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The reservation occupies northern Thurston County, Nebraska, as well as southeastern Dixon County and Woodbury County, Iowa, and a small plot of off-reservation land of southern Craig Township in Burt County, Nebraska. The other federally recognized Winnebago tribe is the Ho-Chunk Nation of Wisconsin.
English: A series of United States Indian reservation locator maps, constructed mostly with Tiger/LINE and BIA open data, with supplements from the Canadian and Mexican censuses. Generated on July 24, 2019.
The Winnebago Reservation, established by a treaty on 8 March 1865, [6] is in Thurston and Dixon counties, Nebraska, and Woodbury County, Iowa. [7] The reservation is 176.55 square miles (112,990 acres; 457.3 km 2), [8] of which 27,637 acres (43.183 sq mi; 111.84 km 2) is tribal trust land. [1] In 1990, 1,151 tribal members lived on the ...
The Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska will soon get back about 1,600 acres (647 hectares) of land the federal government took more than 50 years ago and never developed. A new law will require the U.S ...
The Winnebago Bend Wildlife Area was made up of land illegally condemned in 1970. Soon it will be returned to the Winnebago Tribe of Nebraska. 1,600 acres of land in western Iowa is being returned ...
The Winnebago ceded lands in Wisconsin in 1829, 1832 and 1837; further removal attempts occurred in Wisconsin in 1840, 1846, 1850, and 1873–4. [26] Winnebago 1846 Reservation, Nicollet's 1843 map. The 1848 removal from Iowa was documented by a soldier in Morgan's Mounted Volunteers.
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the Ho-Chunk Nation reservation parcels totaled 3.46 square miles (8.96 km 2) in 2020, with an additional 12.57 square miles (32.56 km 2) of off-reservation trust land. The combined reservation and off-reservation trust land have a total area of 16.03 square miles (41.51 km 2), of which 15.93 square miles ...
They had been sent on their 1,200-mile journey by Capt. W.H. Beck, an Indian agent who oversaw the Winnebago and Omaha tribes at a time when the federal government was breaking up reservation lands.