Lame Deer, Montana, with about 4,000 residents, of which 92% are American Indian, is the capital of the Northern Cheyenne nation.
Chief Dull Knife College is located there. To the west is
Muddy, Montana, with about 600 residents, 94% American Indian, and further west
Busby, Montana, with about 700 residents, 90% American Indian. Busby was the site of the Tongue River Boarding School, opened in 1904. The school would later become quite active in
basketball, with their team playing a winning game against the
Harlem Globetrotters and winning a state championship in the 1950s. The Busby White River Cheyenne Mennonite Church is located in Busby. In 1976 the reservation had 2400 people and
Marie Sanchez was the Chief Judge.
Ashland, Montana, is to the east. In 1884 a Catholic boarding school, the
St. Labre Indian School, was established there. The 460 residents of Ashland are about 75% American Indian. They are also very active in basketball. When
Busby became part of their district, they had notable rivalry basketball games in the late 1940s and on.
Birney, Montana, population about 100, 86% Indian, is south of Lame Deer and Ashland. Part of Birney, "White Birney", lies south of the reservation.
Colstrip, Montana, is a neighboring industrial city devoted to coal mining and electrical generation. Located 20 miles north of the reservation, it has a population of about 2,300 residents, of which approximately 240, or 11%, are American Indians. It is also where some Cheyenne attend public school or live for work.
Historic Northern Cheyenne bands Known in Cheyenne either as Notameohmésêhese or ''Notameohmésėhétaneo'o
meaning "Northern Eaters" or simply as Ohmésêhese / Ôhmésêheseo'o'' meaning "Eaters". • '''''Notameohmésêhese / Notameohmésėhétaneo'o proper
("Northern Eaters", also simply known as Ȯhmésėhese / Ôhmésêheseo'o
or Omísis
– "Eaters"' - They go by these names because they were known as great hunters and therefore had a good supply of meat to feed their people. They were the most populous Cheyenne group, inhabiting land from the northern and western
Black Hills (Mo'ȯhtávo'honáéva – ″black-rock-Location″) toward the
Powder River Country (Páeo'hé'e – ″gunpowder river″ or ″coal river″). Often they were accompanied by their Totoemanaho and Northern Só'taeo'o kin and had through intermarriages close ties to Lakota. Today they, along with the Northern Só'taeo'o, are the most influential among the Northern Cheyenne. • '''
Northern Oévemanaho / Oivimána (
Northern Oévemana – "Northern Scabby", "Northern Scalpers"''' - They now live in and around
Birney, Montana (Oévemanâhéno – ″scabby-band-place″) near the confluence of the
Tongue River and
Hanging Woman Creek in the southeastern corner of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation) • '''''Northern Só'taeo'o / Só'taétaneo'o
(Suhtai
or Sutaio''''' - They married only other Só'taeo'o (Northern or Southern alike) and camped separate from the other Cheyenne camps. They maintained closest ties to the Notameohmésêhese band and lived in the northern and western
Black Hills (Mo'ȯhtávo'honáéva – ″black-rock-Location″). They also roamed together with their Notameohmésêhese and Totoemanaho kin in the
Powder River Country (Páeo'hé'e), remaining north of the Platte River. They gained higher band numbers than their southern kin because of better Northern hunting and grass. They now live in and around Birney, Montana (Oévemanâhéno – ″scabby-band-place″). Today they, along with the Notameohmésêhese, are the most influential among the Northern Cheyenne.
Lesser northern bands (not represented in the Council of Forty-Four): •
Anskówînîs / Anskowinis ("Narrow Nose", "narrow-nose-bridge" - They are named after their first chief, properly named Broken Dish, but nicknamed
Anskówǐnǐs. They separated from the Ôhmésêheseo'o because of a quarrel. • '''Moktavhetaneo / Mo'ȯhtávėhetaneo'o (''Mo'ôhtávêhetane
– "Black skinned
Men", "Ute-like Men"' They are named this because they had darker skin than other Cheyenne and looked more like the Utes. Their name also means ″Mountain Men″, maybe descended from Ute (Mo'ȯhtávėhetaneo'o) captives. They live today in the
Lame Deer, Montana (Mo'ȯhtávȯheomenéno – ″black-lodge-place″) district on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation. Lame Deer, the tribal and government agency headquarters, was also the place where rations were given out and is known as Meaveʼhoʼeno – ″the giving place″ or ″giving-whiteman-place″. • '''Ononeo'o / Ononeo ("
Arikara People" or ″Ree Band″)''' - This band is of mixed Cheyenne-Arikara and Mandan heritage. They were formerly associated with the mixed Cheyenne-Lakota Masikota band and sometimes considered a Masikota subband. today they live in the nonofficial Rosebud/Ree district (Ónoneo'o), politically part of the Muddy Creek district, between Busby and Muddy Creek, some are also present in the Lame Deer district) • Totoemanaho / Totoimana (
Totoemana, Tútoimanáh – "Backward Clan", "Shy Clan" or "Bashful Clan", also translated as ″Reticent Band″, and ″Unwilling Band″, so named because they prefer to camp by themselves, lived in the northern and western
Black Hills (Mo'ȯhtávo'honáéva – ″black-rock-Location″) and along the
Tongue River (Vétanovéo'hé'e – ″Tongue River″), roamed together with their Notameohmésêhese and Northern Só'taeo'o kin also in the
Powder River Country (Páeo'hé'e), had through intermarriages close ties to Lakota, now centered in and around
Ashland, Montana (Vóhkoohémâhoéve'ho'éno, formerly called Totoemanáheno) immediately east of the boundary of the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation) • '''Vóhpoométaneo'o / Woxpometaneo (
Voxpometaneo – "White River People", ″White River Cheyenne″)'
Named for the White River (Vóhpoome) near Pine Ridge in South Dakota and also named after a large extended family as Wóopotsît
or Wóhkpotsit'' – "White Wolf", ″White Crafty People″. The majority joined their Cheyenne kin and settled in 1891 south of
Kirby, Montana near the headwaters of the Rosebud Creek. They are now centered in and around
Busby, Montana (Vóhpoométanéno) on the Northern Cheyenne Indian Reservation. Some stayed on the
Pine Ridge Indian Reservation with their
Oglala Lakota kin and are known as Tsėhésė-ho'óhomo'eo'o – ″Cheyenne-Sioux″. == Education ==