Sunday, December 15, 2013

Welcome!



Welcome to The Turtle Mountain Reservation!

Location: Rolette, North Dakota
This map shows the location of the Turtle Mountain Reservation and where other reservations are in the state of North Dakota. We hope that this Exploration guide will help you enjoy your stay here. There is a lot to discover out at the Turtle Mountain Reservation that you can't find anywhere else in the U.S.!


Saturday, December 14, 2013

History, Sights, and more!

History

Sit among the history that awaits you here at the Turtle Mountain Reservation which will allow you to learn more than what a book might tell you. By visiting the reservation you will gain first hand experience on a day in the life of the tribe. Although their culture varies from how things were in the past, there are many traditional things you will find here. 

Historical Background

During the three centuries immediately following the discovery of America, the Chippewas occupied territory extending back from the Northern and Eastern shores of Lake Superior and Huron. Moving westward through what is now Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota, the Chippewa pushed the Sioux southward over many fierce conflicts over the rich hunting grounds. As the Chippewa spread to the West and South, they broke up into more loosely defined groups.The Turtle Mountain Chippewas occupied the Turtle Mountain Hills all the way up to the Canadian Border.

 As hunting, trapping, and lumbering diminished and river and lake navigation changed, while agricultural enterprises came in, the Chippewas were left stranded as they have been for three generations. Obtaining their living mostly from fish and game within the region. Game was scarce after the passing of the buffalo, and the Indians were often reduced to starving conditions. On March 3, 1873, Congress appropriated $25,000 for the purchase of the township on the White Earth Reservation in Minnesota as a home for the Turtle Mountain Tribe. The tribe refused to accept the offer since they felt that their claim to the territory was valid and that they must continue to live in The Turtle Mountain Hills to protect their interests.

Life on the Reservation

Turtle Mountain has attracted several businesses to the Reservation. A Bulova watch factory, a shopping mall, an industrial park, a casino, and the construction industry. In addition, Tribal programs, the Indian Health Service, the Bureau of Indian Affairs, and the school all provide jobs to tribal members.

Little Shell III was the last in line of the hereditary Chiefs of the Turtle Mountain Band.


Sights

The Railroad


Between 1858 and 1862, the railroad appeared in parts of Red River country. The man who was responsible for driving the first spike in the first railroad west of St. Paul was William Crooks in 1862. The railroad followed the Red River trails, accelerated the growth of agriculture, and led many settlers to the northwest. It is believed that the railroad colonized much of the west.


Seeing many historical landmarks will provide a much better look at the life of a Native American, and can help diminish stereotypes. You might also see quite a few turtles sitting around the place!

They might look a little something like this!



Turtle Mountain


The land base of the Reservation is entirely within Rolette County, measuring 12 miles (from west to east) by 6 miles (from north to south).
Total acreage: 140,107 acres
The habitat of the Turtle “Mountain” hills is filled with small deciduous trees such as birch, oak, elm, poplar, aspen, willow, and cottonwood. The flora of the Turtle Mountains consists of several varieties of plants which attract numerous forms of wildlife like deer, moose, wolves, fox, beavers, rabbit, and others. There are various types of waterfowl as well such as Canadian geese, ducks, and pelicans. Birds such as eagles, hawks, crows, robins, bluebirds, and wrens return year after year to take up residence.

Friday, December 13, 2013

Artifacts & Places!

Artifacts

Bellevue Mine


The Bellevue Mine, in the shadow of infamous Turtle Mountain, began production in December, 1903, when West Canadian Collieries purchased a large tract of land in this coal-rich area.  Over the next 58 years more than 13 million tons of coal were extracted from the Bellevue Mine.

This is one of the license plates you would see around the reservation on any vehicle. As you can see, they are customized much differently than that of a normal state license plate.


A flag of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa.


This is a dream catcher that also shows the universal imagery seen all around the reservation.

Staying on the Reservation!

Stay with us!

While on the Reservation there is plenty to keep you busy including a Casino and Resort called the Sky Dancer. The entire hotel is beautiful, and each room is a little bit different. Visit their website!  http://www.skydancercasino.com/

The lights on the outside of the casino are phenomenal, check them out!


Parking Lot / Sky Dancer Logo


Standard Double Queen


Standard Room #1


Standard Room #2


While enjoying your stay at The Sky Dancer Casino & Hotel, be sure to check out the gift shops, filled with special gifts and mementos from Turtle Mountain.

Handcrafted jewelry such as Landstrom's Black Hills Gold.




The Casino Floor


Black Jack is the Game.

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Figures

The Round House

Louise Erdrich was born June 7, 1954, in Little Falls, Minnesota, She is an American writer of novels, poetry, and children's books featuring Native American characters and settings. She is an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, a band of the Anishinaabe (also known as Ojibwa and Chippewa).
Erdrich is widely acclaimed as one of the most significant writers of the second wave of the Native American Renaissance. In 2009, her novel The Plague of Doves was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. In November 2012, she received the National Book Award for Fiction for her novel The Round House.
Louise Erdrich's award-winning novel The Round House tells a story of brutal rape and a boy's coming of age on a Native-American Reservation.


"During the old days when Indians could not practice their religion - well, actually not such old days: pre-1978 - the round house had been used for ceremonies. People pretended it was a social dance hall or brought their Bibles for gatherings." [pg. 59]

How to determine if someone is of Native American ancestry has always been a subject of debate and discussion, the U.S. Government eventually stepped in and dictated these terms, as Louise Erdrich mentions in her novel.

" From the government's point of view, the only way to tell an Indian is in Indian is to look at that person's history. There must be ancestors from way back who signed some document or were recorded as Indians by the U.S. government, someone identified as a member of a tribe." [pg. 30]


Typical Native American Round House
http://www.mewuk.com/cultural/images/round_house_front_view_1947_lg.jpg