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Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country By Marsha Weisiger University of Washington Press, 2009
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Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country Foreword: Sheep Are Good to Think With Preface Prologue: A View from Sheep Springs FAULT LINES: Counting Sheep Range Wars
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Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country BEDROCK With Our Sheep We Were Created A Woman’s Place
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Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country TERRA FIRMA Herding Sheep Hoofed Locusts
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Climate Change
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Dreaming of Sheep in Navajo Country EROSION Mourning Livestock Drawing Lines on a Map Making Memories
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Time Line for Stock Reduction (Pre-Collier) 1920s – horses slaughtered due to dourine infection 1931-32 – stock reduction is first proposed by BIA to check erosion
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Time Line for Stock Reduction (Phase 1) 1933 – John Collier appointed commissioner of Indian Affairs 1933-34 – first stock reduction (voluntary)
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Time Line for Stock Reduction (Phase 2) 1934 – goat reduction 1935 – Indian Reorganization Act rejected by voters 1936-41 – protests against stock reduction grow 1936-49 – Southwestern Range and Sheep Breeding Laboratory bred hybrid churra sheep (crossed with Corriedales and Romneys)
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Grazing Regulations 1937 – special grazing regulations issued for Navajo reservation 1937 – sheep dipping count becomes basis for grazing permits 1938 – grazing permits issued 1939 – special grazing regulations issued for Checkerboard, under the Taylor Grazing Act
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Time Line for Stock Reduction (Phase 3) 1938-41 – horse reduction and sheep reduction 1938-41 – BIA prosecutes 19 cases against people who refuse to reduce numbers of horses 1941 – grazing regulations on reservation relaxed, with “special grazing permits” for duration of World War II 1943 – Navajo Tribal Council ends the stock reduction program
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Time Line for Stock Reduction (Modern Phase) 1947 – BIA allows women to hold grazing permits in their own name 1951-59 – severe drought on Navajo Reservation 1956-present – Navajo Nation Council administers grazing regulations
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Things to Consider Stock reduction affected families differently, depending on how much they depended on livestock and where they lived. Some were affected badly, and some were not directly affected as much. Existing oral histories cover only a few areas of the Navajo Nation. More oral histories will give us a richer, more nuanced, more complicated understanding of this era.
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Oral Histories
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Roessel, Ruth, and Broderick H. Johnson, eds. Navajo Livestock Reduction: A National Disgrace. Chinle, Ariz.: Navajo Community College Press, 1974. Sundberg, Dean, and Fern Charley, eds. Navajo Stock Reduction Interviews. Microfilm. Oral History Program, California State University, Fullerton. Moon, Samuel. Tall Sheep: Harry Goulding, Monument Valley Trader. University of Oklahoma Press, 1992. Hubbell Trading Post Oral History Files. Hubbell Trading Post National Monument. Ganado, Ariz. (Mainly about weavers.) Navajo Oral Histories. American Indian Oral History Transcriptions. Microfilm. Center for Southwest Research. Zimmerman Library. University of New Mexico. Albuquerque. (Not useful for livestock reduction.)
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Director, Public History Program New Mexico State University mweisige@nmsu.edu After 1/15/11: Department of History University of Oregon mlweisiger@oregon.edu Dr. Marsha Weisiger
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