Congress passed the Wheeler–Howard Act, better known as the Indian Reorganization Act (IRA), on June 18, 1934. This legislation marked a major shift in federal Indian policy.
The National Archives houses multiple series of records related to the IRA, its acceptance or rejection by American Indian tribes, and the programs it established.
Indian Reorganization Act of 1934
The IRA led to major changes related to tribal land ownership and self-government. The IRA ended allotment of tribal lands, which had broken apart reservations and led to serious economic and cultural impacts on tribal communities, and established a process by which lands could be restored to tribal ownership.
The act also recognized tribal governments and offered incentives for tribes to adopt U.S. government-style constitutions and governing councils. In addition to these major policy shifts, the IRA set aside funds for Indian education and established Indian hiring preference in the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA).
For its supporters, the IRA was a major victory in preserving and strengthening tribal sovereignty, which had been undermined by decades of forced assimilation into American society.
For its critics, however, the IRA ignored differences in American Indian and Alaska Native cultures and their traditional methods of organization and leadership.
Records related to the IRA are found in different record groups and series. Select series, and in some instances file units, are listed below. The list is arranged by the National Archives research facility where the records are housed. For a full list of National Archives research facilities, see Visit Us.
Click the National Archives Identifiers for the full archival records descriptions in the National Archives Catalog. For questions related to the records, please contact the custodial unit indicated.
Petition for Charter, Tulalip Reservation, January 14, 1936
For questions related to these records, please email archives1reference@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email legislative.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email archives2reference@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email carto@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email chicago.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email denver.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email ftworth.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email kansascity.archives@nara.gov.
Letter from New York Indian Agency Superintendent Charles H. Berry addressing the reason why New York tribes rejected the Indian Reorganization Act
For questions related to these records, please email newyork.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email riverside.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email sanbruno.archives@nara.gov.
For questions related to these records, please email seattle.archives@nara.gov.
This page was last reviewed on September 9, 2024.
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