The Dispute between the Hopi and Navajo Tribes
Digital item
Identifier: CAC_CC_009_2_67_9_0002
Dates
- July 22, 1958
- 85th Congress (1957-1959)
Scope and Contents
The Department of the Interior responds to two bills that would partition the surface rights of the 1882 Executive Order Hopi Reservation and the 1934 Navajo Reservation between the Hopi and Navajo Tribes. The Department recommends that no bill be enacted, as the Arizona District Court has ruled that the United States plan for giving the Hopis true joint use of the disputed area should be put into effect. If partition is the route Congress chooses, the Department recommends that it be done by giving jurisdiction to partition to the District Court in Arizona. The Department also suggests that the possibility of arbitration be considered, but states that it would prefer to let the court's present order prevail. Finally, the Department outlines several amendments that it believes would improve H.R. 7679.
Extent
12 pages
Creator
unknown
Congress 85th (1957-1959)
Policy Area Indians of North America--Oklahoma; Indians of North America--Politics and government; Indians of North America--Claims; Taxation--Law and Legislation
Tribal Affiliation Navajo Indians; Hopi Indians
Congress 85th (1957-1959)
Policy Area Indians of North America--Oklahoma; Indians of North America--Politics and government; Indians of North America--Claims; Taxation--Law and Legislation
Tribal Affiliation Navajo Indians; Hopi Indians
Source
- Camp, John N. "Happy", 1908-1987 (Person)
- TypeDeliverableUnit
Repository Details
Part of the Carl Albert Center Congressional and Political Collections Repository