Yavapai Family - The Wathogomas
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Stella M. Jordan, Cottonwood, Arizona Unknown 1512-2107-0000.jpg IN-Y-2107 B&W 1512-2107-0000 IN-Y-2107p Photo Card Print 6x9 Historic Photographs 1920s Reproduction requires permission. Digital images property of SHM Library & ArchivesDescription
The Wathogoma family, Yavapai Indians, in front of their home near Clarkdale, Arizona. The boy is Andrew Wathogoma. The parents were deceased by 1965.
The Yavapai Tribe’s rich history dates back centuries, when the women wove intricate baskets and the men were largely hunters and gatherers. The tribe’s first chief was Sam Jimulla, succeeded by his wife Viola. She was the first woman chieftess among North American Indians.The Yavapai have lived in central and western Arizona for centuries. Today there are three primary groups of Yavapai: The Fort McDowell-Yavapai Nation, the Yavapai-Apache Nation, and the Yavapai-Prescott Indian Tribe. The Yavapai-Prescott Indian Reservation consists of approximately 1,400 acres that are adjacent to the city of Prescott, Arizona in central Yavapai County. When it was established in 1935, the Yavapai-Prescott Indian Reservation occupied only 75 acres of the former Fort Whipple Military Reserve in central Arizona. The first reservation established solely for the Yavapai, it continued to grow with the 1956 addition of 1,320 acres.
Sources:
Website - Yavapai-Prescott IndianTribe.com
Website - InterTribal Council of Arizona - itcaonline.com
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