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The Four State Lookout is located on high ground north of White Cloud. A viewing area enables visitors to see the states of Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa. The Casino White Cloud is located five miles west of the town, on the Iowa Tribe Reservation.
The Iowa Reservation of the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska straddles the borders of southeast Richardson County in southeastern Nebraska and Brown and Doniphan counties in northeastern Kansas. Tribal headquarters are west of White Cloud, Kansas. The reservation was defined in a treaty from March 1861. [3]
The strong opposition from the Potawatomi and Kickapoo tribes helped them, as well as the Sac and Fox and the Iowa Tribe, avoid termination. [9] In 2021 Johnson County, IA Conservation Board donated 7 acres of land to the Iowa Tribe of Nebraska and Kansas. The first land owned by the Iowa Tribe in Iowa .
The Ioway Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska operates the Casino White Cloud at White Cloud, Kansas, on the Ioway Reservation. [8] Jacob Keyes is the current tribal chairperson of the Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma. [9] The tribes operates the Cimarron Casino in Perkins, Oklahoma, [10] and the Ioway Casino in Chandler, Oklahoma.
The Ioway Tribal National Park is a tribal national park established by the Iowa Tribe of Kansas and Nebraska. The 444-acre park is located entirely within the Ioway Reservation, next to the Missouri River southeast of Rulo on the border between Kansas and Nebraska. [1] The Park was created in 2020 and is set to open to the public in 2025.
The tribal jurisdiction area is west of White Cloud, Kansas and northeast of Hiawatha, Kansas. [1] It was created as a consequence of the Platte Purchase of 1836. Other reservations associated with the Sac and Fox Nation: Sac and Fox/Meskwaki Settlement-- located in central Iowa
Iowa Township covers an area of 84.35 square miles (218.5 km 2) and contains two incorporated settlements: Highland and White Cloud.According to the USGS, it contains six cemeteries: Fanning, Highland, Iola, Iowa Point, Martin and Olive Branch.
Lidar-derived image of Marching Bears Mound Group, Effigy Mounds National Monument.. Prehistoric earthworks by mound builder cultures are common in the Midwest.However, mounds in the shape of mammals, birds, or reptiles, known as effigies, apparently were constructed primarily by peoples in what is now known as southern Wisconsin, northeast Iowa, and small parts of Minnesota and Illinois.