8 Comments

  1. I have accurate maps of the entire Mohawk valley including the Scott and Simmons DLCs. They are in 17S 2W while Marcola is in 16S 1W. If you can share the document describing the reservation, I would be willing to use it to map the reservation and share a Google Earth outline with you. Note the Mohawk River has been altered. After the flood of 1861 it was cleared and straightened removing the oxbows. It was dredged and kept nearly straight until the late 1860s as they were using small steam vessels to transport crops and goods through the valley. But it looks like only 825 feet of boundary is defined by the river bed, so the margin of error should be small.

      • I did not realize that was the entire document, I assumed it was part of a larger document. Did the document have a title? Where did you find a copy?

        The river has definitely changed course as the current bed is currently 400 feet south of the corner they are using, but satellite views show hints of the old bed running right through the corner. I used a roughly straight line for the river boundary was we don’t know the exact path.

        Do you have an email where I can send you a KMZ file of the Simmons and Scott claims and the two grants?

  2. yeah this is the entire document
    1855- “Be it known that we William Simmons and James A. Scott do grant to the superintendent of Indian Affairs in Oregon for the term of four years or until the Indians shall be removed by order of the United States the following described portions of our respective land claims as a temporary reserve for the Mohawk Band of Calapooia Indians to be occupied and cultivated by said band to wit the said Simmons grants of his claim that part included in the following boundaries. Beginning at the corner of his northern boundary on the Mohawk creek; thence southerly along said creek fifty rods thence west to the base of the hill; thence northerly to said Simmon’s Northern boundary and thence east on said boundary to the place of beginning; and the said Scott grants of his claim that portion within the following boundaries; beginning at the same point on the Mohawk Creek before named; thence northerly along said creek fifty rods; thence west to the foot of the hill; thence Southerly to said Scott’s southern boundary; thence along said boundary to the place of beginning. The Indian hold the same as a temporary reserve for the time specified, provided said Indians shall behave themselves in a quiet and peaceable manner… 6th Day of March 1855, Williams Simmons, James L. Scott“

    This is the reference- (RG75, M2 Roll 13 1855)- its in the microfilm records of the Oregon superintendency

Leave a Reply