Congressional Digest

Supreme Court Debates February 2019 No. 2 Vol. 22
Indian Treaty Rights

Indian Treaty Rights

Tribal Hunting Privileges and State Power

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Excerpt

The Crow Indians, known in their native tongue as the Apsáalooke, have lived and hunted in the northern plains of Montana, North Dakota, and Wyoming since at least the seventeenth century. By the mid-1800s, however, the Crow people were being squeezed between hostile Indian tribes and a growing tide of white settlers. They negotiated a series of treaties with the U.S. Government, concluding with 1868 Treaty of Fort Laramie, which gave them a large reservation in the southwestern portion of modern-day Montana…

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