Shared Space

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REMOVAL REMOVAL REVERSED : REVERSED : Native/ Native/ non-Native non-Native joint management joint management of reclaimed lands of reclaimed lands Zoltan Grossman Zoltan Grossman www.uwec.edu/ grossmzc UWEC Geography/ UWEC Geography/ American Indian Studies 3 American Indian Studies 3

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REMOVAL REVERSED : Native/ non-Native joint management of reclaimed lands Zoltan Grossman www.uwec.edu/grossmzc UWEC Geography/ American Indian Studies 322. Shared Space. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Shared Space

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REMOVAL REMOVAL REVERSED : REVERSED :

Native/Native/non-Native non-Native

joint management joint management of reclaimed landsof reclaimed lands

Zoltan GrossmanZoltan Grossman www.uwec.edu/grossmzc

UWEC Geography/UWEC Geography/American Indian Studies 322American Indian Studies 322

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Hybrid space or “negotiated space”as relates to Native peoples and land use (Morris and Fondahl 2002, Waage 2001)

Mainly co-management of ceded territory resources (NWIFC 1998, Ellsworth et al 1997)

Natives and non-Natives removed from landscape

Return for divided ownership, joint control

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Alleviate interethnic conflict

Correct past injustices Against Native peopleAgainst non-Native land-based people

Common source of place identity

Common goals for sustainability

Shared SpaceShared Space

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Ho-Chunk Nation

- Closed munitions plant

- Defeated dam project

Wolf River tribes- Mole Lake Ojibwe,

Potawatomi

- Defeated mine project; two tribes bought land

Possible Wisconsin PrecedentsPossible Wisconsin Precedents

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Ho-Chunk NationHo-Chunk Nation

Formerly WisconsinWinnebago Tribe

Origins in the effigymound builders of Southern Wisconsin

Agricultural peoplealong waterways

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xxxxxxx• xxxxxxxxxx

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Ho-ChunkHo-Chunktreatiestreaties

Strategic waterways

Lead Rush of 1820s

Rich farmlandfor settlement, 1830s

Resistance toIndian Removal(Loew 2001)

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Return to WisconsinReturn to Wisconsin

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Resistance to RemovalResistance to Removal

Wazijaci (DwellersAmong Pines) hid out

Many returned fromnew reservations

Some white farmersactively opposed removal by 1870s(Reedsburg incident)

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Ho-Chunk survivalHo-Chunk survivalWisconsin homesteadspermitted, 1870s

Poor in income and land

Little federal interferencewith cultural autonomy

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Ho-Chunk survivalHo-Chunk survivalPurchased land parcels in14 counties

Tribal status in 1962

5,000 + members by 1990s

Casino success in 1990s

Casino near Wisconsin Dells

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Ho-Chunk survivalHo-Chunk survival

Using gaming revenueto acquire a few parcels

832 acres into trust by 1997

Federal trust relationship used for return of other parcels

Muscodabisonranch

WhirlingThunderstables

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KickapooKickapooReserve Reserve and Saukand SaukPrairiePrairie

Ho-Chunkceded lands inpurple;Present-daylands in red

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KickapooKickapooValleyValley

Vernon County,Southwestern Wisconsin

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KickapooKickapooValleyValley

Ho-Chunk sacred sites,rock art

Very few Ho-Chunkremained after Removal

Maintained visits toKickapoo River

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La Farge DamLa Farge DamProposed 1961, butenvironmental opposition

Local white residentsremoved from 14-milestretch of river

8,600-acre site grew over;little dam construction

Dam plans scuttled, 1975

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Kickapoo ReserveKickapoo ReserveArmy Corps of Engineerspromised to State forconservation, 1997

State promised toturn over 1,200 acres toHo-Chunk Nation

Entire 8,600-acre siteunder joint management, 2001

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Kickapoo ReserveKickapoo ReserveHo-Chunk & farmershad common historyof forced removal

Yet conflict overwho is “local”

Some resentment of DNR by former landowners

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KickapooKickapooReserve Reserve divisiondivisionJoint land-use planprotects natural andcultural resources,enhancesrecreation

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Kickapoo Reserve Management BoardKickapoo Reserve Management Board

11 member, appointedby Governor; State-funded

Local majority principle

Represents State, Tribe, Local Communities, Watershed

Ho-Chunk own 1,200 acres

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STATE (3)At-large non-local agencyrepresentatives with expertise in resources, tourism, education.

TRIBAL (2)Ho-Chunk Nation reps, one of whom is a watershed resident.

STATE

TRIBAL

LOCAL

WATERSHED

LOCAL COMMUNITIES (4)Nominated from adjacentcommunities, school boards

KICKAPOO WATERSHED (2)At-large members from watershed; not all adjacent.Executive Director runs KRMB.

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3322Kickapoo Reserve Management BoardKickapoo Reserve Management Board

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Conflict over Powers Bluff County Park tree cuttings for for ski run expansion, 1999-2001

Resolution with Wood County for joint management of cultural/ natural resources, 2002

Ho-Chunk Nation,Prairie Band (Kansas) Potawatomi, Friends of Powers Bluff (enviros)purchasing parcels for $48,000

Skunk Hill burial site Skunk Hill burial site (Arpin, Wood County)(Arpin, Wood County)

Potawatomi also removed & returned

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xxxxBadger Ammo Plant on Sauk PrairieBadger Ammo Plant on Sauk Prairie

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Sauk PrairieSauk Prairie Glacial outwash plainsouth of Baraboo Hills

Ho-Chunk farm fieldson rich soil

Fire management ofvast prairie for hunting

Native Americansremoved, 1830s

Sauk County,South-Central

Wisconsin

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Sauk PrairieSauk Prairie

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Badger Ordnance WorksBadger Ordnance Works Built in WWII on some of

Wisconsin’s richest farmland.Flat area with access to water and labor.

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Removal of farmers, 1942Removal of farmers, 1942Sited Nov. 1941 oversites with poorer soil

Accepted after Pearl Harbor

Some of 90 landownersnot paid fair price

7,400 acres evacuated;buildings torn down

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Badger Army Ammunition PlantBadger Army Ammunition Plant

Made propellant for shells, bullets, rockets

Open during WWII, Korea, Vietnam

Mothballed 1975 (Goc 2002)

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Badger Army Ammunition PlantBadger Army Ammunition PlantNitrates contaminated groundwater (uninhabitable)

Army clean-up begun

Prairie grasses, birds, wildlife flourished above

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Badger closure begins, 1998Badger closure begins, 1998

Claims of Tribe (1,500 acres), Federal (USDA) over State (DNR).

No local claim, but ex-residentfamilies want to have say

Choice between conservation/tourism and reindustrialization

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Badger land use plan conflictsBadger land use plan conflicts

Tribe proposed prairie restoration, bison herd, cultural site protection

State wanted full DNR control of contiguous site as park

Tribe can pressure Army clean-up;critiques DNR track record

Agriculturaluse on site

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Conflict over who is “local”Conflict over who is “local”

Ho-Chunk not treated as “local” (2nd highest tribal population)

County gov’t opposed tribal role, feared casino

From federal land to trust land(no loss in local taxes)

Tribe largest employer in county

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Badger Re-Use Committee, 2001Badger Re-Use Committee, 2001

State, tribal, federal governments divided ownership, possible joint management?

“Uses and activities … contribute to the reconciliation and resolution of past conflicts involving the loss and contamination of the natural environment, the displacement of Native Americans and Euro-American farmers, and the effects of war.”

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Future Land Use ConceptsFuture Land Use Concepts

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OwnershipOwnershipproposalsproposals

Most pollutedsites in north/central zone

GSA acreagedecision, 2003:

DNR 4,700USDA 2,000Ho-Chunk 420 (in NW corner)

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Other Ho-ChunkOther Ho-Chunkenvironmentalenvironmentalconcernsconcerns

Military low-level flights (‘95)

Hardwood Bombing Range expansion (Juneau/Wood)

Perrier springwater (Adams)

Xcel incinerator (LaCrosse)

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Land divided but joint management

Return of the land to those who respect and care for it the most

Possible precedents for shared sovereignties (Khamisi 2001)

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Ellsworth, JP, LP Hildebrand, and EA Glover. 1997. “Canada’s Atlantic Coastal Action Program: A community-based approach to collective governance.” Ocean & Coastal Management 36(2), 121-42.

Goc, Michael J. 2002. Powder, People, and Place: Badger Ordnance Works and the Sauk Prairie. Friendship, Wis.: New Past Press.

Ho-Chunk Nation and the State of Wisconsin. 1999. “Memorandum of Understanding Concerning the Badger Army Ammunition Plant.” (Dec. 11).

Khamaisi, R. 2002. “Shared Space, Separate Geopolitically. “ Geoforum 33(3), pp 278-283.

Loew, Patty, 2001. Indian Nations of Wisconsin: Histories of Endurance and Removal. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, pp 40-53.

Morris, P., and G. Fondahl. .2002. “Negotiating the Production of Space in Tl’azt’en Territory, Northern British Columbia.” Canadian Geographer 26(2).

Northwest Indian Fisheries Commission (NWIFC). 1998. Comprehensive Tribal Natural Resource Management: A Report from the Treaty Indian Tribes in Western Washington.

Smith, Susan L. 1997, “Ho-Chunk Land Returned in Kickapoo Valley.”Wisconsin State Journal (Oct. 29).

Waage, Sissel A. 2001. “(Re)claiming space and place through collaborative planning in rural Oregon.” Political Geography 20(7), pp 839-858.

Wisconsin Cartographers’ Guild. 1998. Wisconsin’s Past and Present: A Historical Atlas. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.

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Zoltán Grossman, Ph.D.Assistant Professor of GeographyP.O. Box 4004University of Wisconsin-Eau ClaireEau Claire, WI 54702Tel. (715) 836-4471 E-mail: [email protected]: www.uwec.edu/grossmzc