Indian Land Trust Restrictions Expiring in 1961 Extended Five Years

Media Contact: Bureau of Indian Affairs
For Immediate Release: December 22, 1960

INDIAN LAND TRUST RESTRICTIONS EXPIRING IN 1961 EXTENDED FIVE YEARS Trust restrictions on allotted Indian lands, scheduled to expire in calendar year 1961, have been extended for an additional five years, Secretary of the Interior Fred A. Seaton announced today.

This order, and similar orders issued in December of 1958 and 1959, reverse a custom started in 1951 of limiting such extensions to a maximum of only one year. In 1951, the then Acting Secretary was considering terminating trust status individual Indian lands on a year-by-year basis. Each trust case would be subject to review every year.

Secretary Seaton said the new orders reemphasize the Department's stated p01icy of taking all precautions against ending Federal supervision over Indians before they are competent to end their status as Federal wards.

The General Allotment Act of February 8, 1887, authorized trust restricted allotments of land for individuals both on reservations and on the public domain.

Homesteads for Indians off-reservations, similarly restricted, were also authorized by an Act of February 28, 1891.

The 1934 Indian Reorganization Act extended trust restrictions over lands of Indians who accepted the Act's provisions. Tribes and groups which were not so covered--so-called "unorganized" Indians--have had their trust protection extended for varying periods, until the 1951 decision established the one-year rule.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs said that it had DC accurate estimate of the acreage covered by the new order, but that it would run into the thousands.