Maricopa people





















Maricopa

Pakit, Maricopa, by Edward S. Curtis, 1907.jpg
Pakit, a young Maricopa woman, 1907 - Edward S. Curtis

Total population
804 (2015 census)
Regions with significant populations

 United States ( Arizona)
Languages

Maricopa, English
Religion
Traditional tribal religion[1]
Related ethnic groups
Yuman peoples



Maricopa


The Maricopa or Piipaash[2] are a Native American tribe, who live in the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community and Gila River Indian Community along with the Pima, a tribe with whom the Maricopa have long held a positive relationship. The Maricopa at the Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community consist mostly of Xalychidom Piipaash members and are concentrated in Lehi.[3] The Maricopa at the Gila River Indian Community are concentrated in Maricopa Colony. The Maricopa are a River Yuman group, formerly living along the banks of the Colorado River.




Contents






  • 1 Names


  • 2 History


  • 3 Language


  • 4 Arts


  • 5 Notable Maricopa


  • 6 See also


  • 7 Footnotes


  • 8 Further reading


  • 9 External links





Names


The neighboring Akimel O'odham (Pima) and future allies, called these people the Kokmalik'op ('enemies in the big mountains'),[citation needed]. The Spanish transliterated this to Maricopa. They call themselves Piipaa, Piipaash or Pee-Posh ('people'). Many descendants of the Halchidhoma, who had sought refuge at the Maricopa in 1825, today identify in English as Maricopa. But some also identify traditionally as Xalychidom Piipaa or Xalychidom Piipaash ('people who live toward the water').



History


They formerly consisted of small groups of people who lived for generations along the banks of the Colorado River. In the 16th century, they migrated to the area around the Gila River, to avoid attacks by the Quechan and Mojave peoples. During the 1840s, epidemics of new infectious diseases took a toll on the tribe.


In 1825 a party of American trappers, James Ohio Pattie among them, massacred a group of 200 Maricopa in revenge for an earlier attack[4].


In the 19th century, the Maricopa formed a confederation with the Pima, and in 1857 they successfully defeated the Quechan and Mojave at the Battle of Pima Butte near Maricopa Wells. They became successful farmers, and in 1870, they produced three million pounds of wheat. Drought and water diversion by non-Indians brought widespread crop failures.[2]


In the 19th and the 20th centuries, the Bureau of Indian Affairs implemented policies to try to assimilate the Maricopa into mainstream European-American society, and they brought Presbyterian missionaries into the communities. In 1914, the US federal government broke up communal tribal landholdings for distribution as individual allotments in order to encourage subsistence farming according to the European-American model. It was not appropriate for the geography and climate here. The Pima Advisory Council was formed by the BIA in 1926 to speak on behalf of the Pima and Maricopa communities. Following congressional passage of the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, in 1936 the Pima and Maricopa agreed on a constitution to restore some measure of self-governance.[2]


Through the 1930s, surface flow on the Gila River was reduced to nothing, and the tribe suffered greatly due to the loss of their river. But the BIA ignored water issues. The tribe resorted to using brackish well water, but it would not support growing edible crops. They began to cultivate cotton as a commodity crop.[2]



Language


Their heritage language is Maricopa, which belongs to the Yuman language family.[2]



Arts


The Maricopa are known for their basket weaving and textiles,[1] but in particular, they are known for their highly burnished red-on-redware pottery. Their traditional pottery practices enjoyed a revival from 1937 to 1940. A US Home Extension Agent, Elizabeth Hart works with a leading Maricopa pottery, Ida Redbird, formed the Maricopa Pottery Cooperative. Redbird served as president of the cooperative, which had 17 to 19 master potters as members. Hart encouraged members to sign their work. Swastikas were a common traditional motif that was abandoned in the 1940s, due to the Nazi usurpation of the symbol. The paddle and anvil method of construction is used, and, while utilitarian cookware is tempered, decorative Maricopa pottery has no temper.[5]



Notable Maricopa



  • Ida Redbird (1892-1971) - Master potter of the Maricopa; instrumental in the 1937-1940 Maricopa pottery revival; first president of Maricopa Pottery Makers Association;[5] translator and informant for Leslie Spier’s Yuma Tribes of the Gila River, thus helping to preserve her American Indian heritage.


  • Robert "Tree" Cody, flutist. He is also an enrolled member of the Hunkpapa tribe.



See also



  • Halchidhoma, a band that joined the Maricopa


Footnotes





  1. ^ ab Pritzker, A Native American Encyclopedia, pg. 57.


  2. ^ abcde Barry Pritzker, A Native American Encyclopedia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998; pg. 56


  3. ^ "Xalychidom Piipaash (Maricopa) People." Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community. (retrieved March 29, 2010)


  4. ^ http://www.lewismicropublishing.com/Publications/Robidoux/RobidouxMichel.htm


  5. ^ ab "Maricopa Potters." August 21, 2009 (retrieved September 9, 2010)




Further reading



  • Pritzker, Barry. A Native American Encyclopedia. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.

  • Zappia, Natale A. Traders and Raiders: The Indigenous World of the Colorado Basin, 1540-1859. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press, 2014.



External links






  • Salt River Pima-Maricopa Indian Community page on the Maricopa people








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