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The
Fort Belknap Indian Reservation is located in north central Montana. The
reservation is the homeland of the Gros Ventre and Assiniboine people.
Established in 1888, the reservation is what remains of the vast ancestral
territory of the Blackfeet and Assiniboine Nations. The Gros Ventre, as
members of the Blackfeet confederacy, and the Assiniboine Nation signed the
Fort Laramie treaties of 1851 and 1855 with the United States Government
establishing their respective territories within the continental United
States. The Fort Belknap Reservation is part of what remains of these two
nations ancestral territory that included all of central and eastern Montana
and portions of western North Dakota. The Blackfeet, and Fort Peck Indian
Reservations are also part of this territorial boundaries.
The 12-bed hospital has been replaced
with a 6-bed infirmary, which was occupied May 18, 1998. As part of the
treaties and agreement between the U.S. Government and Indian tribes, health
services are to be provided to Indian people. This was in exchange for the
many lands given up by the Indian people for things such as the railroad,
homesteading, roads, reservoirs, and etc. The establishment of IHS did not
occur until 1955, the concepts of dependency-to-self determination and
tribal sovereignty have been a long-standing tradition.
The Gros Ventre call themselves
“AH-AH-NE-NIN” meaning the White Clay People. They believed that they were
made from the White Clay that is found along the river bottoms in Gros
Ventre country. Early French fur trappers and traders named this tribe “Gros
Ventre” because other tribes in the area referred to them as “The Water
Falls People.” The sign for water fall is the passing of the hands over the
stomach and the French though the Indians were saying big belly so they
called them “Gros Ventre” – meaning “big belly” in the French language.
The Assiniboine refer to themselves as
“Nakota” meaning the generous ones. This tribe split with the Yanktonai
Sioux in the seventeenth century and migrated westward onto the northern
plains with their allies, the Plains Cree. “Assiniboine” is a Chippewa word
meaning, “One who cooks with stones.” The Assiniboine are located on both
the Fort Belknap and Fort Peck Indian Reservations in Montanan and on
several reserves in Saskatchewan and Alberta.
The Gros Ventre and Assinboine were
nomadic hunters and warriors. They followed the buffalo which provided them
with all the necessities of life. Their food, clothing and teepees all came
from the buffalo. The buffalo was the Indian staff of life and the
Assinboine and Gros Ventre and other plains tribes lived a good life with
the buffalo. The last herd of buffalo in the continental United States in
the nineteenth century existed between the Bear Paw Mountains and the Little
Rocky Mountains in the lush Milk River valley.
Today, the two tribes are united as
one government called the Fort Belknap Indian Community. Together, the
tribes have formed and maintained a community that has deep respect for it’s
land, it’s culture, and it’s heritage. Fort Belknap derives its name from
the original military post that was established on the Milk River, one mile
southwest of the present town of Chinook, Montana. The Fort, named for
William W. Belknap, who was the Secretary of War at that time, was a
military fort combined with a Trading Post. It became a Government agency
for the Gros Ventre and Assiniboine Indians living in the area.
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