Crow Coal History: Draft 12/24

1920 Crow Act

The 1920 Crow Act was the culmination of over a decade of Crow tribal members fighting white settler attempts to "open" the reservation to settlement. The Act was a compromise that was both a victory and a failure for the settlers and tribal leaders. Opposition to the various attempts to open the reservation were guided by tribal leaders such as Plenty Coups and later assisted by the young Robert Yellowtail

The intent of the Act was, in the words of historian Timothy McCleary, to "make the Crow become farmers and to destroy tribal life by treaty each family as a separate economic unity." (McCleary, 118) 

The Act divided up the reservation into allotments, where Crow tribal members received 900 acres. This division, in turn, served to disperse Crow families and bands. Additionally, the Act also required that the tribe establish a general council to deal with federal and state governments, and set aside mineral rights for the tribe.

The effects of the Act are difficult to measure in full because of how far-reaching they are but include economic, social, political, and environmental changes for Crow families and the reservation land. 

1920 Crow Act Text

For more information see Timothy P. McCleary, “An Ethnohistory of Pentecostalism among the Crow Indians of Montana,” Wicazo Sa Review 15, no. 1 (2000): 117–35 and Hoxie, Parading Through History

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