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Cabazon Indian Reservation


It was supposedly set aside in 1876. Below are several links to google earth photographs of Cabazon Reservation and map of their real Reservation. This small 2,346 acre or 949.4 hectare Cabazon Indian Reservation, is located adjacent to Indio, California which is in Riverside County, California in Little Shell Valley or Coachella Valley. It (Cabazon Reservation land area) includes Twenty-Nine Palms Reservation one secetion of land or 640 acres, which is adjacent to it on it's east and south. Cabazon Reservation is probably Turtle Mountain Reservation Little Shell Chippewa land allotments. Between 1900 and 1905, an event happened which led to a number of Montana or North Dakota Little Shell Chippewa's, being relocated to California. Coachella, California was founded around 1905 or so. In Spanish, Coachella means Little Shell. Indians of this Reservation are supposedly Cahuilla and Chemehuevi but are, as mentioned, really Little Shell Chippewa's who either lived in northeast Montana or North Dakota. Chief Little Shell was from North Dakota. Cahuilla and Chemehuevi People are Mexican-Opata who are known now as Uto-Aztecan. Their language is Comanche-Shoshone or Shoshonean which is really Ojibway. Total number of people living at Cabazon Reservation is 835 according to 2010's census. Native Americans make up 26 of this Reservations population. Mexicans number 730. Whites number 247. Blacks number 16. Asians number 3. Their Reservation was really created on January 5 and January 7 of 1852. Investigate those two treaties from January 5 and January 7, 1852. They created a very large Reservation that continues to be legitimate.



Map of their real Reservation

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