
- Details
- By Jenna Kunze
Out of the 52 land grant universities, Cornell University was the greatest beneficiary, High Country News’ research shows: it received federal vouchers for the selection of Indigenous-held land parcels in the Western United States. Cornell sold all of its Morrill Act lands by 1938, and its revenues funded the university’s operating budget for the next 30 years, according to the report.
In response to the 2020 High Country News story, Cornell’s American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program formed a Cornell University and Indigenous Dispossession Committee (CU&ID). The goal of that Committee was to determine federally recognized and unrecognized tribal nations—including First Nations in Canada— who were displaced as a result of Cornell’s land grabs, notify each group by written letter, and “advocate for redress to mend that history.”
“…Cornell has a moral obligation to acknowledge that its origins were based on a continental-scale program of Indigenous dispossession, and educate its faculty, staff, students, and the general public about this history and why it requires action in the present,” Cornell University’s former American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program Director Kurt Jordan wrote on the CU&ID homepage. “Cornellians should learn that the university was not only funded through the forcible taking of Indigenous lands but also that its buildings today stand on Indigenous homelands.”
The Committee’s first step of formally informing each impacted tribal nation or community of its land-grab status was completed as of June 2023, according to the CU&ID’s press release dated October 7. “To date, members of the committee have had dialogue with approximately 10% of the dispossessed tribes,” it says.
Leslie Logan, a Seneca Nation citizen, the Committee’s co-chair and the associate director of the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program at Cornell, told Native News Online that the process of redress will be devised by the tribes themselves.
“We would like to hear directly from Nation leadership and communities what initiatives they would like to pursue—whether in terms of collaborative research, fortified community engagement efforts, dialogue, specific recommendations regarding Indigenous students,” Logan said. “We want Native people from impacted tribes to determine what the course of action should be.”
Logan told Native News Online that she’d like to see Tribal Nations band together to create a list of demands, as they did in Minnesota.
As a result of the High Country News reporting, the Minnesota Indian Affairs Council in 2020 called for a specific accounting of Mni Sóta Maḳoce’s land grab, where the federal government expropriated 100,000 acres of land from the 11 Minnesota tribes to fund re-opening the bankrupt University of Minnesota. The state’s 11 tribal nations created the TRUTH Project—Towards Recognition and University-Tribal Healing, funded by a grant from the Mellon Foundation— to research university-tribal relations from an Indigenous perspective.
Now, Minnesota Tribes are asking the University of Minnesota for land back, representation among administrators and the student body, and a commitment to “repatriations in perpetuity.”
Cornell University’s administration has been resistant to the idea of tuition waivers for accepted Indigenous students, though they publicly claim a commitment to Native enrollment.
“We have raised that, and it’s gone nowhere,” Logan said of tuition waivers. While the university’s enrollment numbers reflect 87 self-identified first-year Native students, Logan said the number of engaged students with ties to their culture and communities is closer to 35, or about 100 undergraduates in total.
“If the university has gained and benefited so much, and tribes have lost so much, then what is the minimal thing that you could possibly do? And if you’re committed to increasing the numbers of Indigenous students here at the institution, what would really catalyze that?”
To Micahel Charles (Diné), an Assistant Professor in Biological and Environmental Engineering at Cornell and a member of the CU&ID, support of the Committee’s restorative work has stopped short of the institution’s administration.
“To me, it seems like all the support is coming from staff and faculty [of the American Indian and Indigenous Studies program],” Charles told Native News Online by phone from a First Americans Land-Grant Consortium conference in Denver. “But if it requires any extra actions, admissions of wrong, or conversations around land use or bringing funding towards Indigenous students, that’s where the administration starts to get quiet really quick.”
Charles’ advice for impacted tribal nations is to use the land grab data as leverage:
“I see a big opportunity for tribes to be proactive in using this data to help build a story that advocates for themselves,” he said. “Rather than a university saying, ‘Here’s what we can offer you,’ [tribes] can make a lot more targeted demands.”
Editor's Note: This article has been updated with some clarifying corrections.
More Stories Like This
50 Years of Self-Determination: How a Landmark Act Empowered Tribal Sovereignty and Transformed Federal-Tribal RelationsNavajo Citizens Voice Mixed Reactions to Trump’s Coal Executive Order at Public Hearing
Apache Stronghold Will Petition the U.S. Supreme Court Again on Monday, June 23
California Senate Panel Backs Ramos Bill on Tribal Regalia Rights at Graduation
Janie Simms Hipp Named 2025 Chickasaw Nation Dynamic Woman of the Year
Help us tell the stories that could save Native languages and food traditions
At a critical moment for Indian Country, Native News Online is embarking on our most ambitious reporting project yet: "Cultivating Culture," a three-year investigation into two forces shaping Native community survival—food sovereignty and language revitalization.
The devastating impact of COVID-19 accelerated the loss of Native elders and with them, irreplaceable cultural knowledge. Yet across tribal communities, innovative leaders are fighting back, reclaiming traditional food systems and breathing new life into Native languages. These aren't just cultural preservation efforts—they're powerful pathways to community health, healing, and resilience.
Our dedicated reporting team will spend three years documenting these stories through on-the-ground reporting in 18 tribal communities, producing over 200 in-depth stories, 18 podcast episodes, and multimedia content that amplifies Indigenous voices. We'll show policymakers, funders, and allies how cultural restoration directly impacts physical and mental wellness while celebrating successful models of sovereignty and self-determination.
This isn't corporate media parachuting into Indian Country for a quick story. This is sustained, relationship-based journalism by Native reporters who understand these communities. It's "Warrior Journalism"—fearless reporting that serves the 5.5 million readers who depend on us for news that mainstream media often ignores.
We need your help right now. While we've secured partial funding, we're still $450,000 short of our three-year budget. Our immediate goal is $25,000 this month to keep this critical work moving forward—funding reporter salaries, travel to remote communities, photography, and the deep reporting these stories deserve.
Every dollar directly supports Indigenous journalists telling Indigenous stories. Whether it's $5 or $50, your contribution ensures these vital narratives of resilience, innovation, and hope don't disappear into silence.
The stakes couldn't be higher. Native languages are being lost at an alarming rate. Food insecurity plagues many tribal communities. But solutions are emerging, and these stories need to be told.
Support independent Native journalism. Fund the stories that matter.
Levi Rickert (Potawatomi), Editor & Publisher