The
Southern Paiutes of Utah live in the southwestern corner
of the state where the Great Basin and the Colorado
Plateau meet. The Southern Paiute language is one of
the northern Numic branches of the large Uto-Aztecan
language family. Most scholars agree that the Paiutes
entered Utah about A.D. 1100-1200.
Historically, the largest population concentrations
of Paiutes were along the Virgin and Muddy rivers; other
Paiutes adapted to a more arid desert environment that
centered on water sources such as springs. Both desert
and riverine groups were mainly foragers, hunting rabbits,
deer, and mountain sheep, and gathering seeds, roots,
tubers, berries, and nuts. Paiutes also practiced limited
irrigation agriculture along the banks of the Virgin,
Santa Clara, and Muddy rivers. They raised corn, squash,
melons, gourds, sunflowers, and, later, winter wheat.
Paiute social organization was based on the family.
Fluid groupings of families sometimes formed loose bands,
which were often named after a major resource or geographic
feature of their home territory. Paiute groups gathered
together in the fall for dances and marriages. Marriage
meant the establishment of a joint household and was
not marked by ceremony. Although monogamy was the norm,
marriage variants such as sororal polygamy and polyandry
were present.
The riverine Paiutes had influential chiefs with limited
power based on their ability to create consensus among
the group. Leadership in the desert groups was usually
only task specific. Some individuals were better at
hunting rabbits, or at healing, or at twining baskets,
and they organized those activities.
The supernatural world of the Paiutes revolved around
the activities of Wolf and Coyote. Wolf was the elder
brother and the more responsible god, while Coyote often
acted the role of the trickster and troublemaker. Stories
of the activities of these and other spirit animals
generally were told in the winter.
The first recorded contact between Utah Paiutes and
Europeans occurred in 1776 when the Escalante-Dominguez
party encountered Paiute women gathering seeds. In 1826-27
Jedediah Smith passed through Paiute country and established
an overland route to California. Trappers, traders,
and emigrants on their way to California soon followed.
The increased presence of Europeans and their animals
had serious effects on the Paiutes. The animals of the
emigrants ate the grasses and often the corn that served
as food for the Paiute. The Paiutes, especially young
women and children, became commodities as mounted Utes
and Navajos raided for slaves to trade to the Europeans.
Although the Euro-American travelers posed a threat
to the Paiutes, it was the arrival of the Mormons in
the 1850s that destroyed their sovereignty and traditional
lifestyle. The Mormons came to stay, and they settled
in places that had traditionally served the Paiutes
as foraging and camping areas. As a result, starvation
and disease drastically reduced the Paiute population.
Between 1854 and 1858 the Mormons conducted a fairly
intensive missionary effort among the Paiutes.
The Utah Paiutes and the federal government signed a
treaty in 1865, but it was not ratified by the Senate.
The first reservation for the Paiutes was established
at Shivwits, near St. George, in 1891. Other small reservations
were established by executive order: Indian Peaks in
1915, Koosharem in 1928, and Kanosh in 1929. The Cedar
City Paiutes were treated as a scattered band and lived
on land owned by the Mormon Church.
A Paiute agency was established in Cedar City in 1927
by the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA). Nevertheless,
very little federal help was available for the Paiutes.
Paiute women worked as maids, cleaning houses and washing
clothes. Paiute men worked as section hands for the
railroad, did intermittent labor on farms, and sometimes
worked small plots on reservation land.
In 1935 the Shivwits and the Kanosh Paiutes voted to
accept the Wheeler-Howard Act. Known as the Indian Reorganization
Act (IRA) this legislation encouraged tribal self-governance
and the protection of Indian land rights. With their
new IRA governments, they received more help than before
from the federal government. They were given $10,000
loans under the Indian Service Revolving Credit Fund
in the 1940s.
During the 1950s the Utah Paiutes became victims of
the termination policy of Congress. Although BIA documents
clearly recognized that the Paiutes were not ready to
survive without the benefits of the trust relationship,
Utah Senator Arthur Watkins included them on the list
of tribes to be terminated. Without federal tax protection,
health and education benefits, or agricultural assistance,
the Paiutes were reduced to a miserable existence during
the late 1950s and 1960s.
The Paiutes filed for the land that they had lost to
the Anglo settlers with the Indian Claims Commission
in 1951 and were awarded 27 cents per acre in 1965.
Distribution of the award money began in 1971. In 1972
the Utah Paiute Tribal Corporation was incorporated
and 113 HUD housing units were built at Richfield, Joseph,
Shivwits, and the Cedar City area between 1976 and 1989.
Efforts toward restoration of federal status began in
1973 when petitions were circulated among the bands
calling for the federal government to again recognize
the Paiutes. This became a reality on 3 April 1980 when
President Carter signed legislation that restored federal
recognition and called for the Secretary of the Interior
to present legislation for a Paiute reservation to Congress
by 3 April 1982. On 17 February 1984 the Paiutes received
4,470 acres of poor BLM land scattered throughout southwestern
Utah and a $2.5 million fund from which they could draw
interest for economic development and tribal services.
In recent years they have built new houses, operated
two sewing factories, and dramatically improved their
health care and educational opportunities.
Ronald L. Holt