1900 Federal Census Boreman (Standing Rock Indian Reservation), North Dakota (Fort Yates: ED 260A) ************************************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwcensus.org/notices/ http://www.usgwcensus.org/ http://www.usgwcensus.org/cenfiles/ ************************************************************************** Abstracted by Brenda Meade from public records. Proofread by Maggie Stewart. Submitted by Brenda Meade. Edited and formatted by Maggie Stewart. ************************************************************************** All above information must remain when copied or downloaded. ************************************************************************** FORMATTER'S NOTES: Gov. Louis B. Hanna created Sioux county by proclamation on 3 September 1914 from the area covered by the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in North Dakota. It was named for the Indians who inhabited the reservation, known as Dakota or Sioux. ************************************************************************** NOTE: For more information on Sioux County(Parish), North Dakota, Please visit the Sioux County, NDGenWeb page at http://www.rootsweb.com/~ndsioux/ ========================================================= ALSO visit the ndGenWeb archives at http://www.usgwarchives.net/nd/ndfiles.htm ************************************************************************** ************************************************************************** From http://www.usgwarchives.net/nd/sioux/census/1900/000read.txt The 1900 Standing Rock Indian Reservation (now Sioux County), North Dakota, Census contains 110 pages (census images) in Enumeration District 260. The six pages of Fort Yates have no Enumeration District number, so they were assigned the ED Number 260A. The following is a breakdown showing which county subdivisions are enumerated in each Enumeration District: Standing Rock Indian Reservation: ED 260 Fort Yates: ED 260A ************************************************************************** From http://historical-county.newberry.org/website/North_Dakota/documents/ND_Consolidated_Chronology.htm 2 November 1889 The state of North Dakota was created from the Dakota Territory; Dakota Territory was eliminated. The following fifty-three counties became part of the state of North Dakota: ALLRED (extinct), BARNES, BENSON, BILLINGS, BOTTINEAU, BOWMAN, BUFORD (extinct), BURLEIGH, CASS, CAVALIER, CHURCH (extinct), DICKEY, DUNN, EDDY, EMMONS, FLANNERY (extinct), FOSTER, GARFIELD (extinct), GRAND FORKS, GRIGGS, HETTINGER, KIDDER. LA MOURE, LOGAN, McHENRY, McINTOSH, McKENZIE, McLEAN, MERCER, MORTON, MOUNTRAIL, NELSON, OLIVER, PEMBINA, PIERCE, RAMSEY, RANSOM, RENVILLE, RICHLAND, ROLETTE, SARGENT, SHERIDAN, STARK, STEELE, STEVENS (extinct), STUTSMAN, TOWNER, TRAILL, WALLACE (extinct), WALSH, WARD, WELLS, and WILLIAMS (original, extinct). Non-County Areas (17), (18), (20), and (21) became part of the State of North Dakota. Non-County Area (9) became part of the state of North Dakota and gained from BOREMAN (S.D., extinct), EWING (S.D., extinct), MARTIN (S.D., extinct), SCHNASSE (S.D., extinct), and WAGNER (S.D., extinct) when the boundary between North Dakota and South Dakota was set at the seventh standard parallel. That part of Non-County Area (9) east of 102 degrees west longitude was part of the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. (U.S. Stat., vol. 25, ch. 180[1889]/pp. 676–684 and vol. 26, no. 5/pp. 1548–1549; Swindler, 7:526–527; Van Zandt, 134) **************************************************************************