Times-Call (Longmont)

Tribes want Bahsahwahb­ee massacre site named national monument

- By Brittany Peterson

ELY, NEV.>> White attackers turned a lush, high desert oasis in eastern Nevada, with its bubbling springs and a rare stand of Rocky Mountain junipers, into killing fields. They massacred hundreds of Native people there in the 1800s — a horrific history once retold in hushed tones behind closed doors.

That was until tribal members reluctantl­y found themselves defending the valley’s historical significan­ce in state hearings. In the 2000s, they shared their painful past with authoritie­s weighing whether to divert substantia­l amounts of groundwate­r that feeds the valley their relatives have long considered sacred.

Bahsahwahb­ee — Shoshoni for “Sacred Water Valley” — is where the spirits of their dead live on in the trees growing among the open graves, the final resting place of ancestors who remained where they were slain.

Now they want to tell their story on their own terms. The Ely Shoshone, Duckwater Shoshone, and the Confederat­ed Tribes of the Goshute Reservatio­n — a coalition representi­ng about 1,500 enrolled tribal members — are lobbying the federal government to designate nearly 40 square miles as Bahsahwahb­ee National Monument.

“The goal is to commemorat­e what happened there to protect the memory of that place,” said Warren Graham, the Duckwater Shoshone chairman.

This lush section of the valley was visited by Shoshone and Goshute people, who were all related and called themselves “Newe,” for centuries, serving as a sacred site for healing and celebratio­n. It was desecrated at least three times. In the mid-1800s, federal soldiers carried out two massacres at Bahsahwahb­ee in retaliatio­n for attacks on settlers and their property.

During the final massacre in 1897, two girls were away on a walk during the fall harvest. Upon return, they found vigilantes killing their family and friends.

One of those girls was Laurene Mamie Swallow, grandmothe­r to 86-yearold Delaine Spilsbury, an Ely Shoshone elder who has worked for years on federal recognitio­n of the sacred site.

“The people that were killed here were left here,” said Spilsbury, sitting at dusk in a camp chair nestled among the trees. “Their spirits, their bodies are in those trees. And so we darn sure are going to protect those people.”

For more than a century, the history of the massacres was recounted on a need-toknow basis. Charlene Pete’s mother closed the doors and drew the blinds the day she told her children about the violence against their Goshute ancestors — trained from her days at a boarding school to believe she’d face punishment for recalling her heritage.

“That’s the first time I’d ever seen my mom emotional like that,” Pete said, recounting a wailing sound she later learned was customary for mourning. It was one of the few traditions her mother recalled from a time before the government forced her to attend a boarding school establishe­d to assimilate Native American children into white society.

When Las Vegas, which nearly doubled its population from 1990 to 2000, pursued a pipeline in the early 2000s to divert groundwate­r from the Bahsahwahb­ee area and pump it 300 miles to the burgeoning desert city, tribal members felt compelled to speak up.

“It came to a point where we had to start talking to save it,” said Ely Shoshone elder Alvin Marques. He testified in a multi-decade legal battle alongside ranchers, local officials and environmen­tal groups who all opposed the project by the Southern Nevada Water Authority.

College of Southern Nevada biology professor David Charlet said the trees likely wouldn’t last more than a half-century with a depleted water table.

“It can take cold, but it can’t take the heat and lack of water during the summer,” Charlet said of the rare stand of trees.

Rocky Mountain junipers — known locally as swamp cedars for the springs they rely on to survive hot summers — are usually found thousands of feet higher on mountains. Birds likely dispersed their seeds, and they thrived because of the valley’s shallow springs that fed the soil, according to Charlet.

Ultimately, the Nevada Division of Water Resources denied the Southern Nevada Water Authority’s applicatio­ns to pump water based on the protection of the cultural resource, said state engineer Adam Sullivan, who worked for the department during the ruling and later was appointed to lead it.

Protecting water for sacred trees is not something the agency had previously done, Sullivan said. In permitting projects, “we look broadly at what is in the public interest, and that has evolved.”

The water agency appealed to a state district court, but was rebuffed and withdrew its permit requests in 2020.

Even if the land becomes a national monument, the water beneath Bahsahwahb­ee would remain under the state’s jurisdicti­on. Today, there are no major water permit applicatio­ns in the valley, and any future applicatio­ns to extract significan­t amounts of water would face high scrutiny, Sullivan said.

But the land and its heritage would be managed by the National Park Service, whose mission it is to preserve them, explained Neal Desai of the National Parks Conservati­on Associatio­n.

The designatio­n would send a message that “we have decided as a country that this place is absolutely essential and we will commit to doing our best to ensure that this place, this story, the reasons that it’s important, that it will be preserved and interprete­d for the benefit of future generation­s,” he said.

Bahsahwahb­ee is already listed on the National Register of Historic Places — a mostly symbolic title. It remains under the Bureau of Land Management, whose focus is in managing public land for multiple users. In becoming a monument, the land would transfer to the National Park Service, which would work alongside tribes to preserve the place and its history.

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