GC4QHWQ Traditional Cache Mondo's NAT #341 - Modoc
Type: Traditional | Size: Micro Micro | Difficulty: 1.5 out of 5 | Terrain: 1.5 out of 5
By: mondou2 @ | Hide Date: 10/19/2013 | Status: Available
Country: United States | State: Colorado
Coordinates: N39° 47.896 W104° 43.539 | Last updated: 08/30/2019 | Fav points: 0
Takes less than an hour  No Difficult climbing  Available at all times  Available during winter 

Native American Tribe Series.


Modoc

 

The Modoc, meaning "southerners,” were a warlike and aggressive offshoot from the Klamath tribe of southeast Oregon, occupying the territory immediately to the south of the latter, extending across the California border and including the Lost River Country and the famous Lava-bed region. The most important bands of the tribe were settled at Little Klamath Lake, Tule Lake, and in the Lost River Valley when the first white settlers began to arrive.

The Modoc were nomadic hunters and gatherers, surviving on fish, game, seeds, roots, and berries. By weaving together tule reeds they made a variety of their needs including fishing rafts, baskets, moccasins, and summer huts. In the winter they made their homes in earthen dug-out lodges.

 Though they spoke virtually the same language as the Klamath tribe and often intermarried with them, they also had a number of conflicts with them. The first recorded contact with the Modoc was made in the 1820’s when Peter Skene Ogden, an explorer for the Hudson's Bay Company, established trade with the Klamath people to the north of the Modoc. But the real intrusion of white settlers would not be until 1846 when Lindsay Applegate established the South Emigrant Trail between Fort Hall, Idaho and the Willamette Valley of Oregon, which provided an open route except for a short winter season each year. By the following year, new settlers began to flood the region, usurping the Modocs’ traditional hunting grounds.

In retaliation, the war-like Modocs began to attack the wagon trains and in September 1852, destroyed an emigrant train at Bloody Point on the east shore of Tule Lake. The white pioneers fought back, sending Indian fighters in to ambush the Modocs. Before long, the white settlers demanded that the Modoc be removed from their homes and placed on a reservation. In 1864, a treaty was reached with the Klamaths, the Modocs, and the Yahooskin band of Snake tribes that ceded their Indian lands and created the Klamath Reservation. An estimated 2,000 Indians were then escorted by the U.S. Army to the reservation.

However, the Modoc and the Klamath were historic enemies and the Modocs' relationship with the Yahooskin was not much better. In addition to the tensions between the tribes, the reservation did not provide enough food for the comfort of all of them and a number of illnesses on the reservation broke out. As a result, the Modoc began to demand a separate reservation closer to their ancestral home. When the government would not approve a new site, a prominent chief named Kintpuash, commonly known to history as Captain Jack, led the more turbulent portion of the tribe back to the California border in 1870 and obstinately refused to return to the reservation.

The first attempt to bring back the runaways by force instigated the Modoc War of 1872-73. After some struggles Kintpuash and his band retreated to the lava-beds on the California frontier, and from January to April, 1873, successfully resisted the attempts of the troops to dislodge them. In April, President Grant organized a Peace Commission to meet unarmed with the Modoc leaders in a peace negotiation meeting. However, the meeting resulted in the killing Major General Edward Canby and a Reverend Thomas.

The campaign was then pushed with vigor, the Modoc were finally dispersed and captured, and Kintpuash and three other leaders were hanged at Fort Klamath in October,  1873. The tribe was then divided, a part being sent to Indian Territory and placed on the Quapaw Reservation, where they had diminished to 56 by 1905. The remainder were sent to the Klamath Reservation, where they numbered 223 in 1905. In 1907, the group in Oklahoma was given permission, if they wished, to return to Oregon. Several did, but most stayed at their new home.

Today, the Modoc still live in both Oklahoma and Oregon with an estimated 600 members in Klamath County, Oregon, in and around their ancestral homelands; and another 200 in Oklahoma.

Unfortunately, for those living on the Klamath Reservation in Oregon, including the Modoc, Klamath and Yahooskin tribes, an act of congress terminated federal recognition in 1954. Even though tribal leaders and the Bureau of Indian Affairs opposed the act, it was passed anyway, The act not only stripped them of federal recognition and federal assistance, it also took away some 1.8 million acres of their reservation. In 1986, the Klamath Indian Tribe Restoration Act returned their federal recognition, but did not return their land. Though a small parcel was set aside for a diminished reservation, the land remains owned by the federal government rather than the tribes themselves.

The present day Klamath Indian Reservation consists of just twelve small non-contiguous parcels of land in Klamath County, with a total land acreage of just a little more then 300 acres. Few of Klamath tribal members actually live on reservation land. In fact, the 2000 census reported only nine persons residing there, five of whom were white.  The Modoc Tribe of Oklahoma was officially recognized by the United States government in 1978, and their constitution was approved in 1991.

 Custom URLs

Add cache to watch list
Log your visit
Picture Gallery

 Hints

2ml so bring your tweezers to post your find

 Nearby Caches

GC4QHWA Mondo's NAT #340 - Moctobi (0.17 kms W)
GC4QHWY Mondo's NAT #342 - Mogollon (0.25 kms E)
GC4QHW5 Mondo's NAT #339 - Mocogo (0.34 kms W)
GC4QHVX Mondo's NAT #338 - Mobile (0.55 kms W)
GC4QHWZ Mondo's NAT #343 - Mohawk (0.65 kms E)

   


Driving Directions

 Logs

11 Logs: Found it 11  

Found it 05/31/2019 By CacheDeposit
Tweezers definitely a must! TFTC

Found it 02/07/2019 By prerules
Nicely done. Signed log.

Thanks mondou2 for giving me a reason to get outside. It’s always worth it when you are enjoying nature. There is nothing better than acting like a kid again, digging through weeds and climbing trees, all to sign my name on a piece of paper.

Found with Cachly for IOS.

prerules | Parker, CO
Geocache find #585.

Found it 12/15/2018 By Memfis Mafia
Thanks to mondou2 for the cache. We always appreciate the effort that goes into publishing and maintaining a Traditional. This year we are trying getting out with the family more. I’m all we have found 6922 Geocaches.



December 15, 2018
Memfis Mafia

We will add our extra pictures (or ones with spoilers) to our family Instagram @memfismafia

We are also very likely to talk about our experiences on our weekly podcast. Geocache Talk

Geocachetalk.com

Found it 10/23/2018 By Mika_N
4FIN (Mika_N, Viveka1, Zaxa and Matti Merelä) on American tour visiting Seattle, Denver, Albuquerque and Las Vegas. @ 10.30. Cache # 10930. TFTC!

Found it 10/23/2018 By zaxa
Starting out from Denver towards Woodland. Quick found. TFTC.

Found it 09/03/2018 By Mean Kitty
Find #48990

Its been a long hot summer in Texas, I've been trying to get out and do a caching trip a couple of times this summer, but it never worked out. Finally managed to get a week off, and am so happy to be out here in Colorado. The weather if perfect, and there is a load of caches that need my name on Smile Thanks so much for the hide mondou2, I really enjoyed finiding this cache!

Found it 08/30/2018 By kkcjrlma
Had to go back to the car for tweezers. Those weeds hurt! Lovely carcass nearby. Tftc

Found it 07/20/2018 By heh324
Oh the attraction of a souvenir to a geocacher!! Curse you geo marketing people for doing your job so well. Evidently this great adventure has been going on for weeks, but in true form PayMeCache waits until the 23rd hour to call me up and say “let’s do this”….so we did. We knew we wanted to crank it out, so the plan was to hit an area concentrated with easy finds, unfound by both of us. Well we all know about best laid plans….our first couple of hours had their struggles, but the good news is if we weren’t quickly finding geocaches, we were laughing until it hurt and enjoying the adventures the universe was throwing at us. We eventually got our groove on and cranked out 80 or so finds for the day. My one piece of advice when caching just south of the airport….stop to watch the planes fly over. It was an amazing experience and the best part for me was watching the HUGE plane shadows sailing over the fields and right over our heads. TFTC

Found it 07/20/2018 By PayMeCache
The things we do for silly souvenirs...

I took a much needed day off to relax and recharge. I wanted to try and bag as many of these souvenirs (that I will forget by tomorrow). That being said heh324 joined forces and is chauffeuring us around. The heat is exhausting but we are getting through it one by one.

Found GC4QHWQ - Mondo's NAT #341 - Modoc on July 20, 2018 using Cachly for iOS.

Some may call me seriously mentally ill. Some may state that I am in a state of mind that prevents social interaction. Some may say I am in a state of mind that prevents normal perception and or behavior. I prefer to say that I tend to do the same thing over and over again, but I expect different results. That being said, I believe we only live one life and I am trying to make the best of it. I thank you, mondou2 for placing a fun geocache to fuel my "insanity" or addiction as I call it. I appreciate you bringing me here so that I can try and sign my alias on a piece of paper that you have hidden.

I look forward to finding more of your geocaches. I also look forward to potentially finding geocaches with you one day and sharing stories of our insanity... I mean hobby or addiction? Cheers!

Found it 07/14/2018 By Penny's pack
Had to be away from home for a meeting so decided to look for some Colorado Hidden Creatures! LOL TFTC SL TNLN

Found it 07/13/2018 By tc54915
Had the whole day to waste waiting for my coworker to get into town, so I figured I would grab some easy ones. This is so not fun doing park and grabs by yourself. Oh well...TFTCBigSmile