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The Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma is headquartered near Perkins in Payne County. Beginning in 1878 bands of Iowa left their Kansas-Nebraska reservation and settled among the Sac and Fox in Indian Territory, where they were assigned land in 1883. Situated between the Cimarron and Deep Fork rivers, the Iowa reserve included portions of present Payne, Logan, Oklahoma, and Lincoln counties and was allotted to 109 tribal members in 1890.

The Iowa called themselves Bah-Kho-Je, meaning "gray snow," and were a Siouan people who spoke the Chiwere language. Their first reported contact with Europeans occurred at a Winnebago village on Green Bay in 1676. During the eighteenth century they moved eastward across the present state of Iowa from the Missouri River to the lower Des Moines River. By the early 1800s their villages were situated along the watercourses of northern Missouri. The Iowa were organized into two clan divisions, with the head chiefs of the Buffalo and Bear clans each providing principal semiannual leadership.

By 1839 the Iowa had ceded all their tribal land in Iowa and Missouri and resided on the Great Nemaha Reservation in northeastern Kansas and southeastern Nebraska. There factionalism developed between the mixed-blood and full-blood populations. While the mixed-bloods farmed and assimilated into the Euroamerican culture, the full bloods followed their traditional heritage and opposed allotment. To preserve their way of life the latter moved to Indian Territory starting in 1878. Consequently, two Iowa tribes exist the Iowa of Kansas and Nebraska, and the Iowa of Oklahoma.

The Iowa Tribe of Oklahoma was organized under the Oklahoma Indian Welfare Act of 1936 and adopted a constitution and bylaws in 1937. A five-person business committee governs them. There were 496 enrolled members in 2003. Tribal revenue is generated through the Cimarron Casino at Perkins, and BKJ (an acronym for Bah-Kho-Je) Solutions, a tribally owned company involved in trucking, energy marketing, construction management, and archaeological and environmental services. An annual Iowa powwow is held each June.

Iowa ('sleepy ones'). One of the southwestern Siouan tribes included by J. O. Dorsey with the Oto and Missouri in his Chiwere group. Traditional and linguistic evidence proves that the Iowa sprang from the Winnebago stern, which appears to have been the mother stock of some other of the southwestern Siouan tribes; but the closest affinity of the Iowa is with the Oto and Missouri, the difference in language being merely dialectic.

    Iowa chiefs informed Dorsey in 1883 that their people and the Oto, Missouri, Omaha, anti Ponca "once formed part of the Winnebago nation." According to the traditions of these tribes, at an early period they came with the Winnebago from their priscan home north of the great lakes, but that the Winnebago stopped on the shore of a great lake (Lake Michigan), attracted by the abundant fish, while the others continued southwestward to the Mississippi. Here another band, the Iowa, separated from the main group, "and received the name of Pahoja, or Gray Snow, which they still retain, but are known to the white people by the name of Ioway, or Aiaouez. The first stopping place of the Iowa, after parting from the Winnebago, as noted in the tradition, appears to have been on Rock river, Ill., near its junction with the Mississippi. Another tradition places them farther north.

     In 1848 a map was drawn by a member of the tribe showing their movements from the mouth of Rock river to the place where they were then living. According to this their first move was to the banks of Des Moines river, some distance above its mouth; the second was to the vicinity of the pipestone quarry in southwest Minnesota, although on the map it was placed erroneously high up on the Missouri; thence they descended to the mouth of Platte river, and later moved successively to the headwaters of Little Platte river, Mo.; to the west bank of the Mississippi, slightly above the mouth of Des Moines river, a short distance farther up on the same side of the Mississippi; again southwestwardly, stopping on Salt river, thence going to its extreme headwaters; to the upper part of Chariton river; to Grand river; thence to Missouri river, opposite Ft Leavenworth, where they lived at the time the map was drawn.

These successive movements, which are of comparatively recent date, are generally accepted as substantially correct. The Sioux have a tradition (Williamson in Minn. Hist. Coll., 1, 296) that when their ancestors first came to the falls of St Anthony, the Iowa occupied the country about the mouth of Minnesota river, while the Cheyenne dwelt higher up on the same stream. The Iowa appear to have been in the vicinity of the mouth of Blue Earth river, Minn., just before the arrival there of Le Sueur in 1701 for the purpose of erecting his fort. His messengers, sent to invite them to settle in the vicinity of the fort because they were good farmers, found that they had recently removed toward Missouri river, near the Maha (Omaha), who dwelt in that region. The Sioux informed Le Sueur that Blue Earth river belonged to the Scioux of the West (Dakota), the Ayavois (Iowas), and Otoctatas (Oto), who lived a little farther off.

Father Marest (La Harpe, Jour., 39, 1851) says that the Iowa were about this (late associated with the Sioux in their war against the Sauk. This does not accord with the general tradition that the Dakota were always enemies of the Iowa, nevertheless the name Nadoessi Maseouteins seems to have been applied to the Iowa by the early missionaries because of their relations for a time with the Sioux. Pere Andre thus designated them in 1676, when they were living 200 leagues west of Green Bay, Wis. Perrot (Mem., 63, 1864) apparently located them in the vicinity of the Pawnee, on the plains, in 1685. Father Zenobius (1680) placed the Anthoutantas (Oto) and Nadouessious Maskoutens (Iowa) about 130 leagues from the Illinois, in 3 great villages built near a river which empties into the river Colbert (Mississippi) on the west side, above the Illinois, almost opposite the mouth of the Wisconsin.

He appears to locate a part of the Ainoves (perhaps intended for Aioues), on the west side of Milwaukee river, in Wisconsin. On Marquette's map (1674-79) the Pahoutet (Iowa), the Otontanta (Oto), and Maha (Omaha) are placed on Missouri river, evidently by mere guess. La Salle knew of the Oto and the Iowa, and in his letter in regard to Hennepin, Aug. 22, 1682, mentions them under the names Otoutanta and Aiounouea, but his statement that Accault, one of his company, knew the languages of these tribes is doubtful. It is probable that in 1700, when Le Sueur furnished them with their first firearms, the Iowa resided on the extreme headwaters of Des Moines river, but it appears from this explorer's journal that they and the Oto removed and "established themselves toward the Missouri river, near the Maha." Jefferys (Fr. Dom. in Am., 1761) placed them on the east side of the Missouri, west of the sources of Des Moines river, above the Oto, who were on the west side of the Missouri and below the Omaha; but in the text of his work they are located on the Mississippi in lat. 43º 30'.
    
The Iowa
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In 1804, according to Lewis and Clark (Orig. Jour., vi, 91-92, 1905), they occupied a single village of 200 warriors or 800 souls, 18 leagues up Platte river, on the south east side, although they formerly lived on the Missouri above the Platte. They conducted traffic with traders from St Louis at their posts on Platte and Grand Nemaha river, as well as at the Iowa village, the chief trade being skins of beaver, otter, raccoon, deer, and bear. They also cultivated corn, beans, etc. In 1829 (Rep. Sec. War) they were on Platte river, Iowa., 15 m. from the Missouri state line. Schoolcraft (1853) placed them on Nemaha river, Nebr., a mile above its mouth. By 1880 they were brought under the agencies.

     The visiting and marriage customs of the Iowa did not differ from those of connate tribes, nor was their management of children unlike that of the Dakota, the Omaha, and others. They appear to have been cultivators of the soil at an early date, as Le Sueur tried to persuade them to fix their village near Ft Sueurr because they were "industrious and accustomed to cultivate the earth." Pike says that they cultivated corn, but proportionately not so much as the Sauk and Foxes. He also affirms that the Iowa were less civilized than the latter. Father Andre (Jes. Rel., 1676, Thwaites ed., Lx, 203, 1900) says that although their village was very large, they were poor, their greatest wealth consisting of "ox-hides and red calumets," indicating that the Iowa early manufactured and traded catlinite pipes.

Some small mounds in Minnesota and Iowa have been ascribed to them by two distinct traditions.
     In 1824 they ceded all their lands in Missouri, and in 1836 were assigned a reservation in north east Kansas, from which a part of the tribe moved later to another tract in central Oklahoma, which by agreement in 1890 was allotted to them in severalty, the surplus acreage being opened to settlement by whites.

     Various estimates of the population of the Iowa at different dates are as follows: In 1760, 1,100 souls; by Lewis and Clark in 1804, 800, smallpox having carried off 100 men besides women and children in 1803; the Secretary of War gives the number in 1829 as 1,000; Catlin in 1832 at about 1,400, but in 1836 at 992; the Indian Affairs Report of 1843 gives their number as 470; the number at the Potawatomi and Great Nemaha agency in Kansas was 143 in 1884, 138 in 1885, 143 in 1886, and 225 in 1905. At the latter date they were under the jurisdiction of the Kickapoo School. At the Sauk and Fox agency, Okla., in 1885 they numbered 88; in 1901, 88; in 1905, 89.


    There was an Iowa village called Wolf village.