Rick Williams, an Oglala Lakota citizen and descendent of the Northern and Southern Cheyenne Indian people, does not celebrate Colorado's 150th anniversary of statehood due to the broken treaties, displacement of Native American communities, decimation of the bison herds, and removal of Native Americans. He shares his perspective on the anniversary and the need for healing and rebuilding tribal connections.
Rick Williams, founder and director of the People of the Sacred Land, poses for a portrait at his home in Broomfield on Wednesday, May 13, 2026.
Rick Williams is an Oglala Lakota citizen and a descendent of the Northern and Southern Cheyenne Indian people, all tribes with historical roots in Colorado. In the 1850s, his great-great-grandfather had a winter camp on Cherry Creek in what is now Denver. Despite connections to the state that run deeper than those of many Coloradans, Williams isn’t celebrating this year’s 150th anniversary of statehood.
His reasons: the broken treaties that deprived Native Americans of their lands; the upending of Native American communities during the gold rush and influx of settlers; the decimation of the bison herds that sustained tribes for centuries; and the removal of Native Americans from Colorado to other regions.
“Most people today are excited by the celebration” of statehood, Williams said. “For me, it is a dishonorable disgrace that insults my ancestors. ”But by the time Colorado became the 38th star on the American flag in 1876, the Cheyenne and Arapaho people had been forced out or left for Oklahoma, Montana and Wyoming.
Around 230 Cheyenne and Arapaho people were killed in, an ordained Methodist Minister, led the attack on a camp of about 750 mostly women, children and elders about 170 miles southeast of Denver.who inhabited roughly the western third of Colorado under an 1868 treaty, clashed with settlers and U.S. troops moving into their lands. They saw their territory continue to shrink until the northern and central bands weregave the Cheyenne and Arapaho sovereignty over the Platte River basin if they allowed white migrants to pass through and the government to build forts.
“You come to 1857, 1858, and all of a sudden, you have 100,000 people coming into the state and they’re all here illegally,” said Williams, an educator and the former CEO and president of the American Indian College Fund.drastically shrank Cheyenne and Arapaho lands from an area between the North Platte River and the Arkansas River to land between the Arkansas River and the Sandy Fork of the Arkansas River, now known as Sand Creek. President Abraham Lincoln ratified the agreement, which tribal leaders denounced.
Even with all that was lost, tribes still see Colorado as a part of their heritage. The Ute Mountain Ute and Southern Ute reservations are currently the only ones federally recognized in the state, but other Native American people with strong ties to Colorado have maintained their presence. Some never left. Many moved to Colorado or made trips to what they considered their ancestral homelands.
The sun rises on parts of the Sleeping Ute Mountain on the Ute Mountain Ute Reservation near Towaoc, Colorado, on Nov. 19, 2024. found in 2020 that more than 100,000 people who identify as American Indian/Alaska Native alone or in combination with one or more races were living in Colorado.
Those numbers rose from the 2010 Census and the upward trend is expected to continue, according to theThe center was the place where Tsosie went when he moved to Denver from Kirtland, N.M. , in 2019 for work. Tsosie, a member of the Navajo Nation, was homesick and couldn’t find the kind of food he was used to.
“The center had a community meal, a community social gathering. They were singing powwow music,” Tsosie said.
“It seemed like it was medicine for us. ”which has researched and publicized the history of Native Americans in Colorado and advocated for restoring the status of tribal nations in the state. Native Americans might not see Colorado’s sesquicentennial as a reason to celebrate, but some see opportunities to reestablish connections.
“We have nothing to do with the anniversaries because we were not here. We were confined to a reservation in Oklahoma when Colorado became a state,” said Fred Mosqueda. , the Arapaho outreach specialist on the tribe’s language and culture program for the jointly governed Mosqueda, whose ancestors were at Sand Creek, travels frequently to the Denver area. He was an adviser on the History Colorado Center’s Sand Creek exhibit.
He and other tribal members are working with Boulder County on a project that could restore bison on county open space. He supports developing an The Vibrant Denver Bond Package approved by voters in 2025 includes $20 million for the embassy, proposed on open space on Denver International Airport land. Ernest House Jr., a Ute Mountain Ute Tribe member, was selected to lead the planning.
“When Rick Williams first brought the idea, I told him ‘The Cheyenne and Arapaho want to buy the first office,'” said Fred Mosqueda.. “It’ll bring all the tribes together, under one roof. ” The Cheyenne and Arapaho tribes are also looking to work more closely with the Colorado state government, Mosqueda added. In September 1864, a Cheyenne and Arapaho delegation met with U.S. military and Colorado territorial officials, including Gov.
John Evans and Army Col. John Chivington. Two months after the peace talks at Camp Weld on the outskirts of Denver, Chivington led the attack on a camp of Cheyenne and Arapaho people at Sand Creek, killing approximately 230 mostly women, children and elders. The photograph shows some of the participants of the Camp Weld meeting.
Identities are believed to be, from left, kneeling in front: Maj. Edward W. Wynkoop and Capt. Silas Soule. Seated, first row, from left: Chief Neva , Chief Bull Bear , Chief Black Kettle , Chief White Antelope , and Chief Na-ta-nee .
Back row: unidentified; unidentified but possibly Dexter Colley, son of Indian agent Samuel Colley; US interpreter John Smith; Chief Heap of Buffalo ; Chief Bosse ; unidentified but possibly Samuel Elbert, secretary of Colorado Territory; unidentified. The resources, plains and mountains of present-day Colorado provided food, shelter and a way of life for Indians throughout the region.
“We lived on the buffalo. We followed the buffalo,” Mosqueda said.
“I think there was a northern herd and a southern herd. I think they congregated where they crossed over to each other out there on the Eastern Plains. ” There was water year-round and other wildlife.
“This was the perfect place to live. Much of our medicines still grow there today,” Mosqueda said.
“We still go back to get them. ” The area was also a sweet spot for non-Indians, or “Euro-Americans,” advancing West. Middle regions of the country proved easier for people on the move because the climate was often better for growing crops, soils were fertile and the Mississippi, Ohio and other rivers provided transportation networks.
“That middle area had always just been kind of easier, more enticing,” said Thomas Andrews, a history professor at the University of Colorado Boulder and director ofto look for gold or set up businesses and farms to supply the miners, according to the History Colorado Center. The gold rush, followed by discovery of other minerals and development of irrigation on the Front Range spurred more growth, Thomas said.
At the time, “Colorado is easily the fastest-growing, most vibrant part of the inner mountain West. ”, but it took five tries over 17 years for it to become a state, said Katherine Mercier, an exhibit developer and historian at the History Colorado Center. She believes a major reason was the conflict resulting from settlers moving onto Indian lands. The entrance to the 38th Star exhibit at the History Colorado Center in Denver on Saturday, May 2, 2026.
The exhibit dives into the long road to Colorado’s statehood. “In order to become a state, you need land. If you have native people living on the land, then it’s not available for mining, or for agriculture, or for establishing your colony, or building ditch,” Mercier said.
Many of the people in power trying to make Colorado a state saw native people as an obstacle and tried to move them off much of the land to clear the way, she added.on Colorado becoming a state in 1876, the 100th anniversary of the United States. That earned Colorado the nickname of the Centennial State. Andrews sees the presence of Native American tribes as just one of many issues playing into Colorado’s struggle to being admitted to the Union.
There was reluctance among some to become a state because residents would have to pay taxes to run the government, he said. Partisan political divides played into the effort because the area was considered heavily Republican, Andrews said, fueling concerns about how statehood would affect national politics. Settlers moving West had used various tactics since Colonial times to advance despite the presence of Native Americans, whether through legal moves such as treaties or by instigating conflicts, Andrews said.
“Colorado, when it achieved statehood, was a reflection of the extent to which American settlers had gained power over native peoples, especially on the plains,” Andrews said. This lithograph from 1859 depicts a band of Southern Arapaho people living near the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South Platte River in the newly founded towns of Denver and Auraria, which would later be consolidated with Denver.
On the other side of Cherry Creek, cabins are being built, likely by miners drawn to the region by the gold rush. Subsequently, the rest of Colorado came under scrutiny. Less than a year after statehood, newspaper headlines began “trumpeting the Utes must go,” Andrews said.
Under terms of“Settlers and the state government start coming up with pretexts for making life kind of impossible for the northern Ute bands in particular,” Andrews said.who founded the agricultural community Union Colony in present-day Greeley and the Greeley Tribune newspaper, became the Indian agent in northwest Colorado in 1878. He clashed with the Northern Utes when he pushed them to be farmers and withheld rations when they resisted, according to History Colorado.when federal troops summoned by Meeker entered the area overseen by the White River Indian Agency in Rio Blanco County.
The site was near the present-day town of Meeker, named for the Indian agent. The White River band of the Utes, in northwest Colorado, and the Uncompahgre Utes, in west-central Colorado, were force-marched out of Coloradoto serve the three Ute bands in the southern part of the state. They were confined to a reservation along the Colorado-New Mexico border.authorized the federal government to divide Indian reservations into 160-acre private lots for individual tribal members.
Mercier said the law was intended to remove the Utes from their traditional way of life that included hunting and gathering. The Weenuche band of the Utes agreed the land should be owned communally in what Mercier said was an act of resistance. The reservation split into two, with the Weenuche band moving to the west and forming the Ute Mountain Ute reservation.
The Southern Ute reservation, to the east, is home toA procession of Native Americans on horseback ride the Ute Pass Trail, El Paso County, Colorado, between Manitou Springs and Cascade, by Fountain Creek in 1912. They wear headdresses and traditional clothing for the dedication of the ancestral route which follows the Colorado Rocky Mountain front range into the mountains.
“In almost every single conflict, there was an attack on Indian people or their nation, their village. The survivors retaliate. And then it escalates,” Williams said.
“I’m not saying our people were the most peaceful people. They were really revengeful when somebody did something to them. They didn’t forget,” he added. Cheyenne and Arapaho tribal members take part in a drum circle and play a traditional flag and a memorial song during a gathering at the Sand Creek Massacre National Historic Site on Oct. 5, 2022, near Eads.
“It was genocidal in that it was an attempt to eliminate a portion of a population,” Andrews said of the massacre.
“It was an attempt to make it impossible for that population to reproduce itself. I think the perpetrators were quite transparent about that. ”Less than three months after testifying, Soule was gunned down on a street in Denver. Native American tribal members pay their respects at the headstone of Union Officer, Capt.
Silas Soule, at the Riverside Cemetery Dec. 3, 2014, in honor of the 150th anniversary of the Sand Creek Massacre. The Annual Sand Creek Massacre Spiritual Healing Run runners and supporters took off from the cemetery for the last leg of the run to 15th and Arapahoe for a plaque presentation on Soule's behalf. The brutal onslaught also followed proclamations by Evans. The first required “friendly Indians” to go to certain camps.
The second issued Aug. 11, 1864, authorized “all citizens of Colorado,” to kill “hostile Indians” who didn’t follow the first decree and take their property.after Williams discovered that the proclamations were still on the books. Former Rep. Adrienne Benavidez,a Commerce City Democrat who’s now a state senator, supported the effort to repeal the policies.
Grass dancers JR Ironshield, Standing Rock, center, and Anthony Peters, Oglala Lakota, right, dance with members of Indigenous Corporation 5280, during a Denver Tribal Convening welcome ceremony at Tall Bull Memorial Grounds in Sedalia on Oct. 2, 2024. The welcome ceremony begins a two-day Tribal Convening, that is part of Denver Community Planning and Development’s American Indian/Indigenous Peoples Historic Context Study.
The ceremony was organized by Denver Indigenous youth for representatives from 13 Tribal Nations, many of whom traveled from out-of-state. Boulder County has been working for a while on going from “land acknowledgements,” or publicly recognizing that specific areas were originally the home of Native American people, to meaningful work, said County Commissioner Marta Loachamin of Longmont.
A proposal under discussion with the Cheyenne and Arapaho people of Oklahoma includes leasing land on county open space for the tribes to steward the land. That could include restoring bison to the area.
“We have agricultural leases with many different tenants doing different types of projects and work, research, etc. … It seemed like an opportunity,” Loachamin saidWilde, a member of the Muscogee Nation of Oklahoma, is charged with advancing the work with tribes whose homelands were in Boulder County, officials said.on plans for managing a site with a connection to Sand Creek. Boulder County residents who mobilized into Company D of the Third Colorado Cavalry at“I do believe government has a responsibility to understand and to determine how to act accordingly in regards to people being removed from their land and land being stolen and taken,” Loachamin said.
Denver City Councilwoman Stacie Gilmore supports the creation of an embassy in Colorado for Native Americans who view the state as their homeland. She noted that the proposed site on First Creek at DIA Open Space is near a corner of the A bison grazes in a field with the downtown Denver skyline in the background at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge in Denver on Dec. 12, 2023.
Gilmore has traveled with Williams and other advocates of the embassy to neighboring states to talk about the project. While promoting the embassy has been “an honor and a joy,” Gilmore said she understands Indian tribes’ lack of enthusiasm to mark the state’s 150th anniversary.
“We know for certain that this is not a cause for celebration for most Native Americans. The creation of the United States and the state of Colorado came at great cost of their land and culture and people, and so it is not something that they want to celebrate at all,” Richie said.
However, he said, the sesquicentennial is an opportunity to share the history of how Colorado came to be. Richie said when the commission was formed in 2022, the goal was to ensure there was broad representation on the panel. Positions were created for representatives of the Southern Ute and Ute Mountain tribes. The legislation was updated in 2024 to expand the commission.
Richie said members wanted to create seats for members of tribes that don’t have reservations in Colorado, but have historic ties to the state. Southern Ute Indian Tribe chairman Melvin J. Baker, speaks inside the house chamber at the Colorado State Capitol for The State of the Tribes Address on January 16, 2026, in Denver.
Tribal members representing both the Southern Ute Indian Tribe and the Ute Mountain Ute Tribe, including councilwoman Marilyn House, right, were there to address the Colorado General Assembly. Williams said he raised the lack of representation with commission members. He spoke during one of the listening sessions held to gather input from Indian people.
People made clear that the story of Colorado becoming a state should include talk of the Sand Creek massacre and other atrocities, treaties reneged on and the treatment of children at Indian boarding schools. When people question commemorating an event with such a checkered past, Richie answers that two or more different things can be true at the same time.
“It is true that something like Colorado can be created because of great harm to native people and destruction of land and culture and gigantic loss,” Richie said. “It also can be true that people love the state and are proud of the achievements of individuals who have called Colorado home and wish to make the state that we live in a better place for themselves and for the future.
“It doesn’t diminish us to talk about bad things in our history. It actually makes us much stronger and wiser, I think, as a culture,” Richie said. Here is a list of Native American tribes with ties to what is now the state of Colorado, based on information from History Colorado, which acknowledges that there may be tribes connected to the state that are not on the list:
Colorado Native American Native American Issues Redress Bison Broken Treaties Ridley Scott Native American Resistance Sand Creek Cheyenne And Arapaho Tribal Nations
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Cubs' Pete Crow-Armstrong Voices Regret After Fiery Moment with White Sox FanAs if a walk-off loss to a Crosstown rival wasn't enough, Pete Crow-Armstrong had to answer some tough questions after Sunday afternoon's loss. The Cubs' star
Read more »
Supreme Court sends closely watched Native American voting rights decision back to lower courtThe justices ordered lower courts to take another look at the decision that went against tribes and undercut a key enforcement mechanism: lawsuits from voters and advocacy groups.
Read more »
Native American Voting Rights DecisionThe Supreme Court sends a closely watched Native American voting rights decision back to a lower court, with concerns about tribal sovereignty and voting rights protected under the U.S. Constitution.
Read more »
Millions of Americans Could Get Extra Day Off WorkPlans for an official Native American Day cleared a major hurdle in California.
Read more »
