University of Arizona Land Grant Project

Year

Tracking the History of Land-Grant Enrichment at the University of Arizona

An interactive story map built by the James E. Rogers College of Law Land-Grant Project Team, the goal of the University of Arizona Land-Grant Project is two-fold:

(1) to research, share, and begin to understand how the University of Arizona has been enriched from the 19th century dispossession of Native nations' land in Arizona; and,

(2) to provide students, faculty, researchers, and Arizona residents with an authoritative source of information and documentation about our history which will serve as a launching pad for further investigation, ground-breaking research, and original scholarship.

The digital resource brings together the early history of Arizona Territory including Native land cessions, the founding of the University of Arizona, and the Morrill land-grant acts and related legislation. The project also illustrates through interactive maps some 775,012 acres of land that have been positively identified as having been transferred to the Arizona State Land Trust since statehood for the benefit and enrichment of the University of Arizona, to the detriment of Arizona's Native nations. The team continues to track down and locate land records that are associated with our land-grant status. The team welcomes input, provide feedback here.

Citation

Williams, Jr., Robert A.,T. Miguel-Stearns, C. Laskowski, K. Keck, S. Ginsburg. (2024). University of Arizona Land Grant Project. University of Arizona's James E. Rogers College of Law. Website. Accessed Sept. 30, 2024: https://storymaps.arcgis.com/stories/913da25f6c3d46658690c3800bfef48e

Related Resources

Thumbnail or cover image
The Role of Tribes and Tribal Relations in Creating a More Vibrant Arizona

Arizona’s rich history begins with its Native inhabitants. Since time immemorial, Native Peoples built their own vibrant communities in the region’s river valleys, high deserts, mountains, and forests. Western archeologists affirm this long occupancy; they document ancestral Puebloan, Sinagua,…

Thumbnail

“Water in the Native World,” a special issue on tribal water research was just released by the Journal of Contemporary Water Research and Education. This is the second time, Dr. Karletta Chief, the PI of the Community Engagement Core of the University of Arizona Superfund Research Center (UA SRC)…

Image
Managing Land, Governing for the Future: Finding the Path Forward for Membertou

This in-depth, interview-based study was commissioned by Membertou Chief and Council and the Membertou Governance Committee, and funded by the Atlantic Aboriginal Economic Development Integrated Research Program to investigate methods by which Membertou First Nation can further increase its…