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TimpanogosTipis

Timpanogos Tipis - Western artwork by Jeremy Winborg.

The Timpanogos Tribe (Timpanog, Utahs or Utah Indians) were a tribe of Native Americans who inhabited a large part of central Utah—particularly, the area from Utah Lake eastward to the Uinta Mountains and south into present-day Sanpete County, Utah.[1] In some accounts they were called the Timpiavat, Timpanogot, Timpanogotzi, Timpannah, Tempenny and other names. During the mid-19th century, when Mormon pioneers entered the territory, the Timpanogos were one of the principal tribes in Utah based on population, area occupied and influence. Scholars have had difficulty identifying (or classifying) their language; most communication was carried out in Spanish or English, and many of their leaders spoke several native dialects of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family.

The Timpanogos have generally been classified as Ute people. They may have been a Shoshone band, since other Shoshone bands occupied parts of Utah. Nineteenth-century historian Hubert Howe Bancroft wrote in 1882 that the Timpanogos were one of four sub-bands of the Shoshone.[3]

Timpanogos

Chief Walkara, also known as Chief Walker, was a noted mid-19th-century chief[4] who led his people against Mormon settlers in the Walker War. The Shoshone and Ute shared a common genetic, cultural and linguistic heritage as part of the Numic branch of the Uto-Aztecan language family. Most Timpanogos live on the Uintah Valley Reservation, established by executive order in 1861 and affirmed by congressional legislation in 1864, they are not counted with the Ute Indian Tribe of the Uintah and Ouray Reservation. The Ute Tribe consists of 3 bands of Confederated Utes from Colorado. The Uintah, Whiteriver, (Yampah/Grandriver), and Uncompahgre, these bands relocated to the already inhabited Uinta Valley Reservation pursuant to the 1880 Act of Congress.

In 2002, the Timpanogos won a federal case against the state in the Court of Appeals upholding their traditional rights to hunt, fish and gather on the reservation. The court concluded that their relationship with the federal government was well-established, although they are not listed by the Department of the Interior as a federally-recognized tribe. They have submitted an application and documentation to the Department of the Interior seeking federal recognition as an independent tribe.

Pre-European history[]

European and American contacts[]

Conflicts with the Mormons[]

1849 Battle Creek massacre[]

1849 Battle at Fort Utah[]

1865 Walker and Black Hawk Wars[]

Uintah Reservation[]

Population estimates[]

Historical confusion[]

Uncertain legal status[]

Notable Timpanogos[]

Legacy[]

References[]

  1. ^ Hodge, Frederick Webb (July 2006). Handbook of American Indians V2 North of. ISBN 9781428645585.

See Also[]

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