]]|date=March 2, 1868|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> in [[Washington, D.C.]] The Utes were removed to the [[Ute Nation|Consolidated Ute Reservation]] in the western portion of the Territory of Colorado and the [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uinta Valley Reservation]] in the Territory of Utah.
*On September&nbsp;13, 1873, leaders of the seven bands of the [[Ute Nation]] signed the Brunot Treaty<ref name=Brunot_Treaty>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c43/llsl-c43.pdf|page=36|title=An act to ratify an agreement with certain Ute Indians in Colorado, and to make an appropriation for carrying out the same|author=[[43rd United States Congress|Forty-third United States Congress]]|date=April 29, 1874|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> in [[Washington, D.C.]] The Utes relinquished land in the [[San Juan Mountains]] desired by miners.
*On November&nbsp;9, 1878, leaders of the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Capote|Capote]], [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Mouache|Mouache]], and [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Weeminuche Utes]] signed an agreement at [[Pagosa Springs, Colorado]], establishing the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation]] and relinquishing all other land in [[Colorado]].<ref name=Southern_Ute>{{cite web|url=http://images.library.wisc.edu/History/EFacs/CommRep/AnnRep79/reference/history.annrep79.i0026.pdf|title=Agreement with the Capote, Muache, and Weeminuche Utes|author=[[United States|United States of America]] and the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Capote|Capote]], [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation#Mouache|Mouache]], and [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Weeminuche Utes]]|location=[[Pagosa Springs, Colorado]]|date=November 9, 1878|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref>
*On March&nbsp;6, 1880, leaders of the seven bands of the Ute Nation signed the Ute Agreement of 1880<ref name=Ute_Agreement_of_1880>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c46/llsl-c46.pdf|page=199|title=An act to accept and ratify the agreement submitted by the confederated bands of Ute Indians in Colorado, for the sale of their reservation in said State, and for other purposes, and to make the necessary appropriations for carrying out the same|author=The [[United States|United States of America]] and the [[Ute Nation]]|publisher=[[46th United States Congress|Forty-sixth United States Congress]]|date=June 15, 1880|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> at Washington, D.C. The Agreement called for the [[Uncompahgre Ute#Tabeguache|Tabeguache Utes]] to remove to the [[Grand Valley (Colorado-Utah)|Grand Valley]] of Colorado and [[White River Utes#Parianuche|Parianuche]] and [[White River Utes#Yampa|Yamparica Utes]] to remove to the [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uintah Reservation]] in the Territory of Utah.
*On January&nbsp;5, 1882, President [[Chester A. Arthur]] signed an executive order to remove the [[Uncompahgre Ute#Tabeguache|Tabeguache Utes]] to the new [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uncompahgre Indian Reservation]] in the Territory of Utah.
*On July&nbsp;28, 1882, President Arthur signed [[Ute Nation|An act relating to lands in Colorado lately occupied by the Uncompahgre and White River Ute Indians]],<ref name=Uncompahgre_and_White_River>{{cite web|url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/service/ll/llsl//llsl-c47/llsl-c47.pdf|page=178|title=An act relating to lands in Colorado lately occupied by the Uncompahgre and White River Ute Indians|author=[[47th United States Congress|Forty-seventh United States Congress]]|date=July 28, 1882|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref> expropriating the lands of the Parianuche, Tabeguache, and Yamparica Utes in Colorado.
*On June&nbsp;6, 1940, the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Weeminuche Utes]] separated from the [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation]] as the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Tribe]] of the [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Reservation]].<ref name=Ute_Mountain>{{cite web|url=https://thorpe.law.ou.edu/IRA/utemtcons.html|title=Constitution and Bylaws of the Ute Mountain Tribe of the Ute Mountain Reservation in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah|author=[[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Tribe]]|date=June 6, 1940|access-date=March 16, 2022}}</ref>


==Reservations==
[[Image:UteBeadwork1.jpg|right|thumb|A [[Ute Tribe|Northern Ute]] Beaded Pipebag. This pipebag is made from brain-tanned mule-deer hide, more than glass trade beads, and eagle bone. This pipebag incorporates the sacred symbols of the Ute, the blue fire, the yellow fire, the green of the earth and the hail of the thunder beings, motifs of the turtle (earth) and moccasin (home), and the symbol of the red fire and the bear, sacred animal of the Ute.]]
===Uinta and Ouray Indian Reservation===
The [[Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation|Uinta and Ouray Indian Reservation]] is the second-largest [[Indian Reservation]] in the US – covering over {{convert|4500000|acre|km2}} of land.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://www.utetribe.com/|title=Home|website=www.utetribe.com|language=en-gb|access-date=2018-04-16}}</ref><ref name="report">{{citation|url=http://www.bia.gov/cs/groups/xieed/documents/document/idc1-022549.pdf |type=PDF |title=UINTAH AND OURAY RESERVATION |publisher=[[Bureau of Indian Affairs]] |date=n.d.}}</ref> Tribal owned lands only cover approximately {{convert|1.2|e6acre|round=5}} of surface land and {{convert|40000|acre|km2}} of mineral-owned land within the {{convert|4|e6acre|round=5}} reservation area.<ref name="report"/> Founded in 1861, it is located in [[Carbon County, Utah|Carbon]], [[Duchesne County, Utah|Duchesne]], [[Grand County, Utah|Grand]], [[Uintah County, Utah|Uintah]], [[Utah County, Utah|Utah]], and [[Wasatch County, Utah|Wasatch Counties]] in Utah.<ref name=p245>Pritzker, Barry M. ''A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples.'' Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. p. 245. {{ISBN|978-0-19-513877-1}}.</ref> Raising stock and oil and gas leases are important revenue streams for the reservation. The tribe is a member of the [[Council of Energy Resource Tribes]].<ref name="Pritzker2000" />


====Northern Ute Tribe====
Like their southern neighbors, the Diné (Navajo), today a large percentage of Northern Ute are members of the [[Native American Church]] and participate in sacred ceremonies that use [[peyote]], a small spineless cactus. Traditional Ute healers use peyote to treat infections, and a variety of other plants, including [[Echninacea angustifolia|Elk Root]], Bear Root (''Ligusticum porteri''), and [[Salvia dorii|tobacco sage]]. The Ute have integrated peyote religion into their culture; its artistic and expressive influences pervade their art and rich cultural and ceremonial objects. There is evidence the Ute have used peyote obtained through trade and other potent ceremonial plants used as [[entheogen]]s since ancient times, such as the dried leaves of ''Larb'' (a species of ''[[Manzanita]]''), tobacco sage collected from the Escalante area (a mild [[hallucinogen]] when smoked), and the potent and narcotic [[White Uinta water lily]]. Tobacco Sage was also brewed into a tea with Elk Root and the root of the [[Yellow Uinta water lily]], and used to treat tumors and cancer. (While the root of the Yellow Uinta water lily is toxic in large amounts, small amounts can be used to strengthen the heart muscle in people with heart ailments.).{{citation needed|date=December 2010}}
The [[Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation]] (Northern Ute Tribe) consists of the following groups of people:
* [[Uintah tribe]], which is larger than its historical band since the U.S. government classified the following bands as Uintah when they were relocated to the reservation: [[San Pitch Utes|Sanpits]] (San Pitch), [[Pahvant]] that were not assimilated into the [[Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah|Paiute]], [[Timpanogos]], and Seuvarits.<ref name="Bakken" />
* [[White River Utes]] consists of [[Yampa Utes|Yampa]] and [[Parianuche]] Utes.<ref name="Bakken" /><ref name="SUH" />
* [[Uncompahgre Ute|Uncompahgre]], formerly called the Tabeguache Utes.<ref name="Bakken" />


===Southern Ute Indian Reservation===
[[Image:Horse Rider Ute Tribal Rock Art at Arches National Park.jpg|thumb|left|Ute Petroglyphs at [[Arches National Park]]]]
The [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation]] is located in southwestern Colorado, with its capital at [[Ignacio, Colorado|Ignacio]]. The area around the Southern Ute Indian reservation are the hills of [[Bayfield, Colorado|Bayfield]] and Ignacio, Colorado.{{citation needed|date=March 2024}}
Ute religious beliefs borrowed much from the Plains Indians after the arrival of the horse. The Northern and Uncompahgre Ute were the only group of Indians known to create ceremonial pipes out of salmon [[alabaster]], as well as a rare black [[pipestone (mineral)|pipestone]] found only in the creeks that border the southeastern slopes of the Uinta Mountains in Utah and Colorado. Although Ute pipe styles are unique, they resemble more closely the styles of their eastern neighbors from the Great Plains. The black pipestone is also used to make lethal war clubs that warriors used to great effect from the back of a horse. The Ute have a religious aversion to handling thunderwood (wood from a tree struck by lightning) and believe that the thunder beings would strike down any Ute Indian that touched or handled such wood. This is also a Diné (Navajo) belief. There is extensive evidence that contact between the two groups existed since ancient times.


The Southern Utes are the wealthiest of the tribes. The Tribe holds a triple A credit rating with all three primary rating agencies. Oil & gas, and real estate leases, plus various off-reservation financial and business investments, have contributed to their success. The tribe owns the Red Cedar Gathering Company, which owns and operates natural gas pipelines in and near the reservation.<ref>[http://www.redcedargathering.com/ Red Cedar Gathering Company website], accessed 12 April 2009.</ref> The tribe also owns the Red Willow Production Company, which began as a natural gas production company on the reservation. It has expanded to explore for and produce oil and natural gas in Colorado, New Mexico, Texas and in the deep water in the Gulf of Mexico. Red Willow has offices in [[Ignacio, Colorado]] and [[Houston, Texas]].<ref>[http://www.rwpc.us/ Red Willow Production Company website], accessed 12 April 2009,</ref> The Sky Ute Casino and its associated entertainment and tourist facilities, together with tribally operated Lake Capote, draw tourists. It hosts the Four Corners Motorcycle Rally<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fourcornersmotorcyclerally.com/|title=Four Corners Motorcycle Rally – Labor Day Weekend – Ignacio Colorado|work=fourcornersmotorcyclerally.com}}</ref> each year. The Ute operate KSUT,<ref>[http://www.ksut.org/ KSUT].</ref> the major public radio station serving southwestern Colorado and the Four Corners.
Each spring the Utes (Northern and Southern) hold their traditional [[Bear Dance]]s. Origin of the Bear Dance can be traced back several centuries. Each year, a mid-summer fasting ceremony known as the [[Sun Dance]] is held; this ceremony has important spiritual significance to the Ute.
[[Image:UteQuartzRattle.jpg|right|thumb|An [[Ute Tribe|Uncompaghre Ute]] Buffalo rawhide ceremonial rattle filled with quartz crystals. The rattle produces flashes of light ([[mechanoluminescence]]) created when quartz crystals are subjected to mechanical stress when the rattle is shaken in darkness.]]
[[Image:UteBeadworkHorseBag.jpg|right|thumb|An early 1900s [[Ute Tribe|Uncompahgre Ute]] Beaded Horse Bag. This bag is made from brain-tanned mule-deer hide, 30,000+ glass trade beads, and tobacco balls stitched into the rim and sides of the bag for protection. These bags were used to hold sacred religious totems, pipes, and carvings, sometimes an [[effigy]] of a [[medicine]] horse or medicine buffalo, or some other [[totem]] of power. The bags were not opened to view the contents except during ceremonies or in private. The objects were associated and used in private prayer and family rituals.]]


====Southern Ute Tribe====
The Uncompahgre Ute Indians from central Colorado are one of the first documented groups of people in the world known to utilize the effect of [[mechanoluminescence]] through the use of [[quartz]] crystals to generate light, likely hundreds of years before the modern world recognized the phenomenon. The Ute constructed special ceremonial rattles made from [[American bison|buffalo]] rawhide which they filled with clear quartz crystals collected from the mountains of Colorado and Utah. When the rattles were shaken at night during ceremonies, the friction and mechanical stress of the quartz crystals impacting together produced flashes of light which partly shone through the translucent buffalo hide. These rattles were believed to call spirits into Ute Ceremonies, and were considered extremely powerful religious objects.
The Southern Ute Tribes include the [[Muache]], [[Capote Ute|Capote]], and the [[Weeminuche]], the latter of which are at [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain]].<ref name="Bakken" />


== Historic Ute bands ==
===Ute Mountain Reservation===
The [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe|Ute Mountain Reservation]] is located near [[Towaoc, Colorado]] in the [[Four Corners]] region. Twelve ranches are held by tribal land trusts rather than family allotments. The tribe holds fee patent on 40,922.24 acres in Utah and Colorado. The 553,008 acre reservation borders the [[Mesa Verde National Park]], [[Navajo Reservation]], and the Southern Ute Reservation.<ref name="Greif">{{cite book|last1=Greif|first1=Nancy S.|last2=Johnson|first2=Erin J.|title=The Good Neighbor Guidebook for Colorado: Necessary Information and Good Advice for Living in and Enjoying Today's Colorado|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dXPklwSEocoC&pg=PA185|year=2000|publisher=Big Earth Publishing|isbn=978-1-55566-262-2|pages=185–}}</ref> The Ute Mountain Tribal Park abuts [[Mesa Verde National Park]] and includes many [[Ancestral Puebloan]] ruins. Their land includes the sacred [[Ute Mountain]].<ref name="Bakken2" /> The White Mesa Community of Utah (near Blanding) is part of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe but is largely autonomous.
The Ute were divided into several larger and smaller bands, which today mostly are organized as the Northern Ute Tribe, Southern Ute Tribe and Ute Mountain Ute Tribe:


The [[Ute Mountain Tribe|Ute Mountain Utes]] are descendants of the Weeminuche band,<ref name="Greif" /> who moved to the western end of the Southern Ute Reservation in 1897. (They were led by [[Chief Ignacio]], for whom the eastern capital is named).
===Northern Ute Tribe (Uinta Utes)===
* '''[[Yapudttka]]''' (''Yampadttka'', ''Yamparka'', ''Yamparika'', lived in the [[Yampa River|Yampa River Valley]] and the adjacent regions, known today as '''''[[White River Utes]]''''' or '''''Yamparika Utes''''')
* '''[[Pahdteeahnooch]]''' (''Pahdteechnooch'', ''Parianuc'', ''Parianuche'', later called ''Uncompahgre'', lived along the [[Colorado|Grand River]] in Colorado and Utah, known today as '''''Grand River Utes ''''' or '''''Parianuche Utes''''')
* '''[[Taveewach]]''' (''Taviwach'', ''Taviwac'', ''Tabeguache'', later called ''Uncompahgre'', lived in river valleys of the [[Gunnison River]] and [[Uncompahgre River]], as well in the [[Elk Mountains (Colorado)|Elk Mountains]] west toward the [[Grand Junction, Colorado|City of Grand Junction]], known today as '''''Taviwach Utes''''')
* '''[[Muhgruhtahveeach]]''' (include all ''Northern Utes'', who lived in Utah, known today as ''Utah Utes'' or ''Unita'')
** ''[[Cumumba]]'' (also called ''Weber Utes'', lived along the [[Weber River]], intermarried with the [[Western Shoshone]],<ref>It is discussed whether they were originally a Shoshone group, which later followed the Ute</ref> known today as '''''Cumumba Utes''''')
** ''[[Toompahnahwach]]'' (''Tumpanuwac'', ''Tumpanawach'' - ‘Fish-eaters’, also called ''Tumpipanogo'' or ''Timanogot'',<ref>derived from ''tumpi'' - 'rock' and ''panogos'' - 'water mouth' or 'Canyon'</ref> lived in the [[Wasatch Range]] centered around [[Mount Timpanogos]], along the southern and eastern shores of [[Utah Lake]] of the [[Utah Valley]], and in Heber Valley, [[Uinta Basin]] and Sanpete Valley, utilized the river canyons of the [[Spanish Fork (Utah)|Spanish Fork]], Diamond Fork, Hobble Creek, [[American Fork River|American Fork]] and [[Provo River]], in [[Spanish language|Spanish]] called ''Lagunas'' - ‘Lake People’, ''Come Pescados'' - ‘Fish-eaters’, known today as '''''[[Timpanog tribe|Timpanog Utes]]''''')
** ''[[Sahpeech]]'' (''Sanpeech'', ''Sanpits'', lived in the [[Sanpete Valley]] and [[Sevier River|Sevier River Valley]] and along the [[San Pitch River]], today known as '''''San Pitch Utes''''')
** ''[[Pahvant]]'' (lived west of the Wasatch Range in the [[Pavant Range]] towards the Nevada border along the Sevier River in the desert around [[Sevier Lake]] and [[Fish Lake (Utah)|Fish Lake]], therefore they called themselves ''Pahvant'' - ‘living near the water’, in their way of living they resembled their neighbors, the Kaibab Paiute, and intermarried just like the ''Sahyehpeech'' with neighboring [[Goshute]] and [[Paiute]], known as '''''Pahvant Utes''''', today absorbed into the '''''[[Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah]]''''')<ref>[http://historytogo.utah.gov/people/ethnic_cultures/the_history_of_utahs_american_indians/chapter5.html The Northern Utes of Utah]</ref><ref>[http://www.utefans.net/home/ancient_ute/utetribe.html Ute Tribe]</ref>
** ''[[Yoowetum]]'' (''Yoovwetuh'', ''Uinta-at'', later called ''Tavaputs'', lived in the [[Uintah Basin]], [[Uinta Mountains]], including the Utah Lake and [[Great Salt Lake]], along the [[Strawberry River (Utah)|Strawberry River]] in the west and the Tavaputs Plateau in the [[Green River (Utah)|Green River]]-[[Colorado River]]-system in the east, known today as '''''Uinta-Ats Utes''''')
** ''[[Sahyehpeech]]'' (''Sheberetch'', lived in the vicinity of today [[Moab, Utah|Moab]], had almost no direct contact with Europeans until 1850 Mormons penetrated into their territory, about 1870 by war and disease decimated ''Sahyehpeech'' joined other Ute bands, known today as '''''Sheberetch Utes''''')
** ''[[Moanunts]]'' (''Moanumts'', lived in the Upper Sevier River Valley in central Utah, in the Otter Creek region south of [[Salina, Utah|Salina]] and in the vicinity of Fish Lake, today absorbed into the '''''[[Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah]]''''')


===Cultural and lifestyle changes on the reservations ===
===Southern Ute Tribe===
Prior to living on reservations, Utes shared land with other tribal members according to a traditional societal property system. Instead of recognizing this lifestyle, the U.S. government provided allotments of land, which was larger for families than for single men. The Utes were intended to farm the land, which also was a forced vocational change. Some tribes, like the Uintah and Uncompahgre were given arable land, while others were allocated land that was not suited to farming and they resisted being forced to farm. The White River Utes were the most resentful and protested in Washington, D.C. The Weeminuches successfully implemented a shared property system from their allotted land.<ref name="Bakken2">{{cite book|last1=Bakken|first1=Gordon Morris|last2=Kindell|first2=Alexandra|title=Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=I6Q5DQAAQBAJ&pg=PT740|date=February 24, 2006|publisher=SAGE|isbn=978-1-4129-0550-3|chapter=Utes|page=648}}</ref> Utes were forced to perform manual labor, relinquish their horses, and send their children to [[American Indian boarding schools]].<ref name="Bakken2" /> Almost half of the children sent to boarding school in Albuquerque died in the mid-1880s,<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> due to [[tuberculosis]] or other diseases.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.historicabq.org/albuquerque-indian-school.html |title=Albuquerque Indian School |website=Historic Albuerquerque |access-date=June 20, 2018}}</ref>
* '''[[Capote Band of Utes]]''' (''Kapota'', ''Kahpota'') lived east of the [[Continental Divide of the Americas|Great Divide]] south of the [[Conejos River]] and east of the [[Rio Grande]] towards the west site of the [[Sangre de Cristo Mountains]], they were also living in the [[San Luis Valley]], along the headwaters of the Rio Grande and along the [[Animas River]], centered in the vicinity of today [[Chama, New Mexico|Chama]] and [[Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico|Tierra Amarilla]] of [[Rio Arriba County, New Mexico|Rio Arriba County]], like the ''Mahgrahch'' the Kahpota maintained trade relations to [[Puebloan peoples]] and came into conflict with southern plains people because of their alliance with the [[Jicarilla Apache|Ollero band of the Jicarilla Apache]].<ref>[http://historytogo.utah.gov/people/ethnic_cultures/the_history_of_utahs_american_indians/chapter5.html The Northern Utes of Utah]</ref>
* '''[[Muache Band of Utes]]''' (''Mouache'', ''Mahgruhch'', ''Mahgrahch'', ''Muwac'') lived along the eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains from [[Denver]], Colorado in the north to [[Las Vegas, New Mexico|Las Vegas]], New Mexico in the south, traded with northern Puebloan peoples, especially with [[Taos Pueblo]], therefore often called ''Taos-Ute'', ranged after adoption of the horse with their allies, the [[Jicarilla Apache|Llanero band of the Jicarilla Apache]], southeastward as far as the [[Texas Panhandle]].


There was a dramatic reduction in the Ute population, partly attributed to Utes moving off the reservation or resisting being counted.<ref name="Bakken2" /> In the early 19th century, there were about 8,000 Utes, and there were only about 1,800 tribe members in 1920.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> Although there was a significant reduction in the number of Utes after they were relocated to reservations, in the mid-20th century the population began to increase. This is partly because many people have returned to reservations, including those who left to attain college educations and careers.<ref name="Bakken2" /> By 1990, there were about 7,800 Utes, with 2,800 living in cities and towns and 5,000 on reservations.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />
===Ute Mountain Ute Tribe===
*The '''[[Weminuche Band of Utes]]''' ("Weeminuche", ''Weemeenooch'', ''Wiminuc'', ''Guiguinuches'') lived west of the Great Divide along the [[Dolores River]] of western Colorado, in the [[Abajo Mountains]], in the Valley of the [[San Juan River (Colorado River)|San Juan River]] and its northern tributaries and in the [[San Juan Mountains]] including the [[mesa]]s and [[plateau]]s of eastern Utah.


Utes have self-governed since the [[Indian Reorganization Act]] of 1934. Elections are held to select tribal council members.<ref name="Bakken2" /> The Northern, Southern, and Ute Mountain Utes received a total of $31 million in a land claims settlement. The Ute Mountain Tribe used their money, including what they earned from mineral leases, to invest in tourist related and other enterprises in the 1950s. In 1954, a group of mixed blood Utes were legally separated from the Northern Utes and called the Affiliated Ute Citizens.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> Since the [[Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975]], the Utes control the police, courts, credit management, and schools.<ref name="Bakken2" />
==Contemporary times==
[[Image:Gourd Dancing.jpg|thumb|A [[Ute Tribe|Northern Ute]] dancer performs the [[Gourd Dance]]. The Gourd dance originates from the [[Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma]].]]
Present-day Utes occupy a small fraction of their former territories.


==Modern life==
=== Northern Ute Tribe ===
All Ute reservations are involved in oil and gas leases and are members of the [[Council of Energy Resource Tribes]].<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> The Southern Ute Tribe is financially successful, having a casino for revenue generation. The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe generates revenues through gas and oil, mineral sales, casinos, stock raising, and a pottery industry. The tribes make some money on tourism and timber sales. Artistic endeavors include basketry and beadwork. The annual household income is well below that of their non-Native neighbors. Unemployment is high on the reservation, in large part due to discrimination, and half of the tribal members work for the government of the United States or the tribe.<ref name="Bakken2" /><ref name="Pritzker2000" />
{{main|Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation}}
The largest tribes are the Northern Ute, which live on the [[Uintah and Ouray Reservation]] in northeastern Utah. It is the largest of several groups of Ute and Shoshone Indians that were relocated to the Northern Ute Indian Reservation during the late 19th and early 20th century, including the Northern Shoshone, Uintah, Uncompahgre, White River, and Southern Ute.


The Ute language is still spoken on the reservation. Housing is generally adequate and modern. There are annual performance of the Bear and Sun dances. All tribes have scholarship programs for college educations. Alcoholism is a significant problem at Ute Mountain, affecting nearly 80% of the population. The age expectancy there was 40 years of age as of 2000.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />
Some believe that the Northern Ute disfranchised the other Ute groups when they reorganized during the mid-20th century and gained control of the Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation as a result. The people of the U & O reservation are well aware of their own ancestries. Lawsuits and litigation have been commonplace between [[mixed-blood]] Utes and the Northern Ute Tribe for rights to tribal enrollment and privileges. The Northern Ute Tribe has a 5/8 [[blood quantum laws|blood quantum]] requirement{{dubious|date=August 2012}} for tribal membership, higher than most tribes. Mixed-blood Utes with a lower percentage of Ute ancestry have accused the tribe of disfranchisement in terms of rights to tribal lands and equal legal treatment.


==Culture==
Some affiliates, descendants of certain Northern Ute families who in earlier years decided against enrollment and federal recognition of their native ancestry, live on the reservation land holdings owned by particular families since the Federal government forced relocation in 1881. The Affiliate Utes have recently applied for [[federally recognized tribes|federal recognition]] and are involved in litigation with the United States and the Northern Ute tribe. The Affiliates should not be confused with other mixed-blood Utes, which families did not choose to be unrecognized. Some Utes of partial descent are enrolled as Northern Utes, but are also active members of the Affiliates.
The culture of the Utes was influenced by the invasion of neighboring Native American tribes. The eastern Utes had many traits of Plain Indians, and they lived in [[tepee]]s after the 17th century. The western Utes were similar to [[Shoshone]]s and [[Paiute]]s, and they lived year-round in domed willow houses. Weeminuches lived in willow houses during the summer. The [[Jicarilla Apache]] and [[Puebloans]] influenced the southeastern Utes. All groups also lived in structures 10–15 feet in diameter that were made of conical pole-frames and brush, and [[sweat lodge]]s were similarly built.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> Lodging also included hide tepees and [[ramada (shelter)|ramadas]], depending upon the area.<ref name="USHS" />


[[File:UteHideArt3.jpg|thumb|left|An [[Uncompahgre Ute]] shaved beaver hide painting, made by trapping beavers and shaving images into the stretched and cured hides. They have used these paintings to decorate their personal and ceremonial dwellings.]]
Northern Utes can be found all over the world. They have learned to adapt to various societies. A northern Ute is also called ''Nuchu''. Various bands have more complex names and each name has a meaning. Over the years the Northern Ute language has changed extensively with the combinations of different dialects and English language influences.
People lived in extended family groups of about 20 to 100 people. They traveled to seasonally-specific camps.<ref name="USHS" /> In the spring and summer, family groups hunted and gathered food. The men hunted buffalo, antelope, elk, deer, bear, rabbit, sage hens, and beaver using arrows, spears and nets. They smoked and sun-dried the meat, and also ate it fresh.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /><ref name="USHS" /> They also fished in fresh water sources, like [[Utah Lake]]. Women processed and stored the meat and gathered greens, berries, roots, yampa, pine nuts, yucca, and seeds.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /><ref name="USHS" /> The [[Pahvant]] were the only Utes to cultivate food.<ref name="USHS" /> Some western groups ate reptiles and lizards. Some southeastern groups planted corn and some encouraged the growth of wild tobacco.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> Implements were made of wood, stone, and bone. Skin bags and baskets were used to carry goods.<ref name="USHS" /> There is evidence that pottery was made by the Utes as early as the 16th century.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Nelson|first1=Sarah M.|last2=Carillo|first2=Richard F.|last3=Clark|first3=Bonnie J.|first4=Lori E. |last4=Rhodes|first5= Dean|last5= Saitta|title=Denver: An Archaeological History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6q59wf15Bc8C&pg=PA16|date=January 2, 2009|publisher=[[University Press of Colorado]]|isbn=978-0-87081-984-1|page=122}}</ref>


Men and women wore woven and leather clothing and rabbit skin robes. They wore their hair long or in braids.<ref name="USHS" /> Parents provided some input, but people decided who they would take as spouses. Men could have multiple wives, and divorce was common and easy. There were restrictions for menstruating women and couples who were pregnant. Children were encouraged to be industrious through several rituals. When someone died, that person was buried in their best clothes with their head facing east. Their possessions were generally destroyed and their horses either had their hair cut or they were killed.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />
The Northern Ute Tribe began repurchasing former tribal lands following the [[Indian Reorganization Act]] of 1934. They gained return of the {{convert|726000|acre|km2|adj=on}} [[Hill Creek Extension]] by the federal government in 1948. More recent court decisions of the 1980s have granted the Northern Utes "legal jurisdiction" over three million acres (12,000&nbsp;km²) of alienated reservation lands. Discoveries of oil and gas on Ute land in Utah hold the promise of increased living standards for tribal members.


Occasionally members of Ute bands met up to trade, intermarry, and practice ceremonies, like the annual spring Bear Dance.<ref name="USHS">{{Cite web |url=https://historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/american_indians/uteindians.html |title=Ute Indians |last=Lewis |first=David Rich |publisher=Utah State Historical Society |access-date=June 17, 2018}}</ref>
[[Image:UtePipe3.jpg|right|thumb|Uncompahgre Ute Salmon Alabaster Ceremonial Pipe. Ute pipe styles are similar to those of the Plains Indians, with notable differences. Ute pipes are thicker and use shorter pipestems than the Plains style, and more closely resemble the pipe styles of their Northern neighbors, the [[Shoshone]].]]


===Spirituality and religion===
In 1965, the Northern Tribe agreed to allow the US [[Bureau of Reclamation]] to divert a portion of its water from the [[Uinta Basin]] (part of the [[Colorado River]] Basin) to the [[Great Basin]]. The diversion would provide water supply for the Bonneville Unit of the [[Central Utah Project]]. In exchange, the Bureau of Reclamation agreed to plan and construct the Unitah, Upalco, and Ute Indian Units of the Central Utah Project to provide storage of the tribe's water. By 1992, the Bureau of Reclamation had made little or no progress on construction of these facilities. To compensate the Tribe for the Bureau of Reclamation's failure to meet its 1965 construction obligations, Title V of the [[Central Utah Project Completion Act]] contained the Ute Indian Rights Settlement. Under the settlement, the Northern Tribe received $49.0 million for agricultural development, $28.5 million for recreation and fish and wildlife enhancement, and $195 million for economic development.
[[Image:Gourd Dancing.jpg|thumb|A [[#Northern Ute Tribe|Northern Ute]] dancer performs the [[Gourd Dance]]. The Gourd dance originates from the [[Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma]].]]


Utes have believed that all living things possess supernatural power. A medicine person (the term shaman was not used among Native people in North America, it being a Siberian term), people of any gender receive power from dreams and some take [[vision quest]]s.<ref name="Pritzker2000" /> Traditionally, Utes relied on medicine men for their physical and spiritual health, but it has become a dying occupation. Spiritual leaders have emerged that perform ceremonies previously performed by medicine men, like sweat ceremonies, one of the oldest spiritual ceremonies of the Utes, performed in a [[sweat lodge]].<ref name="Young1997">{{cite book|last=Young|first=Richard Keith|title=The Ute Indians of Colorado in the Twentieth Century|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780806129686|url-access=registration|year=1997|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|isbn=978-0-8061-2968-6|pages=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780806129686/page/40 40], 69, 272–278}}</ref> The annual fasting and purification ceremony [[Sun Dance]] is an important traditional spiritual event, feast, and means of asserting their Native American identity.<ref name="Young1997" /> It is held mid-summer. Each spring the Ute (Northern and Southern) hold their traditional [[Bear Dance]], which was used to strengthen social ties and for courtship. It is one of the oldest Ute ceremonies.<ref name="Pritzker2000" />
===Southern Ute Tribe===
The [[Southern Ute Indian Reservation]] is located in southwestern Colorado, with its capital at [[Ignacio, Colorado|Ignacio]]. The area around the Southern Ute Indian reservation are the hills of [[Bayfield, Colorado|Bayfield]] and Ignacio, Colorado.


The [[Native American Church]] is another source of spiritual life for some Ute, where followers believe that "God reveals Himself in [[Peyote]]."<ref name="Young1997" /> The church integrates Native American rituals with Christianity beliefs. One of the followers was [[Sapiah]] ("Buckskin Charley"), chief of the Southern Ute Tribe.<ref name="Young1997" />
The Southern Ute are the wealthiest of the tribes and claim financial assets approaching $2 billion.<ref>[http://www.gfprivateequity.com/ GF Private Equity Group, LLC], Southern Ute Indian Tribe , USA.</ref> Gambling, tourism, oil & gas, and real estate leases, plus various off-reservation financial and business investments, have contributed to their success. The tribe owns the Red Cedar Gathering Company, which owns and operates natural gas pipelines in and near the reservation.<ref>[http://www.redcedargathering.com/ Red Cedar Gathering Company website], accessed 12 April 2009.</ref> The tribe also owns the Red Willow Production Company, which began as a natural gas production company on the reservation. It has expanded to explore for and produce oil and natural gas in Colorado, New Mexico, and Texas. Red Willow has offices in [[Ignacio, Colorado]] and [[Houston, Texas]].<ref>[http://www.rwpc.us/ Red Willow Production Company website], accessed 12 April 2009,</ref> The Sky Ute Casino and its associated entertainment and tourist facilities, together with tribally operated Lake Capote, draw tourists. It hosts the Four Corners Motorcycle Rally<ref>[http://www.fourcornersmotorcyclerally.com/ Four Corners Motorcycle Rally]</ref> each year. The Ute operate KSUT,<ref>[http://www.ksut.org/ KSUT].</ref> the major public radio station serving southwestern Colorado and the Four Corners.


Christianity was picked up by some Ute from missionaries of the Presbyterian and Catholic churches.<ref name="Young1997" /> Some Northern Utes accepted [[Mormonism]].<ref name="Bakken2" /> It is common for people to see Christianity and Native American spirituality as complementary beliefs, rather than believing that they have to pick either Christianity or Native American spirituality.<ref name="Young1997" />
[[Image:UteCeremonialKnife.jpg|right|thumb|A [[Ute Tribe|Northern Ute]] ceremonial knife made from white quartz and Western cedar wood. These knives were used to cut the umbilical cord of a newborn infant or to harvest sweetgrass and other sacred herbs for ceremonies.]]


====Ceremonial items and artwork ====
===Ute Mountain Tribe===
Utes produced beadwork over centuries. They obtained glass beads and other trade items from early trading contact with Europeans and rapidly incorporated their use into their objects.<ref name="NelsonCarillo2009">{{cite book|last1=Nelson|first1=Sarah M.|last2=Carillo|first2=Richard F.|last3=Clark|first3=Bonnie J.|first4=Lori E.|last4= Rhodes|first5= Dean |last5=Saitta|title=Denver: An Archaeological History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6q59wf15Bc8C&pg=PA16|date=January 2, 2009|publisher=University Press of Colorado|isbn=978-0-87081-984-1|pages=16–18}}</ref>
The [[Ute Mountain Tribe|Ute Mountain Ute]] are descendants of the ''Weminuche'' band, who moved to the western end of the Southern Ute Reservation in 1897. (They were led by [[Chief Ignacio]], for whom the eastern capital is named). The [[Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]] Reservation is located near [[Towaoc, Colorado]]. It includes small sections of Utah and New Mexico. The Ute Mountain Tribal Park abuts [[Mesa Verde National Park]] and includes many [[Anasazi]] ruins. The White Mesa Community of Utah (near Blanding) is part of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe but is largely autonomous.


Native Americans have been using ceremonial pipes for thousands and years, and the traditional pipes have been used in sacred Ute ceremonies that are conducted by a medicine person or spiritual leader.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.deseretnews.com/article/401977/PANEL-QUASHES-DEBATE-ON-CEREMONIAL-PIPES.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180623083555/https://www.deseretnews.com/article/401977/PANEL-QUASHES-DEBATE-ON-CEREMONIAL-PIPES.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=June 23, 2018 |title=Panel Quashes Debate on Ceremonial Pipes |date=February 1, 1995 |work=Deseret News |access-date=June 21, 2018}}</ref> The pipe symbolizes the Ute's connection to the creator and their existence on Earth. They conduct pipe ceremonies during events were different people come together. For instance, they conducted a pipe ceremony at an Interfaith event in [[Salt Lake City, Utah]].<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.heraldextra.com/lifestyles/faith-and-values/religion/salt-lake-group-launches-annual-interfaith-month/article_67e289dc-f1a4-58df-ab94-247089ff344f.html |title=Salt Lake group launches annual Interfaith Month |last=Clark |first=Cody |date=February 2, 2013 |work=Daily Herald |access-date=June 21, 2018}}</ref>
===Modern challenges===
Gradual assimilation into American culture has presented both challenges and opportunities for the Utes. The current conditions of the Utes are similar to those of many Native Americans living on reservations. Cultural differences between the Utes and the rest of America have contributed to pockets of [[poverty]], educational difficulties and societal marginalization, although the Southern Ute Tribe is financially successful.


The Uncompahgre Ute Indians from central Colorado are one of the first documented groups of people in the world known to use the effect of [[mechanoluminescence]]. They used [[quartz]] crystals to generate light, likely hundreds of years before the modern world recognized the phenomenon. The Ute constructed special ceremonial rattles made from [[American bison|buffalo]] rawhide, which they filled with clear quartz crystals collected from the mountains of Colorado and Utah. When the rattles were shaken at night during ceremonies, the friction and mechanical stress of the quartz crystals banging together produced flashes of light which partly shone through the translucent buffalo hide. These rattles were believed to call spirits into Ute ceremonies, and were considered extremely powerful religious objects.<ref>[https://www.bbc.co.uk/bang/handson/sugar_glow.shtml BBC Big Bang on triboluminescence]</ref><ref>Timothy Dawson ''Changing colors: now you see them, now you don't'' Coloration Technology 2010 {{doi|10.1111/j.1478-4408.2010.00247.x}}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Wilk|first=Stephen R.|title=How the Ray Gun Got Its Zap: Odd Excursions into Optics|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NaTHAAAAQBAJ&pg=PA231|date=October 7, 2013|publisher=Oxford University Press|isbn=978-0-19-937131-0|pages=230–231}}</ref>
==Ethnobotany==
{{expand section|date=August 2013}}
The Ute use the roots and flowers of [[Abronia fragrans]] for stomach and bowel troubles.<ref>Chamberlin, Ralph V. 1909 Some Plant Names of the Ute Indians. American Anthropologist 11:27-40 (p. 32)</ref>


<gallery widths="180px" heights="120px">
== In popular culture ==
Image:UteBeadwork1.jpg|A [[#Northern Ute Tribe|Northern Ute]] Beaded Pipebag. This pipebag— made from brain-tanned mule-deer hide, glass trade beads, and eagle bone—incorporates the sacred symbols of the Ute: the blue fire, the yellow fire, the green of the earth, and the hail of the thunder beings; motifs of the turtle (earth) and moccasin (home), and the symbol of the red fire and the bear, sacred animal of the Ute.
''[[When the Legends Die]]'' (1963), a book by [[Hal Borland]], is a story about a Ute boy growing up on a reservation after his parents die, and becoming a rodeo sensation. A film adaptation by the same name was released in 1972.
Image:UteBeadworkHorseBag.jpg|An early 1900s [[Uncompahgre Ute]] beaded horse bag, which has been used to hold sacred religious totems, pipes, and carvings, sometimes an [[effigy]] of a medicine horse or medicine buffalo, or some other [[totem]] of power. The objects were associated and used in private prayer and family rituals.
Image:UteCeremonialKnife.jpg|A Northern Ute ceremonial knife made from white quartz and Western cedar wood. These knives were used to cut the umbilical cord of a newborn infant or to harvest sweetgrass and other sacred herbs for ceremonies.
Image:UteQuartzRattle.jpg|An Uncompahgre Ute Buffalo rawhide ceremonial rattle filled with quartz crystals. The rattle produces flashes of light ([[mechanoluminescence]]) created when quartz crystals are subjected to mechanical stress when the rattle is shaken in darkness.
Image:UtePipe3.jpg|Uncompahgre Ute Salmon Alabaster Ceremonial Pipe. Ute pipe styles are similar to those of the Plains Indians, with notable differences. Ute pipes are thicker and use shorter pipestems than the Plains style, and more closely resemble the pipe styles of their Northern neighbors, the [[Shoshone]].
</gallery>


==Notable Utes==
===Ethnobotany===
{{main|Native American ethnobotany}}
*[[Chipeta]], Ouray's wife and Ute delegate to negotiations with federal government
[[File:Abroniafragrans.JPG|thumb|''[[Abronia fragrans]]'']]
*[[R. Carlos Nakai]], Native American flutist
Medicine women used up to 300 plants to treat ailments. Pine pitch or split cactus was used to treat sores or wounds. Sage leaves were used for colds. Sage tea and powdered obsidian for sore eyes. Teas were made from various plants to treat stomachaches. Grass was used to stop bleeding.<ref>{{cite book|last=Beaton|first=Gail M.|title=Colorado Women: A History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gsu9AwAAQBAJ&pg=PT26|date=November 15, 2012|publisher=University Press of Colorado|isbn=978-1-4571-7382-0|page=26}}</ref> The Ute use the roots and flowers of ''[[Abronia fragrans]]'' for stomach and bowel troubles.<ref>[[Ralph Vary Chamberlin|Chamberlin, Ralph V.]] 1909 Some Plant Names of the Ute Indians. American Anthropologist 11:27-40 (p. 32)</ref> Cedar and sage were used in purification ceremonies conducted in sweat lodges.<ref>{{cite book|last=Young|first=Richard Keith|title=The Ute Indians of Colorado in the Twentieth Century|url=https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780806129686|url-access=registration|year=1997|publisher=University of Oklahoma Press|isbn=978-0-8061-2968-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780806129686/page/273 273]}}</ref> [[Yarrow]] was also used as a medicine by the Utes.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Yaniv|first1=Zohara|last2=Bachrach|first2=Uriel|title=Handbook of Medicinal Plants|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QN78GmmPGBQC&pg=PA133|date=July 25, 2005|publisher=CRC Press|isbn=978-1-56022-995-7|page=133}}</ref> There were many plants found in [[Provo Canyon]] that were used by Utes as medicine.<ref>{{cite book|last=Simmons|first=Virginia McConnell|title=Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=dMS9AwAAQBAJ&pg=PT19|date=May 18, 2011|publisher=University Press of Colorado|isbn=978-1-4571-0989-8|page=PT19}}</ref>
*[[Chief Ouray]], leader of the Uncompahgre band of the Ute tribe

*[[Joseph Rael]], (b. 1935), dancer, author, and spiritualist
== Population history ==
*[[Raoul Trujillo]], dancer, choreographer, and actor
The Ute were estimated at 6,000 in New Mexico in year 1846 (and also 6,000 in 1854), 7,000 in Colorado in year 1866 and 13,050 in Utah in 1867, for a total of around 26,050 in the mid-19th century. In 1868 it was reported that 5,000 Ute lived on the Colorado reservation. Later Ute population declined rapidly. The census of 1890 counted only 2,839 (1,854 in Utah and 985 in Colorado), Indian Affairs 1900 reported 2,694 (1,699 in Utah and 995 in Colorado) and in 1910 there were about 2,658 (1,472 in Utah, 815 in Colorado and 371 in South Dakota).<ref name="Krzywicki">{{Cite book |last=Krzywicki |first=Ludwik |url=https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc1.b4381154&view=1up&seq=346&skin=2021 |title=Primitive society and its vital statistics |publisher=Macmillan |year=1934 |series=Publications of the Polish Sociological Institute |location=London |pages=477–478}}</ref>
*[[Bluff War|Polk]], Ute-Paiute chief

*[[Posey War|Posey]], Ute-Paiute chief
Ute population has increased in the 20th and 21st centuries, and 15,119 people identified as Ute on the 2020 census.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Distribution of American Indian tribes: Ute People in the US |url=https://www.statimetric.com/us-ethnicity/American_Indian_tribes_Ute}}</ref>

== Notable historic Utes ==
* [[Antonga Black Hawk|Black Hawk]], son of Chief San-Pitch and noted War leader during the Utah [[Black Hawk War (1865–72)]].
* [[Chipeta]], Ouray's wife and Ute delegate to negotiations with federal government
* [[R. Carlos Nakai]], Native American flutist
* [[Ouray (Ute leader)|Ouray]], leader of the Uncompahgre band of the Ute tribe
* [[Bluff War|Polk]], Ute-Paiute chief
* [[Posey War|Posey]], Ute-Paiute chief
* [[Joseph Rael]], (b. 1935), dancer, author, and spiritualist
* [[Sanpitch (Ute chief)|Sanpitch]], chief of the Sanpete tribe, and brother of [[Walkara|Chief Walkara]]. [[Sanpete County]] is named for him.
* [[Raoul Trujillo]], dancer, choreographer, and actor
* [[Walkara|Chief Walkara, also called Chief Walker]], the most prominent Chief in the Utah area when the [[Mormon Pioneers]] arrived and leader during the Walker War.


==See also==
==See also==
{{portal|History|United States|Native Americans}}
* [[List of Indian reservations in the United States]]
* [[Indian Campaign Medal]]
* [[Otto Mears]]
* [[Pinhook Draw fight]]
* [[Ute Indian Museum]]
* [[Ute Indian Museum]]
* [[Ute music]]
* [[Ute mythology]]
* [[Ute mythology]]
{{clear}}
* [[Utah]]

== Notes ==
{{reflist|22em}}


== References ==
== References ==
* {{cite book |last1=Denison |first1=Brandi |title=Ute Land Religion in the American West, 1879–2009 |date=2017 |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |location=Lincoln |isbn=9781496201416|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=zuYlDwAAQBAJ}}
{{reflist}}
* {{cite book|last=Pritzker |first=Barry |title=A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples |url=https://archive.org/details/nativeamericanen0000prit|url-access=registration |year=2000 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-513877-1 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/nativeamericanen0000prit/page/242 242]–246|chapter=Utes}}</ref>


==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* McPherson, Robert S. (2011) ''As If the Land Owned Us: An Ethnohistory of the White Mesa Utes''. ISBN 978-1-60781-145-9.
* Jones, Sondra (2019). ''Being and Becoming Ute: The Story of an American Indian People''. Salt Lake City: [[University of Utah Press]]. {{ISBN|978-1-60781-657-7}}.
* Silbernagel, Robert. (2011) ''Troubled Trails: The Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado''. ISBN 978-1-60781-129-9.
* McPherson, Robert S. (2011). ''As If the Land Owned Us: An Ethnohistory of the White Mesa Utes''. {{ISBN|978-1-60781-145-9}}.
* Silbernagel, Robert. (2011). ''Troubled Trails: The Meeker Affair and the Expulsion of Utes from Colorado''. {{ISBN|978-1-60781-129-9}}.


== External links ==
==External links==
{{sister project links|auto=yes}}
{{commons category|Ute}}
{{AmCyc Poster|Utahs}}
{{AmCyc Poster|Utahs}}
* [http://www.utetribe.com/ Ute Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Agency (Northern Ute Tribe)]
* [https://www.utemountainutetribe.com/ Ute Mountain Ute Tribe], official website
* [http://www.southern-ute.nsn.us/ Southern Ute Indian Tribe]
* [https://www.utetribe.com/ Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation], official website
* [http://www.utemountainutetribe.com/ Ute Mountain Ute Tribe]
* [https://www.southernute-nsn.gov/ Southern Ute Indian Tribe], official website
* [https://indian.utah.gov/ute-indian-tribe-of-the-uintah-ouray-reservation/ Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah & Ouray Reservation], Utah Division of Indian Affairs
* [http://www.uiteducation.com/ Ute Tribe Education Department]
* [https://www.utetribeeducation.org/uited/uited-home?dh=1 Ute Indian Tribe Education Department]
* [http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_041600_ute.htm Ute article], Encyclopedia of North American Indians
* [https://utahindians.org/archives/ute/didYouknow.html Utah American Indian Digital Archive]
* [http://lawreview.byu.edu/archives/2008/2/8WITTE.FIN.pdf Removing Classrooms from the Battlefield: Liberty, Paternalism, and the Redemptive Promise of Educational Choice, 2008 BYU Law Review 377 The Utes and Richard Henry Pratt<!-- Bot generated title -->]
* [http://college.hmco.com/history/readerscomp/naind/html/na_041600_ute.htm Ute article], ''Encyclopedia of North American Indians''
* [http://www.fourcornersmotorcyclerally.com/ Four Corners Motorcycle Rally]
* [http://www.greeleyhistory.org/pages/white_river.html White River/Meeker Massacre]
* [http://historytogo.utah.gov/utah_chapters/ Utah History to Go]


{{Ute people}}
{{Indigenous People of CO}}
{{Indigenous People of CO}}
{{Indigenous People of AZ}}
{{Indigenous People of AZ}}
{{authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Ute people}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Ute people}}
[[Category:Ute tribe| ]]
[[Category:Ute people| ]]
[[Category:Ute (ethnic group)| ]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in Colorado]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in Colorado]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in Nevada]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in New Mexico]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in New Mexico]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in Utah]]
[[Category:Native American tribes in Utah]]

Latest revision as of 03:37, 12 December 2024

Ute
Núuchi
Chief Severo and family, c. 1899
Total population
4,800[1]–10,000[2]
Regions with significant populations
United States (Colorado, Utah)[3]
Languages
English, Spanish, Ute (Núuchi-u)[1]
Religion
Native American Church, Indigenous religion, and Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Shoshone, Southern Paiute, and Chemehuevi[4]

Ute (/ˈjt/) are an Indigenous people of the Great Basin and Colorado Plateau in present-day Utah, western Colorado, and northern New Mexico.[5][3] Historically, their territory also included parts of Wyoming, eastern Nevada, and Arizona.

Their Ute dialect is a Colorado River Numic language, part of the Uto-Aztecan language family[6]

Historically, the Utes belonged to almost a dozen nomadic bands, who came together for ceremonies and trade. They also traded with neighboring tribes, including Pueblo peoples. The Ute had settled in the Four Corners region by 1500 CE.[7]

The Utes' first contact with Europeans was with the Spanish in the 18th century.[5] The Utes had already acquired horses from neighboring tribes by the late 17th century. They had limited direct contact with the Spanish but participated in regional trade.[5]

Sustained contact with Euro-Americans began in 1847 with the arrival of the Mormons to the American West and the gold rushes of the 1850s.[5] Utes fought to protect their homelands from invaders, and Brigham Young convinced U.S. President Abraham Lincoln to forcibly remove Utes in Utah to an Indian Reservation in 1864.[5] Colorado Utes were forced onto a reservation in 1881.[8][3]

Today, there are three federally recognized tribes of Ute people:

These three tribes maintain reservations: Uintah-Ouray in northeastern Utah (3,500 members); Southern Ute in Colorado (1,500 members); and Ute Mountain which primarily lies in Colorado, but extends to Utah and New Mexico (2,000 members).[citation needed]

Name

[edit]

The origin of the word Ute is unknown; it is first attested as Yuta in Spanish documents. The Utes' self-designation is Núuchi-u, meaning 'the people'.[9]

Language

[edit]
Distribution of Uto-Aztecan languages in present-day Western United States at the time of first European contact/invasion

Ute people speak the Ute dialect of the Colorado River Numic language, which is closely related to the Shoshone language.[6]

Their language is from the Southern subdivision of the Numic language branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family. This language family is found almost entirely in the Western United States and Mexico,[9] stretching from southeastern California, along the Colorado River to Colorado and extending south the Nahuan languages in central Mexico.[9][10]

The Numic language group likely originated near the present-day border of Nevada and California, then spread north and east.[11] By about 1000 CE, hunters and gatherers in the Great Basin spoke Uto-Aztecan. They are the likely ancestrors of the Ute, Shoshone, Paiute, and Chemehuevi peoples.[4] Linguists believe that the Southern Numic speakers (Ute and Southern Paiute), left the Numic homeland first and that the Central and then the Western subgroups later migrated east and north.[12] The Southern Numic-speaking tribes, the Ute, Shoshone, Southern Paiute, and Chemehuevi, all share many cultural, genetic, and linguistic characteristics.[4]

Territory

[edit]
The Ute Trail, later called the Old Spanish Trail, was a trade route between Santa Fe and California, through Colorado and Utah. It was later used by European explorers of the west.

There were ancestral Utes in southwestern Colorado and southeastern Utah by 1300, living a hunter-gatherer lifestyle.[4][13] The Ute occupied much of the present state of Colorado by the 1600s. The Comanches from the north joined them in eastern Colorado in the early 1700s. In the 19th century, the Arapaho and Cheyenne invaded southward into eastern Colorado.[14]

The Utes came to inhabit a large area including most of Utah,[15] western and central Colorado, and south into the San Juan River watershed of New Mexico.[16] Some Ute bands stayed near their home domains, while others ranged further away seasonally.[4] Hunting grounds extended further into Utah and Colorado, as well as into Wyoming, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico.[4] Winter camps were established along rivers near the present-day cities of Provo and Fort Duchesne in Utah and Pueblo, Fort Collins, Colorado Springs of Colorado.[4]

Colorado

[edit]
Henry Chapman Ford, Ute camp, by 1894

Aside from their home domain, there were sacred places in present-day Colorado. The Tabeguache Ute's name for Pikes Peak is Tavakiev, meaning sun mountain. Living a nomadic hunter-gatherer lifestyle, summers were spent in the Pikes Peak area mountains, which was considered by other tribes to be the domain of the Utes.[17] Pikes Peak was a sacred ceremonial area for the band.[18] The mineral springs at Manitou Springs were also sacred and Ute and other tribes came to the area, spent winters there, and "share[d] in the gifts of the waters without worry of conflict."[19][20][21][22] Artifacts found from the nearby Garden of the Gods, such as grinding stones, "suggest the groups would gather together after their hunt to complete the tanning of hides and processing of meat."[17][23]

The old Ute Pass Trail went eastward from Monument Creek (near Roswell) to Garden of the Gods and Manitou Springs to the Rocky Mountains.[24] From Ute Pass, Utes journeyed eastward to hunt buffalo. They spent winters in mountain valleys where they were protected from the weather.[17][23] The North and Middle Parks of present-day Colorado were among favored hunting grounds, due to the abundance of game.[25]

Cañon Pintado, south of Rangely in Rio Blanco County, Colorado

Cañon Pintado, or painted canyon, is a prehistoric site with rock art from Fremont people (650 to 1200) and Utes. The Fremont art reflect an interest in agriculture, including corn stalks and use of light at different times of the year to show a planting calendar. Then there are images of figures holding shields, what appear to be battle victims, and spears. These were seen by the Domínguez–Escalante expedition (1776). Utes left images of firearms and horses in the 1800s. The Crook's Brand Site depicts a horse with a brand from George Crook's regiment during the Indian Wars of the 1870s.[26]

Utah

[edit]

Public land surrounding the Bears Ears buttes in southeastern Utah became the Bears Ears National Monument in 2016 in recognition for its ancestral and cultural significance to several Native American tribes, including the Utes. Members of the Ute Mountain Ute and Uintah and Ouray Reservations sit on a five-tribe coalition to help co-manage the monument with the Bureau of Land Management and United States Forest Service.[27][28]

Ute petroglyphs at Arches National Park

The Ute appeared to have hunted and camped in an ancient Ancestral Puebloans and Fremont people campsite in near what is now Arches National Park. At a site near natural springs, which may have held spiritual significance, the Ute left petroglyphs in rock along with rock art by the earlier peoples. Some of the images are estimated to be more than 900 years old. The Utes petroglyphs were made after the Utes acquired horses, because they show men hunting while on horseback.[29]

Historic Ute bands

[edit]
Distribution of Ute Indian bands: 1. Pahvant, 2. Moanunt, 3. Sanpits, 4. Timpanogots, 5. Uintah, 6. Seuvarits (Sheberetch), 7. Yampa, 8. Parianuche, 8a. Sabuagana, 9. Tabeguache, 10. Weeminuche, 11. Capote, 12. Muache. University Press of Colorado.

The Ute were divided into several nomadic and closely associated bands, which today mostly are organized as the Northern, Southern, and Ute Mountain Ute Tribes.

Hunting and gathering groups of extended families were led by older members by the mid-17th century. Activities, like hunting buffalo and trading, may have been organized by band members. Chiefs led bands when structure was required with the introduction of horses to plan for defense, buffalo hunting, and raiding. Bands came together for tribal activities by the 18th century.[15]

Multiple bands of Utes that were classified as Uintahs by the U.S. government when they were relocated to the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation.[30] The bands included the San Pitch, Pahvant, Seuvartis, Timpanogos and Cumumba Utes. The Southern Ute Tribes include the Muache, Capote, and the Weeminuche, the latter of which are at Ute Mountain.[4]

# Tribe Ute Name Home
state
Home
locale
Current
name
Tribe Grouping Reservation
1 Pahvant Utah West of the Wasatch Range in the Pavant Range towards the Nevada border along the Sevier River in the desert around Sevier Lake and Fish Lake Paiute Northern Paiute[31][32][33]
2 Moanunt Utah Upper Sevier River Valley in central Utah, in the Otter Creek region south of Salina and in the vicinity of Fish Lake Paiute Northern Paiute[33]
3 Sanpits Utah Sanpete Valley and Sevier River Valley and along the San Pitch River San Pitch Northern Uintah and Ouray[30][34]
4 Timpanogots Timpanogots Núuchi Utah Wasatch Range around Mount Timpanogos, along the southern and eastern shores of Utah Lake of the Utah Valley, and in Heber Valley, Uinta Basin and Sanpete Valley Timpanogots Northern Uintah and Ouray[35]
5 Uintah Uintah Núuchi Utah Utah Lake to the Uintah Basin of the Tavaputs Plateau near the Grand-Colorado River-system Uintah Northern Uintah and Ouray[30]
6 Seuvarits (Sahyehpeech / Sheberetch) Seuvarits Núuchi Utah Moab area Northern Uintah and Ouray[30][4]
7 Yampa 'Iya-paa Núuchi Colorado Yampa River Valley area White River Utes Northern Uintah and Ouray[30]
8 Parianuche Pariyʉ Núuchi Colorado and Utah Colorado River (previously called the Grand River) in western Colorado and eastern Utah White River Ute Northern Uintah and Ouray[36][30][37]
8a Sabuagana (Saguaguana / Akanaquint) Colorado Colorado River in western and central Colorado Northern [38]
9 Tabeguache Tavi'wachi Núuchi Colorado and Utah Gunnison and Uncompahgre River valleys Uncompahgre Northern Uintah and Ouray[39]
10 Weeminuche Wʉgama Núuchi Colorado and Utah In the Abajo Mountains, in the Valley of the San Juan River and its northern tributaries and in the San Juan Mountains including eastern Utah. Weeminuche Ute Mountain Ute Mountain[40]
11 Capote Kapuuta Núuchi Colorado East of the Great Divide, south of the Conejos River, and east of the Rio Grande towards the west site of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, they were also living in the San Luis Valley, along the headwaters of the Rio Grande and along the Animas River Capote Southern Southern[31]
12 Muache Moghwachi Núuchi Colorado Eastern foothills of the Rocky Mountains from Denver, Colorado in the north to Las Vegas, New Mexico in the south Muache Southern Southern[30]

This is also a half-Shoshone, half-Ute band of Cumumbas who lived above Great Salt Lake, near what is now Ogden, Utah. There are also other half-Ute bands, some of whom migrated seasonally far from their home domain.[4]

History

[edit]

Relationships with neighboring tribes

[edit]

The Utes traded with Rio Grande River Pueblo peoples at annual trade fairs or rescates held in at the Taos, Santa Clara, Pecos and other pueblos.[41] The Ute also traded with Navajo, Havasupai, and Hopi peoples for woven blankets.[42]

The Utes were closely allied with the Jicarilla Apache who shared much of the same territory and intermarried. They also intermarried with Paiute, Bannock and Western Shoshone peoples.[16] There was so much intermarriage with the Paiute, that territorial borders of the Utes and the Southern Paiutes are difficult to ascertain in southeast Utah.[4] Until the Ute acquired horses, any conflict with other tribes was usually defensive. They had generally poor relations with Northern and Eastern Shoshone.[15]

Contact with the Spanish

[edit]

In 1637, the Spanish fought with the Utes, 80 of whom were captured and enslaved. Three people escaped with horses.[4] Their lifestyle changed with the acquisition of horses by 1680. They became more mobile, more able to trade, and better able to hunt large game. Ute culture changed dramatically in ways that paralleled the Plains Indian cultures of the Great Plains. They also became involved in the horse and slave trades and respected warriors.[43] Horse ownership and warrior skills developed while riding became the primary status symbol within the tribe and horse racing became common. With greater mobility, there was increased need for political leadership.[4]

The Utes had direct trade with the Spanish at least by 1765 and possibly earlier.[44] The Utes had already acquired horses from neighboring tribes by the late 17th century.[5]

During this time, few Europeans entered Ute territory. Exceptions to this include the Spanish Domínguez–Escalante expedition of 1776.[5]

The Utes traded with other tribes who were part of the deerskin and fur trade with the Spanish in New Mexico in the 18th century. The Utes, the main trading partners of the Spanish residents of New Mexico, were known for their soft, high-quality tanned deerskins, or chamois, and they also traded meat, buffalo robes, and Indian and Spanish captives taken by the Comanche. The Utes traded their goods for cloth, blankets, guns, horses, maize, flour, and ornaments. Several Ute learned Spanish through trading. The Spanish "seriously guarded" trade with the Utes, limiting it to annual caravans, but by 1750 they were reliant on the trade with the Utes, their deerskin being a highly sought commodity. The Utes also traded in enslaved women and children captives from Apache, Comanche, Paiute and Navajo tribes.[41]

French trappers passed through Ute territory and established trading posts beginning in the 1810s.[43] The French expedition recorded meeting members of the Moanunts and Pahvant bands.[4]

Horse culture

[edit]
John Wesley Powell first became acquainted with the Utes along the White River in northwestern Colorado in the fall of 1868. During his expedition five years later, his photographer, Jack Hillers, captured this photograph of a young girl accompanied by a warrior, whose body, painted with yellow and black stripes, is marked for battle.

After the Utes acquired horses, they started to raid other Native American tribes. While their close relatives, the Comanches, moved out from the mountains and became Plains Indians as did others including the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa, and Plains Apache, the Utes remained close to their ancestral homeland.[15] The south and eastern Utes also raided Native Americans in New Mexico, Southern Paiutes and Western Shoshones, capturing women and children and selling them as slaves in exchange for Spanish goods. They fought with Plains Indians, including the Comanche, who had previously been allies. The name "Comanche" is from the Ute word for them, kɨmantsi, meaning enemy.[45] The Pawnee, Osage and Navajo also became enemies of the Plains Indians by about 1840.[46] Some Ute bands fought against the Spanish and Pueblos with the Jicarilla Apache and the Comanche. The Ute were sometimes friendly but sometimes hostile to the Navajo.[15]

The Utes were skilled warriors who specialized in horse mounted combat. War with neighboring tribes was mostly fought for gaining prestige, stealing horses, and revenge. Men would organize themselves into war parties made up of warriors, medicine men, and a war chief who led the party. To prepare themselves for battle Ute warriors would often fast, participate in sweat lodge ceremonies, and paint their faces and horses for special symbolic meanings. The Utes were master horsemen and could execute daring maneuvers on horseback while in battle. Most plains Indians had warrior societies, but the Ute generally did not - the Southern Utes developed such societies late, and soon lost them in reservation life. Warriors were exclusively men but women often followed behind war parties to help gather loot and sing songs. Women also performed the Lame Dance to symbolize having to pull or carry heavy loads of loot after a raid.[47] The Utes used a variety of weapons including bows, spears and buffalo-skin shields,[15] as well as rifles, shotguns and pistols which were obtained through raiding or trading.

Contact with other European settlers

[edit]

The Ute people traded with Europeans by the early 19th century including at encampments in the San Luis Valley, Wet Mountains, and the Upper Arkansas Valley and at the annual Rocky Mountain Rendezvous. Native Americans also traded at annual trade fairs in New Mexico, which were also ceremonial and social events lasting up to ten days or more. They involved the trading of skins, furs, foods, pottery, horses, clothing, and blankets.[48]

In Utah, Utes began to be impacted by European-American contact with the 1847 arrival of Mormon settlers. After initial settlement by the Mormons, as they moved south to the Wasatch Front, Utes were pushed off their land.[43]

Wars with settlers began about the 1850s when Ute children were captured in New Mexico and Utah by Anglo-American traders and sold in New Mexico and California.[48] The rush of Euro-American settlers and prospectors into Ute country began with an 1858 gold strike. The Ute allied with the United States and Mexico in its war with the Navajo during the same period.[15]

Mormons continued to push the Utah Utes off their homelands,[15] which escalated into the Walker War (1853–54).[43] By the mid-1870s, the U.S. federal government forced Utes in Utah onto a reservation, less than 9% of their former land.[43] The Utes found it to be very inhospitable and tried to continue hunting and gathering off the reservation.[43][49] In the meantime, the Black Hawk War (1865–72) occurred in Utah.[43]

In 1868, the U.S. federal government established reservation in Colorado.[43][49] Indian agents tried to get the Utes to farm, a dramatic lifestyle change which lead to starvation due to crop failures.[43] Their lands were whittled away until only the modern reservations were left. A large cession of land in 1873 transferred the gold-rich San Juan area, which was followed in 1879 by the loss of most of the remaining land after the "Meeker Massacre".[43][49] Utes were later put on a reservation in Utah, Uintah and Ouray Indian Reservation,[50] as well as two reservations in Colorado, Ute Mountain Ute Tribe and Southern Ute Indian Reservation.[51]

Treaties with the United States

[edit]
Delegation of Ute Indians in Washington, D.C., in 1880. Background: Woretsiz and general Charles Adams (Colorado Indian agent) are standing. Front from left to right: Chief Ignacio of the Southern Utes; Carl Schurz US Secretary of the Interior; Chief Ouray and his wife Chipeta.
Territory from Treaty of 1868, relinquishing land east of the Contintental Divide, including Pikes Peak and San Luis Valley sacred and hunting grounds
Map of present-day reservations

Following acquisition of Ute territory from Mexico by the Treaty of Guadalupe-Hidalgo 1848, the United States made a series of treaties with the Ute and executive orders that ultimately culminated with relocation to reservations:

Reservations

[edit]

Uinta and Ouray Indian Reservation

[edit]

The Uinta and Ouray Indian Reservation is the second-largest Indian Reservation in the US – covering over 4,500,000 acres (18,000 km2) of land.[62][63] Tribal owned lands only cover approximately 1.2 million acres (4,855 km2) of surface land and 40,000 acres (160 km2) of mineral-owned land within the 4 million acres (16,185 km2) reservation area.[63] Founded in 1861, it is located in Carbon, Duchesne, Grand, Uintah, Utah, and Wasatch Counties in Utah.[64] Raising stock and oil and gas leases are important revenue streams for the reservation. The tribe is a member of the Council of Energy Resource Tribes.[15]

Northern Ute Tribe

[edit]

The Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation (Northern Ute Tribe) consists of the following groups of people:

Southern Ute Indian Reservation

[edit]

The Southern Ute Indian Reservation is located in southwestern Colorado, with its capital at Ignacio. The area around the Southern Ute Indian reservation are the hills of Bayfield and Ignacio, Colorado.[citation needed]

The Southern Utes are the wealthiest of the tribes. The Tribe holds a triple A credit rating with all three primary rating agencies. Oil & gas, and real estate leases, plus various off-reservation financial and business investments, have contributed to their success. The tribe owns the Red Cedar Gathering Company, which owns and operates natural gas pipelines in and near the reservation.[65] The tribe also owns the Red Willow Production Company, which began as a natural gas production company on the reservation. It has expanded to explore for and produce oil and natural gas in Colorado, New Mexico, Texas and in the deep water in the Gulf of Mexico. Red Willow has offices in Ignacio, Colorado and Houston, Texas.[66] The Sky Ute Casino and its associated entertainment and tourist facilities, together with tribally operated Lake Capote, draw tourists. It hosts the Four Corners Motorcycle Rally[67] each year. The Ute operate KSUT,[68] the major public radio station serving southwestern Colorado and the Four Corners.

Southern Ute Tribe

[edit]

The Southern Ute Tribes include the Muache, Capote, and the Weeminuche, the latter of which are at Ute Mountain.[4]

Ute Mountain Reservation

[edit]

The Ute Mountain Reservation is located near Towaoc, Colorado in the Four Corners region. Twelve ranches are held by tribal land trusts rather than family allotments. The tribe holds fee patent on 40,922.24 acres in Utah and Colorado. The 553,008 acre reservation borders the Mesa Verde National Park, Navajo Reservation, and the Southern Ute Reservation.[69] The Ute Mountain Tribal Park abuts Mesa Verde National Park and includes many Ancestral Puebloan ruins. Their land includes the sacred Ute Mountain.[70] The White Mesa Community of Utah (near Blanding) is part of the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe but is largely autonomous.

The Ute Mountain Utes are descendants of the Weeminuche band,[69] who moved to the western end of the Southern Ute Reservation in 1897. (They were led by Chief Ignacio, for whom the eastern capital is named).

Cultural and lifestyle changes on the reservations

[edit]

Prior to living on reservations, Utes shared land with other tribal members according to a traditional societal property system. Instead of recognizing this lifestyle, the U.S. government provided allotments of land, which was larger for families than for single men. The Utes were intended to farm the land, which also was a forced vocational change. Some tribes, like the Uintah and Uncompahgre were given arable land, while others were allocated land that was not suited to farming and they resisted being forced to farm. The White River Utes were the most resentful and protested in Washington, D.C. The Weeminuches successfully implemented a shared property system from their allotted land.[70] Utes were forced to perform manual labor, relinquish their horses, and send their children to American Indian boarding schools.[70] Almost half of the children sent to boarding school in Albuquerque died in the mid-1880s,[15] due to tuberculosis or other diseases.[71]

There was a dramatic reduction in the Ute population, partly attributed to Utes moving off the reservation or resisting being counted.[70] In the early 19th century, there were about 8,000 Utes, and there were only about 1,800 tribe members in 1920.[15] Although there was a significant reduction in the number of Utes after they were relocated to reservations, in the mid-20th century the population began to increase. This is partly because many people have returned to reservations, including those who left to attain college educations and careers.[70] By 1990, there were about 7,800 Utes, with 2,800 living in cities and towns and 5,000 on reservations.[15]

Utes have self-governed since the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934. Elections are held to select tribal council members.[70] The Northern, Southern, and Ute Mountain Utes received a total of $31 million in a land claims settlement. The Ute Mountain Tribe used their money, including what they earned from mineral leases, to invest in tourist related and other enterprises in the 1950s. In 1954, a group of mixed blood Utes were legally separated from the Northern Utes and called the Affiliated Ute Citizens.[15] Since the Indian Self-Determination and Education Assistance Act of 1975, the Utes control the police, courts, credit management, and schools.[70]

Modern life

[edit]

All Ute reservations are involved in oil and gas leases and are members of the Council of Energy Resource Tribes.[15] The Southern Ute Tribe is financially successful, having a casino for revenue generation. The Ute Mountain Ute Tribe generates revenues through gas and oil, mineral sales, casinos, stock raising, and a pottery industry. The tribes make some money on tourism and timber sales. Artistic endeavors include basketry and beadwork. The annual household income is well below that of their non-Native neighbors. Unemployment is high on the reservation, in large part due to discrimination, and half of the tribal members work for the government of the United States or the tribe.[70][15]

The Ute language is still spoken on the reservation. Housing is generally adequate and modern. There are annual performance of the Bear and Sun dances. All tribes have scholarship programs for college educations. Alcoholism is a significant problem at Ute Mountain, affecting nearly 80% of the population. The age expectancy there was 40 years of age as of 2000.[15]

Culture

[edit]

The culture of the Utes was influenced by the invasion of neighboring Native American tribes. The eastern Utes had many traits of Plain Indians, and they lived in tepees after the 17th century. The western Utes were similar to Shoshones and Paiutes, and they lived year-round in domed willow houses. Weeminuches lived in willow houses during the summer. The Jicarilla Apache and Puebloans influenced the southeastern Utes. All groups also lived in structures 10–15 feet in diameter that were made of conical pole-frames and brush, and sweat lodges were similarly built.[15] Lodging also included hide tepees and ramadas, depending upon the area.[43]

An Uncompahgre Ute shaved beaver hide painting, made by trapping beavers and shaving images into the stretched and cured hides. They have used these paintings to decorate their personal and ceremonial dwellings.

People lived in extended family groups of about 20 to 100 people. They traveled to seasonally-specific camps.[43] In the spring and summer, family groups hunted and gathered food. The men hunted buffalo, antelope, elk, deer, bear, rabbit, sage hens, and beaver using arrows, spears and nets. They smoked and sun-dried the meat, and also ate it fresh.[15][43] They also fished in fresh water sources, like Utah Lake. Women processed and stored the meat and gathered greens, berries, roots, yampa, pine nuts, yucca, and seeds.[15][43] The Pahvant were the only Utes to cultivate food.[43] Some western groups ate reptiles and lizards. Some southeastern groups planted corn and some encouraged the growth of wild tobacco.[15] Implements were made of wood, stone, and bone. Skin bags and baskets were used to carry goods.[43] There is evidence that pottery was made by the Utes as early as the 16th century.[72]

Men and women wore woven and leather clothing and rabbit skin robes. They wore their hair long or in braids.[43] Parents provided some input, but people decided who they would take as spouses. Men could have multiple wives, and divorce was common and easy. There were restrictions for menstruating women and couples who were pregnant. Children were encouraged to be industrious through several rituals. When someone died, that person was buried in their best clothes with their head facing east. Their possessions were generally destroyed and their horses either had their hair cut or they were killed.[15]

Occasionally members of Ute bands met up to trade, intermarry, and practice ceremonies, like the annual spring Bear Dance.[43]

Spirituality and religion

[edit]
A Northern Ute dancer performs the Gourd Dance. The Gourd dance originates from the Kiowa Tribe of Oklahoma.

Utes have believed that all living things possess supernatural power. A medicine person (the term shaman was not used among Native people in North America, it being a Siberian term), people of any gender receive power from dreams and some take vision quests.[15] Traditionally, Utes relied on medicine men for their physical and spiritual health, but it has become a dying occupation. Spiritual leaders have emerged that perform ceremonies previously performed by medicine men, like sweat ceremonies, one of the oldest spiritual ceremonies of the Utes, performed in a sweat lodge.[73] The annual fasting and purification ceremony Sun Dance is an important traditional spiritual event, feast, and means of asserting their Native American identity.[73] It is held mid-summer. Each spring the Ute (Northern and Southern) hold their traditional Bear Dance, which was used to strengthen social ties and for courtship. It is one of the oldest Ute ceremonies.[15]

The Native American Church is another source of spiritual life for some Ute, where followers believe that "God reveals Himself in Peyote."[73] The church integrates Native American rituals with Christianity beliefs. One of the followers was Sapiah ("Buckskin Charley"), chief of the Southern Ute Tribe.[73]

Christianity was picked up by some Ute from missionaries of the Presbyterian and Catholic churches.[73] Some Northern Utes accepted Mormonism.[70] It is common for people to see Christianity and Native American spirituality as complementary beliefs, rather than believing that they have to pick either Christianity or Native American spirituality.[73]

Ceremonial items and artwork

[edit]

Utes produced beadwork over centuries. They obtained glass beads and other trade items from early trading contact with Europeans and rapidly incorporated their use into their objects.[74]

Native Americans have been using ceremonial pipes for thousands and years, and the traditional pipes have been used in sacred Ute ceremonies that are conducted by a medicine person or spiritual leader.[75] The pipe symbolizes the Ute's connection to the creator and their existence on Earth. They conduct pipe ceremonies during events were different people come together. For instance, they conducted a pipe ceremony at an Interfaith event in Salt Lake City, Utah.[76]

The Uncompahgre Ute Indians from central Colorado are one of the first documented groups of people in the world known to use the effect of mechanoluminescence. They used quartz crystals to generate light, likely hundreds of years before the modern world recognized the phenomenon. The Ute constructed special ceremonial rattles made from buffalo rawhide, which they filled with clear quartz crystals collected from the mountains of Colorado and Utah. When the rattles were shaken at night during ceremonies, the friction and mechanical stress of the quartz crystals banging together produced flashes of light which partly shone through the translucent buffalo hide. These rattles were believed to call spirits into Ute ceremonies, and were considered extremely powerful religious objects.[77][78][79]

Ethnobotany

[edit]
Abronia fragrans

Medicine women used up to 300 plants to treat ailments. Pine pitch or split cactus was used to treat sores or wounds. Sage leaves were used for colds. Sage tea and powdered obsidian for sore eyes. Teas were made from various plants to treat stomachaches. Grass was used to stop bleeding.[80] The Ute use the roots and flowers of Abronia fragrans for stomach and bowel troubles.[81] Cedar and sage were used in purification ceremonies conducted in sweat lodges.[82] Yarrow was also used as a medicine by the Utes.[83] There were many plants found in Provo Canyon that were used by Utes as medicine.[84]

Population history

[edit]

The Ute were estimated at 6,000 in New Mexico in year 1846 (and also 6,000 in 1854), 7,000 in Colorado in year 1866 and 13,050 in Utah in 1867, for a total of around 26,050 in the mid-19th century. In 1868 it was reported that 5,000 Ute lived on the Colorado reservation. Later Ute population declined rapidly. The census of 1890 counted only 2,839 (1,854 in Utah and 985 in Colorado), Indian Affairs 1900 reported 2,694 (1,699 in Utah and 995 in Colorado) and in 1910 there were about 2,658 (1,472 in Utah, 815 in Colorado and 371 in South Dakota).[85]

Ute population has increased in the 20th and 21st centuries, and 15,119 people identified as Ute on the 2020 census.[86]

Notable historic Utes

[edit]

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Ute-Southern Paiute". Ethnologue. Retrieved 27 Feb 2014.
  2. ^ "American Indian, Alaska Native Tables from the Statistical Abstract of the United States: 2004–2005" (Archived 2012-10-04 at the Wayback Machine). US Census Bureau, USA.
  3. ^ a b c Pritkzer, A Native American Encyclopedia, p. 242
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Bakken, Gordon Morris; Kindell, Alexandra (February 24, 2006). "Utes". Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West. SAGE. ISBN 978-1-4129-0550-3.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Denison, Brandi (2017). Ute Land Religion in the American West, 1879–2009. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 13. ISBN 9781496201416.
  6. ^ a b Iyuba (15 November 2021). "Book of the Week — A Few Words in the Utah and Sho-sho-ne Dialects…". J. Willard Marriott Library. University of Utah. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
  7. ^ "Southern Ute". Museum of Northern Arizona. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
  8. ^ Denison, Brandi (2017). Ute Land Religion in the American West, 1879–2009. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. pp. 13–14. ISBN 9781496201416.
  9. ^ a b c Givón, Talmy (January 1, 2011). Ute Reference Grammar. John Benjamins Publishing. pp. 1–3. ISBN 978-90-272-0284-0.
  10. ^ The Masterkey. Southwest Museum. 1985. p. 11.
  11. ^ Catherine Louise Sweeney Fowler. 1972. "Comparative Numic Ethnobiology". University of Pittsburgh. PhD dissertation.
  12. ^ David Leedom Shaul. 2014. A Prehistory of Western North America, The Impact of Uto-Aztecan Languages. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press.
  13. ^ The Post-Pueblo Period: A.D. 1300 to Late 1700s. Crow Canyon Archaeological Center. 2011. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  14. ^ Indians of Colorado. The William E. Hewitt Institute for History and Social Science Education. University of Northern Colorado. Retrieved June 16, 2018.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Pritzker, Barry (2000). "Utes". A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford University Press. pp. 242–246. ISBN 978-0-19-513877-1.
  16. ^ a b Hodge, Frederick Webb (1912). Handbook of American Indians North of Mexico: N-Z. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 874–875.
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  25. ^ William B. Butler (2012). The Fur Trade in Colorado. Western Reflections Publishing Company. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-937851-02-6.
  26. ^ "Canyon Pintado's Rock Art". Colorado Life Magazine. July–August 2014. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
  27. ^ Davenport, Coral (December 28, 2016). "Obama Designates Two New National Monuments, Protecting 1.65 Million Acres". The New York Times. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  28. ^ "Bears Ears national Monument: Questions & Answers" (PDF). United States Forest Service. Archived from the original (PDF) on January 1, 2017. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
  29. ^ Sullivan, Gordon (2005). Roadside Guide to Indian Ruins & Rock Art of the Southwest. Westcliffe Publishers. pp. 48–49. ISBN 978-1-56579-481-8.
  30. ^ a b c d e f g h "History of the Southern Ute". Southern Ute Indian Tribe. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  31. ^ a b "Chapter Five - The Northern Utes of Utah". utah.gov.
  32. ^ "Ute Memories". utefans.net.
  33. ^ a b D'Azevedo, Warren L., Volume Editor. Handbook of North American Indians, Volume 11: Great Basin. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution, 1986. ISBN 978-0-16-004581-3.
  34. ^ Simmons, Virginia McConnell (September 15, 2001). The Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. University Press of Colorado. p. PT33. ISBN 978-1-60732-116-3.
  35. ^ "The Timpanogos Nation: Uinta Valley Reservation". www.timpanogostribe.com. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  36. ^ Bakken, Gordon Morris; Kindell, Alexandra (February 24, 2006). Encyclopedia of Immigration and Migration in the American West. SAGE. p. PT740. ISBN 978-1-4129-0550-3.
  37. ^ Bradford, David; Reed, Floyd; LeValley, Robbie Baird (2004). When the grass stood stirrup-high: facts, photographs and myths of West-Central Colorado. Colorado State University. p. 4.
  38. ^ Carson, Phil (1998). Across the Northern Frontier: Spanish Explorations in Colorado. Big Earth Publishing. p. 103. ISBN 978-1-55566-216-5.
  39. ^ "Frontier in Transition: A History of Southwestern Colorado (Chapter 5)". National Park Service. Retrieved June 18, 2018.
  40. ^ Oil and Gas Development on the Southern Ute Indian Reservation: Environmental Impact Statement. 2002. p. 43.
  41. ^ a b William B. Butler (2012). The Fur Trade in Colorado. Western Reflections Publishing Company. pp. 27, 40–41, 45, 65, 67, 70–71. ISBN 978-1-937851-02-6.
  42. ^ William B. Butler (2012). The Fur Trade in Colorado. Western Reflections Publishing Company. p. 49. ISBN 978-1-937851-02-6.
  43. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Lewis, David Rich. "Ute Indians". Utah State Historical Society. Retrieved June 17, 2018.
  44. ^ Weber, David J. (1980). The Taos Trappers: The Fur Trade in the Far Southwest, 1540-1846. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. p. 25. ISBN 9780806117027.
  45. ^ Bright, William, ed. (2004). Native American Placenames of the United States. University of Oklahoma Press.
  46. ^ Jordan, Julia A. (October 22, 2014). Plains Apache Ethnobotany. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 209. ISBN 978-0-8061-8581-1.
  47. ^ Simmons, Virginia McConnell. Ute Indians of Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press.
  48. ^ a b William B. Butler (2012). The Fur Trade in Colorado. Western Reflections Publishing Company. pp. 40–41, 46. ISBN 978-1-937851-02-6.
  49. ^ a b c "Chipeta" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on July 20, 2011. Retrieved April 14, 2011.
  50. ^ Kathryn R. Burke. "Chief Ouray". San Juan Silver Stage. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016.
  51. ^ Greif, Nancy S.; Johnson, Erin J. (2000). The Good Neighbor Guidebook for Colorado: Necessary Information and Good Advice for Living in and Enjoying Today's Colorado. Big Earth Publishing. p. 185. ISBN 978-1-55566-262-2.
  52. ^ The United States of America and the Capote and Mouache Utes (December 30, 1849). "Treaty with the Utah". Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  53. ^ The United States of America and the Tabeguache Utes (October 7, 1863). "Treaty between the United States of America and the Tabeguache Band of Utah Indians, concluded October 7, 1863; Ratification advised, with Amendments, by the Senate, March 25, 1864; Amendments assented to, October 8, 1864; Proclaimed by the President of the United States, December 14, 1864" (PDF). p. 673. Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  54. ^ Thirty-eighth United States Congress (May 5, 1864). "An Act to vacate and sell the present Indian Reservations in Utah Territory, and to settle the Indians of said Territory in the Uinta Valley" (PDF). p. 673. Retrieved March 16, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  55. ^ Thirty-eighth United States Congress (February 23, 1865). "An Act to extinguish the Indian Title to Lands in the Territory of Utah suitable for agricultural and mineral Purposes" (PDF). p. 432. Retrieved March 16, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  56. ^ The United States of America and the Ute Nation (March 2, 1868). "Treaty between the United States of America and the Tabeguache, Muache, Capote, Weeminuche, Tampa, Grand River, and Uintah Bands of Ute Indians" (PDF). Fortieth United States Congress. p. 619. Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  57. ^ Forty-third United States Congress (April 29, 1874). "An act to ratify an agreement with certain Ute Indians in Colorado, and to make an appropriation for carrying out the same" (PDF). p. 36. Retrieved March 16, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  58. ^ United States of America and the Capote, Mouache, and Weeminuche Utes (November 9, 1878). "Agreement with the Capote, Muache, and Weeminuche Utes" (PDF). Pagosa Springs, Colorado. Retrieved March 16, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  59. ^ The United States of America and the Ute Nation (June 15, 1880). "An act to accept and ratify the agreement submitted by the confederated bands of Ute Indians in Colorado, for the sale of their reservation in said State, and for other purposes, and to make the necessary appropriations for carrying out the same" (PDF). Forty-sixth United States Congress. p. 199. Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  60. ^ Forty-seventh United States Congress (July 28, 1882). "An act relating to lands in Colorado lately occupied by the Uncompahgre and White River Ute Indians" (PDF). p. 178. Retrieved March 16, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  61. ^ Ute Mountain Tribe (June 6, 1940). "Constitution and Bylaws of the Ute Mountain Tribe of the Ute Mountain Reservation in Colorado, New Mexico, Utah". Retrieved March 16, 2022.
  62. ^ "Home". www.utetribe.com. Retrieved 2018-04-16.
  63. ^ a b UINTAH AND OURAY RESERVATION (PDF) (PDF), Bureau of Indian Affairs, n.d.
  64. ^ Pritzker, Barry M. A Native American Encyclopedia: History, Culture, and Peoples. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000. p. 245. ISBN 978-0-19-513877-1.
  65. ^ Red Cedar Gathering Company website, accessed 12 April 2009.
  66. ^ Red Willow Production Company website, accessed 12 April 2009,
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References

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Further reading

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