23 reviews of 4 Bears Casino and Lodge '4 Bears Casino is located on the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation. Over the last 10 years, there's been a lot of changes to this place. There's a new wing on the hotel where the rooms are much nicer.
- Ft Berthold Indian Reservation
- Fort Berthold Reservation Map
- Fort Berthold Indian Reservation Housing Shortage
- Berthold Indian Reservation North Dakota
- Fort Berthold Reservation
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — Some American Indian leaders are opposing draft legislation that would allow tribes in North Dakota to collect a state sales tax on their reservations as long as it includes casinos.
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe member Ron His Horse is Thunder on Wednesday told the Tribal Taxation Issues Committee, headed by Gov. Doug Burgum, that revenue from the tribal casinos “is used for essential government services” on reservations and should be exempt.
His Horse is Thunder, the tribe’s former chairman, believed it to be no different than the tax-free status of North Dakota’s state-owned bank in Bismarck and a flour mill and grain elevator in Grand Forks that funnel most of their profits to the state’s general fund, which finances a variety of state programs.
“This is something we need to come to terms with,” His Horse is Thunder told the 10-member legislative panel.
Two years ago, the Legislature passed similar legislation that allowed the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe in southern North Dakota to impose state sales tax but the agreement was canceled by the state after the tribe exempted its casino.
The new draft bill, which would allow tribal leaders to enter into a tax agreement with North Dakota’s governor, comes largely in response to tribes’ concerns about dwindling federal dollars on the state’s five American Indian reservations, North Dakota Tax Commissioner Ryan Rauschenberger said.
Republican Sen. Dwight Cook of Mandan, the chairman of the Senate’s Finance and Taxation Committee and primary author of the new bill, said in an interview the goal of the legislation was to remove obstacles for tribes wanting to impose the state’s sales tax.
“Only the tribes can decide whether they want to impose the tax on their members,” Cook said. He said the legislation is far from a finished product and will almost certainly change when the Legislature debates the bill when lawmakers reconvene in January.
Tribal businesses on reservations currently do not levy the state’s 5 percent sales tax. Businesses that are within reservation boundaries and not owned by American Indians are required to collect sales tax from nontribal members.
The draft legislation would forbid tribal governments that reach an accord with the state on sales tax collections to impose separate tribal taxes.
Three Affiliated Tribal Chairman Mark Fox told the committee that it is “unlawful” for the state to collect any sales tax within reservation boundaries unless approved by tribal leaders. Fox, in an interview, said Indian-owned casinos are exempt from state taxation under federal law.
Fox’s reservation accounts for about a fifth of North Dakota’s oil production. Tribal leaders last year imposed a higher tax rate for drillers after state officials had lowered it, saying it was needed to pay for road repairs, law enforcement and other consequences of oil development on the reservation.
Three Affiliated Tribes also last year established new rules and doubled the tax on alcohol for non-American Indian-owned businesses that sell alcohol products on the Fort Berthold Reservation.
Distributors had halted deliveries in protest of the higher tax but resumed after it was suspended.
The Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation (MHA Nation), also known as the Three Affiliated Tribes (Mandan: Miiti Naamni; Hidatsa: Awadi Aguraawi; Arikara: ačitaanu' taWIt), is a Native American Nation resulting from the alliance of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara peoples, whose native lands ranged across the Missouri River basin extending from present day North Dakota through western Montana and Wyoming.
After the signing of the Fort Laramie Treaty and subsequent taking of land, the Nation's land base is currently approximately 1 million acres located Fort Berthold Reservation in northwestern North Dakota. The Tribe reported a total enrollment of 16,085 registered tribe members in July 2018.[1][2] Nearly 5,200 live on the reservation; others live and work elsewhere.
- 1History
History[edit]
Recent history[edit]
Membership/Citizenship Qualifications[edit]
Membership (Citizenship) is derived from the 1936 Indian Census roll of the Three Affiliated Tribes. In 2010 the tribal membership passed amendments specifying 'blood quantum,' or minimum amounts of tribal ancestry to qualify individuals for membership and for candidates for public office. Effective December 16, 2010 individuals must have at least 1/8 Mandan, Hidatsa, or Arikara ancestry (the equivalent of one full-blooded great-grandparent) to become an enrolled member of the MHA Nation and 1/4 ancestry to serve in elected office. [3]
Tribal Business Council[edit]
The Tribal Business Council consists of six Segment Representatives and a Chairman. Each member's term lasts 4 years, and there are no term limits. The Tribal Business Council holds Regular Meetings on the second Thursday of each month, and sub-committees meet at different times throughout the month. A legal quorum as defined in the constitution of the Three Affiliated Tribes is 5 of the 7 council representatives. [4]
Position | Councilman | Segment | Elected |
---|---|---|---|
Chairman | Mark Fox | MHA Nation | 2018 |
Vice-Chairman | Randy Phelan | Mandaree | 2016 |
Treasurer | Mervin Packineau | Parshall/Lucky Mound | 2018 |
Executive Secretary | Fred Fox | White Shield | 2016 |
Member | Judy Brugh | Four Bears | 2018 |
Member | Cory Spotted Bear | Twin Buttes | 2018 |
Member | Dr. Monica Mayer | New Town/Little Shell | 2016 |
Mandan[edit]

The Mandan, who refer to themselves as Nueta, are a Native American tribe currently part of the Three Affiliated Tribes of North Dakota. At the height of their historic culture, the Mandan were prosperous and peaceful farmers and traders, noted for their excellent maize cultivation and crafting of Knife Riverflint. They built earth lodges, and made villages of considerable technical skill, and cultivated many varieties of maize. They were a more sedentary people than other, more nomadic tribes of the Great Plains.
Lewis and Clark stayed with the Mandan when they passed through the Upper Missouri region on their expedition to the Northwest, including five months in the winter of 1804–1805. Sakakawea, a Hidatsa who has subsequently been claimed by both the Shoshone and Hidatsa, joined the expedition as an interpreter and native guide. Because of her role in salvaging the expedition, she was honored with an image on the U.S. dollar coin. On the return trip, the expedition brought the Mandan chief Sheheke Shote with them back to Washington, DC.
The smallpoxepidemic of 1837–1838 decimated the Mandan, leaving approximately 125 survivors and severely impacting their society. They banded together with the Hidatsa to survive. Later, when the Arikara were forced northward by wars with the Lakota, they also settled with the Hidatsa and Mandan forming a confederacy that would later be known as the Three Affiliated Tribes. The Nation now commonly uses the Mandan, Hidatsa and Arikara Nation in most situations although The Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation is used as well.
When European-American settlers began arriving in this territory in number in the late 19th century, the US relocated the three tribes to the Fort Berthold Reservation in 1870. Under the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, the tribes formed a tribal government which they called the Three Affiliated Tribes, a sovereign Tribal Nation. Today over 15,000 tribal members live throughout the United States and internationally, however the population is concentrated on the reservation and nearby cities in North Dakota.
Some explorers described the Mandan and their structures as having 'European' features. In the 19th century, a few people used such anecdotes to speculate that the Mandan were, in part, descended from lost European settlers who had arrived at North America before 1492, the voyage of Christopher Columbus. One legend associated them with having Welsh ancestry. Historians and anthropologists have debated this history, however, the MHA people and their oral tradition agree that there was historic admixture. This is the legend of Madoc ab Owein, popularized in relation to the Mandan in the 19th century by the painter George Catlin. The current center of Mandan culture and population is the community of Twin Buttes, North Dakota.
Hidatsa[edit]

The Hidatsa, called Moennitarri by their allies the Mandan, are a Siouan-speaking people. The Hidatsa name for themselves (autonym) is Nuxbaaga ('Original People'). The name Hidatsa said to mean 'willows,' was that of one band's village, after a prominent landscape feature. When the villages consolidated, the tribe used that name for their people as a whole.
Their language is related to that of the Crow nation. They have been considered a parent tribe to the modern Crow in Montana. The Hidatsa have sometimes been confused with the Gros Ventre, another tribe which was historically in Montana. In 1936, the Bureau of Indian Affairs compiled the Tribe's Base Roll listing all Hidatsa as 'G.V.', for Gros Ventre. Today about 30 full-blood Hidatsa are members of the Affiliated Three Tribes. Most Hidatsa people have ancestry also of the Mandan and Arikara tribes.
Arikara[edit]
Ft Berthold Indian Reservation
The Arikara call themselves Sahnish.[5] The Arikara were forced into Mandan territory by conflict with the Lakota (Sioux), between the Arikara War and the European-American settlement in the 1870s. The Arikara lived for many years near the Fort Clark trading post, also called Knife River.

In 1862 they joined the Hidatsa and Mandan at Like-a-Fishhook Village, near the Fort Berthold trading post. For work, the Arikara men scouted for the U. S. Army, stationed at nearby Fort Stevenson. In 1874, the Arikara scouts guided Custer on the Black Hills Expedition, during which his party discovered gold. This resulted in a rush of miners to the area, causing conflict with the Lakota, who considered the Black Hills to be sacred.
In 1876, a large group of Arikara men accompanied Custer and the 7th Cavalry on the Little Big Horn Expedition. Arikara scouts were in the lead when US Army forces attacked the widespread encampment of thousands of Sioux and Cheyenne warriors and families. Several scouts drove off Lakota horses, as they had been ordered, and others fought alongside the troopers. Three Arikara men were killed: Little Brave, Bobtail Bull, and Bloody Knife. During the subsequent confusion, when the scouts were cut off from the troopers, they returned to the base camp as they had been directed. After the battle, in which Custer and some 260 other US troops were killed, the search for scapegoats resulted in some critics mistakenly accusing the scouts of having abandoned the soldiers.
Fort Berthold Reservation Map
Notable tribal members[edit]
- Ruth Buffalo, elected to the North Dakota House of Representatives in 2018
- Edward Lone Fight (b. 1940), former Chairman of the Three Affiliated Tribes
- Tex G. Hall, Chairman of the Three Affiliated Tribes from 1998 to 2006
- Denise Juneau, State Superintendent of Public Instruction for Montana
- Destrey Zarfos, Disc Jockey for 93X Minneapolis-St. Paul rock radio station
Notes[edit]
- ^'Demographics | North Dakota Studies'. ndstudies.gov. Retrieved 1 August 2016.
- ^Sevant, Taft (13 July 2018). 'Three Affiliated Tribes Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation Office of Tribal Enrollment'(PDF). mhanation.com. Retrieved 23 July 2018.
- ^'MHA Nation Tribal Enrollment FAQ'. mhanation.com. MHA Nation. 2012. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
- ^'Elected Officials'. mhanation.com. MHA Nation. 2014. Retrieved 13 January 2015.
- ^'History: The Sahnish (Arikara).'Archived 9 November 2011 at the Wayback MachineMandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara Nation. Retrieved 29 September 2011.
References[edit]
Fort Berthold Indian Reservation Housing Shortage
- Gilman, Carolyn, Mary Lane Schneider, et al. The Way to Independence: Memories of a Hidatsa Indian Family, 1840–1920. St Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1987. ISBN978-0-87351-209-1.
- Libby, Orin G., ed. Arikara Narrative of Custer's Campaign and the Battle of the Little Bighorn, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1998. ISBN978-0-8061-3072-9.
- Hammer, Ken. With Custer in '76, Norman: University of Oklahoma, 1976.
- Matthews, Washington. Ethnography and Philology of the Hidatsa Indians, U.S. Geological and Geographical Survey, 1877.
- Nichols, Ron. Men with Custer, revised ed. Hardin, MT: Custer Battlefield Historical and Museum Association, 2000.
- Wilson, Gilbert Livingstone, Ph.D. Agriculture of the Hidatsa Indians: an Indian Interpretation, University of Minnesota, 1917.
External links[edit]
Berthold Indian Reservation North Dakota
- Leon Wolf's Complaint - Hidatsa gestural language
- Discovering Lewis and Clark, history of tribe and interviews with members