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Show 29. William S. Godfroy, to Govenor McCook, January 28, 1870, Letters Received. 30. C. I. A. Annual Report, 1870, pp. 627- 629. 31. Session Laws of The State of Colorado, Memorial of January 26, 1872. 32. U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 17, 55. 33. Board of Indian Commissioners, Annual Report, 1872, p. 94. 34. Leroy R. Hafen, " Historical Summary of the Ute and the San Juan Mining Region," in Ute Indians II, New York: Gar am Publishing Inc., 1974, p. 32- 57. 35. C. I. A. Annual Report, 1873, p. 106- 107. 36. Sidney Jocknick, Early Days on the Western Slope of Colorado, Denver: Carson- Harper Co., 1913, p. 358- 359. 37. U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 18, 36. 38. Executive Order, November 22, 1875, Executive Orders Relating to Indian Reservation, 1855- 1912, Washington, D. C : GPO 1912, p. 66. 39. Executive Order, August 17, 1876, Ibid., p 67. 40. C. I. A. Annual Report, 1878, p. 298. 41. U. S. Congress, Senate, Mining Camps on the Ute Indian Reservation, Senate Executive Document 29, 46th Congress, 2nd Session, 1880, p. 93- 97. 42. U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 19, 288. 43. U. S. Congress, House, Message from The President of the United States Transmitting the Department of the Commission Appointed to Make Certain Negotiations with the Indians of Colorado, House Executive Document 84, 45th Congress 3rd Session, p. 2- 4; U. S. Statutes at large, Vol. 20, 48; U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 20, 316. 44. Marshall Sprague, " The Bloody End of Meeker's Utopia,'' American Heritage, Vol. 8, October 1952. 45. U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. 21, 199. 46. Jocknick, p. 216; Wilson Rockwell, The Utes: a Forgotten People, Denver: Sage Books, 1956, p. 170- 171. 47. Jocknick, p. 217 48. Congressional Record 10; 2058- 66, April 2, 1880. 49. U. S. Statutes at large, Vol. 21, 199. 50. U. S. Statutes at large, Vol. 24, 388. 51. CIA. Annual Report, 1881, p. 388. 52. Thomas G. Alexander and Leonard J. Arrington, " The Utah Military Frontier, 1872- 1912: Forts Cameron, Thornburgh and Duchesne," Utah Historical Quarterly, Vol. 32, Fall 1964, p. 340- 341. Fort Thornburgh was soon moved 35 miles from the agency in the mouth of Ashby Creek Canyon. The military reservation itself eventually encompassed 21,851 acres. The army abandoned the post on July 22, 1884. 53. C. I. A. Annual Report, 1881, p. 387. 54. C. I. A. Annual Report, 1881, p. 383. 55. Executive Order, January 5, 1882. Executive Orders Relating to Indian Reservations, p. 1704. 56. W. H. Berry, to Commissioner of Indian Affairs, January 28, 1882, Letters Received. 39 |