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Agua Caliente Reservation in 1928 Agua Caliente Band signage in downtown Palm Springs Location of Agua Caliente Reservation. The Agua Caliente Indian Reservation was founded on May 15, 1876 [5] through Executive Order signed by President Ulysses S. Grant covering 31,610 acres (12,790 ha). In 1877 and 1907 the Reservation was extended, to cover ...
Chairman of the Agua Caliente Band of Indians speaks on the tribe's new cultural destination and surprise archaeological finds during construction.
Golden Checkerboard (1965) is a book by Ed Ainsworth [nb 1] about the mid-20th century economic conditions of the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians of Palm Springs, California and the history of the 99-year lease law, which enabled them to commercially develop tribal-owned lands.
A 1831 ruling described Indian tribes as “domestic dependent nations” and their relationship to the U.S. as being “that of a ward to his guardian.”
He eventually served as a proxy for the tribal council. He was elected to the tribal council in April 2014. In November 2019, he became Vice Chairman of the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians in the wake of a special election after the July 2019 death of then vice chairman Larry N. Olinger. [1] [2] Milanovich spoke at the funeral of Olinger ...
Sometime in 2023, the tribe is due to open the Agua Caliente Cultural Plaza on the 5.8-acre site of the mineral spring that has always been a centerpiece of tribal culture. (The site previously ...
The Agua Caliente Cultural Museum is a culture and history museum located in Palm Springs, California, United States, focusing on the Agua Caliente Band of Cahuilla Indians of the Coachella Valley. [ 1 ]
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