Klamath Indian Reservation (Or.)
Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:
Archaeology and Oral History of an Allotment Homestead on the Former Klamath Indian Reservation, Beatty, Oregon
Forest Lumber Company Train: Photograph
The Modoc Lumber Company was formed in 1918 by J. O. Goldthwaite. It operated in a company town called Pine Ridge, located on the Klamath Indian Reservation about 2 miles from Chiloquin. It was eventually renamed the Forest Lumber Company. Collection contains a sepia photograph from Harry Mesner collection: a Forest Lumber Company train carrying logs.
Letter to Mr. Malcolm Epley, Herald and News, Klamath Falls, Oregon
Office Memorandum on Annual Indian Population
The Klamath Indian Reservation became the home of the Klamath Tribes, a merger of the Klamath, Modoc, and Yahooskin tribes created by the Treaty of 1864. The Klamath Agency was an Indian Agency established for the Klamath Indian Reservation in 1866. Collection contains memorandum sent from T.W. Sanders, Chief Clerk, United States Government, to Hale Scarbrough, Klamath Agency, Oregon, March 10, 1952.
Petition to E.J. Diehl, Superintendent, Klamath Agency, Oregon
The Klamath Indian Reservation became the home of the Klamath Tribes, a merger of the Klamath, Modoc, and Yahooskin tribes created by the Treaty of 1864. Collection contains petition written by the enrolled members of the Klamath Indian Reservation. It refers to the proposed changes in the Constitution for the Klamath Tribes.
Robert Mezger Collection on Klamath Indian Reservation Forestry
Robert W. Mezger was born on December 8, 1922 in Jersey City, New Jersey. After becoming a forester for the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Robert Mezger took a position with the Klamath Indian Reservation in 1952. Collection contains documentation on the accounting and timber sales at the Klamath Indian Reservation
Laurence L. Shaw Collection on the Klamath Basin Timber Industry
The collection focuses on the connections between the Klamath Indian Reservation and the Klamath County, Oregon timber industry in the twentieth century. Laurence L. Shaw was a well-known Oregon timber man and philanthropist.
Charles E. Worden Collection
A. Harvey Wright Collection on Tribal Termination in Oregon, 1952-1964
As director of Indian education and training programs for the Oregon Department of Education in the 1950s and 1960s, A. Harvey Wright was very involved in implementing federal education and training programs, including preparations for federal termination of tribal status for several Indian tribes in Oregon. The collection consists of correspondence and documents related to federal termination of tribal recognition for the Klamath Tribes and other Oregon tribes in the 1950s.