e. As tribal distinctions diminished during the Termination years, some Indians found it more useful to ally themselves with similarly oppressed people from other tribes and act ecumenically to fight poverty, racism, and cultural genocide.
f. The Sioux Treaty of 1868 was the end product of the Red Cloud War—a war caused by the United States’s illegal use of Indian reservations for military forts and their granting rights of way to railroads through Sioux-held land. On March 27, 1964, McKenzie and the four others (Garfield Spotted Elk, Walter Means, Mark Martinez, and Allen Cottier) filed a claim for Alcatraz with the interior secretary, citing U.S. Code 474, 334, and the Fort Laramie Treaty, specifically Article VI, Paragraph 6.
g. Upon discovering this photograph in the San Francisco Public Library archives, I was awestruck. I wanted to copy it and take it home, but the library wouldn’t allow me. The photo carried with it such an intense meaning, and one that is rarely shipped by way of the postal service today: I cannot imagine any eleven year old—particularly one across the world—being so motivated as to hand-write a letter to a group of strangers, professing his support for their radical movement. I can scarcely imagine an adult doing this when most activist campaigns are now spotlighted on and swell in support using the Internet. Further, the Web is so saturated with campaigns that it is difficult to single out any one movement to feel passionate about or act passionately for. When my eyes scanned one handwritten letter of support that read, “I really do care,” I seized up, struck by the sincerity in the writer’s voice. Then I took a moment to lament that I will likely never see such a genuine letter again. October 23, 1970. San Francisco History Center, Alcatraz Collection. SFH 11. Box 1, Folder 10.
h. The return of Blue Lake to the Taos Indians was not simply an act of authoritative benevolence by the Nixon Administration; the Taos had been engrossed in a legal battle over the site for sixty-four years that was nearing an end. Further, to punctuate the lawsuit, in October 1970, two Forest Service signs in Carson National Forest were blown up by plastic explosives, and a second bombing occurred two days later in protest of a proposed “ranger bill” for Taos Blue Lake. The bill was defeated, and the Taos gained control of the lake once more.
Chapter Two:
"Scattering the Seeds of Discord, Misery, and Insurrection with Both Hands":
Land Distribution and Resistance in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
“[The term squatter] has been applied indiscriminately to all who questioned dubious titles and tried to test them by settling land.”
—Paul W. Gates[1]
“Squatting is the oldest mode of tenure in the world, and we are all descended from squatters.”
—Colin Ward[2]
“In conclusion, your committee are compelled to say, that if possession under color of title for 207 years, and actual title under the legitimate government of the land, for 140 years…is not a perfect title, it would be extremely difficult to find one; there can certainly be none in this state.”
—New York Assemblyman William F. Allen in response to the conundrum of Rensselaerwyck
To begin this chapter about the history of land struggles in the United States, it would be fair to again note that the following proprietary injustices were only made possible through the similarly unjust usurpation of the continent by white settlers. By the second generation after colonization, however, little blame could realistically be placed on American residents whose luck had them born onto a stolen continent. Poverty-stricken pioneers moved westward in search of affordable habitation (and occasionally in search of profit) and they were subject to the whims of a fickle federal government that struggled to balance legislation as both lucrative and fair to republican ideals.
Since the arrival of Europeans in North America, land and power have been conflated concepts—the goal of capitalist settlers being to procure as much land as possible. In the New World’s colonial days, the Crown insisted on relatively formal methods of land acquisition, preferring internationally recognized treaties with Natives to bloody conquest. The British did not rule out violence as an option, but according to their Doctrine of Discovery, it was to be used as a last resort should Indians respond poorly to the offer of a treaty agreement. This is not to suggest that the hands of the British colonizers were clean; indeed, their ideas about how a “New World” should be utilized are markedly objectionable by today’s human rights standards.
Ward Churchill writes in his essay “Perversion of Justice” that “a person or a people [was] ultimately entitled to only that quantity of real estate which s/he/they convert from ‘wilderness’ to a ‘domesticated’ state. By this criterion, English settlers were seen as possessing an inherent right to dispossess native people of all land other than that which the latter might be ‘reasonably expected’ to put to such ‘proper’ usage as cultivation.”[3] This practice would nearly always eliminate Native Americans’ claim to land. In 1763, however, King George III broke the conflation of land and power in his proclamation that no land further west than Appalachia was to be settled by colonizers for fear of disrupting the fur trade and risking further Indian warfare.[4]
Possibly anticipating the Revolution of 1776, in 1773 George Washington, among others, defied the king’s proclamation in order to pursue land speculation further west. At this point, the motives of the burgeoning new nation became possibly more dubious than those of Great Britain. The new Americans did not respect treaties to the extent that many international players appeared to; they frequently assumed land title without consulting Natives at all, and even when they did sign treaties, the settlers regularly neglected the terms and later breached the contracts (with few repercussions).[5]
This bulldozer approach of the new Americans proved lucrative after the revolution when the former colonies offered to admit the Western states into the now-independent United States, in exchange for the use of Western lands. Fearing that taxes would drive Eastern residents west and cause the federal government to lose money, Eastern bureaucrats plotted to absorb and develop everything west of the Mississippi and then collect revenue by selling off large parcels of public land to speculators. In turn, the speculators would divide that land into smaller parcels and flip them to settlers at an inflated price.[6] The Land Ordinance of 1785 dictated how these lands would be divided. Counterintuitively, auctions for land in the West were only held in Eastern cities, and bidders could only buy 640 acres or more at $1 an acre or more. Because of this distribution framework, the settlers themselves could not buy land outright; only speculators, or “land-jobbers,” had that privilege.[7] But, as Mike Davis would write of such unfathomable capitalist monstrosities as Dubai two centuries later, “What is too often flipped, some economists predict, may someday flop.”[8] And the same was true in eighteenth-century America.
Squatting on the frontier was a problem for institutions from the onset. With little enforcement structure in place to prevent illegal occupation, settlers grabbed land where they saw it not in use—which compelled the Jefferson administration Congress to craft strict laws against illegal settlements. With the act of March 26, 1804, squatters north of the Ohio River (which was Indian territory) or in Louisiana were subject to a $1,000 fine or a year in prison. The act also authorized the army to use its force toward ejectments. With the act of March 3, 1807, came more penalties for squatters. But it also made for one of the first legal leniencies in regard to land: If settlers were already living on a plot, they were permitted to retain up to 320 acres of it as long as they registered at the land office and signed a statement claiming no right to the property and pledging to leave when it was sold. Squatters who refused this deal would be fined $100 and risked a prison sentence of six months.[9]
Squatting wasn’t exclusively a Western phenomenon, however: In 1726, there