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- Q5096760 description "Chief of the Southern Utes".
- Q5096760 description "Chief of the Southern Utes".
- Q5096760 subject Q6645937.
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- Q5096760 abstract "Chief Ignacio (1828–1913) was a chief of the Weeminuche band of the Ute tribe of American Indians, also called the Southern Utes, located in present-day Colorado north of the San Juan River. He led the band through many difficult years in the late nineteenth century, when they were being encroached on by European-American settlers. In January 1880, Chief Ignacio was part of the Ute delegation that traveled to Washington, DC to testify before the US Congress about the 1879 Meeker Massacre and the Ute uprising among the northern Utes on the White River. Although the Weeminuche had not participated in that violence, white settlers wanted to push all the Utes away from their areas. The Utes tried to negotiate for peace, but later that year Congress passed legislation forcing the Utes into reservations. Unlike the Northern and Central bands of Utes, who were forced to reservations in Utah, the Weeminuche and two other Southern bands managed to stay in Colorado.Together with the Muache and Capote Utes, the Weeminuche occupied the Southern Ute Indian Reservation in southern Colorado and named their capital Ignacio in the chief's honor.In 1887 the US Congress passed the General Allotment Act, better known as the Dawes Act. It was intended to regulate the breakup of the communal Native American lands and assign separate householder allotments of 160 acres each, with "surplus" land to be sold on the open market. This was another step in assimilating the Native Americans to European-American ways, based on individual landholdings. In 1895 the Southern Utes voted on the issue, narrowly passing a measure for allotment.Refusing to have their land broken up, Chief Ignacio and the Weeminuche people moved to the western part of the Southern Ute Reservation in 1896. Their descendants have occupied the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation with headquarters at Navajo Springs. Later they moved their capital to Towaoc. The Ute Mountain Ute are one of three federally recognized tribes of the Ute people.".
- Q5096760 birthDate "1828".
- Q5096760 birthYear "1828".
- Q5096760 deathDate "1913".
- Q5096760 deathYear "1913".
- Q5096760 thumbnail Ute_delegation.jpg?width=300.
- Q5096760 wikiPageExternalLink fg.cgi?page=gr&GSvcid=7467&GRid=13867298&.
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- Q5096760 wikiPageWikiLink Q7686903.
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- Q5096760 wikiPageWikiLink Q8667061.
- Q5096760 wikiPageWikiLink Q8892472.
- Q5096760 dateOfBirth "1828".
- Q5096760 dateOfDeath "1913".
- Q5096760 name "Ignacio".
- Q5096760 shortDescription "Chief of the Southern Utes".
- Q5096760 type Person.
- Q5096760 type Agent.
- Q5096760 type Person.
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- Q5096760 type NaturalPerson.
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- Q5096760 comment "Chief Ignacio (1828–1913) was a chief of the Weeminuche band of the Ute tribe of American Indians, also called the Southern Utes, located in present-day Colorado north of the San Juan River. He led the band through many difficult years in the late nineteenth century, when they were being encroached on by European-American settlers.".
- Q5096760 label "Chief Ignacio".
- Q5096760 depiction Ute_delegation.jpg.
- Q5096760 name "Ignacio".