Robert Yellowtail
The Crow Indian Reservation is the largest reservation in Montana in square miles with a total of 3,606.54 square miles.
There were just under 11,200 enrolled members of the Crow tribe; today there are 11,357, with around 8,000 living on the Crow reservation.
Crow Creek Reservation's population is 1,230.
The area of Crow Creek Reservation is 508.248 square kilometers.
Yes, the Crow Indian Tribe, also known as the Apsáalooke, exists. They are a Native American tribe primarily located in Montana, with a reservation known as the Crow Reservation. The tribe has a rich cultural heritage and history, and they actively engage in preserving their traditions and language. Today, they continue to play a significant role in the cultural and economic landscape of the region.
The three largest reservations in Montana are those at Fort Peck (the Sioux-Assiniboin Reservation) in the north-east of the state, the Blackfoot Reservation in the north-west and the Crow Reservation in the south.The Blackfoot Reservation covers 3,000 square miles; the Crow Reservation covers 3,606.54 square miles (including areas of water); the Fort Peck Reservation covers just over 3,289 square miles.So the largest is the Crow Reservation.The first answer claimed that the "Ojibwe Reservation" was the largest - but there is no Ojibwe reservation in Montana.
According to the official website of the Crow or Apsaalooke tribe there are around 11,000 registered Crows, with 7,900 of them living on the Crow reservation in Montana. At the time of first contact with white explorers there were perhaps just 4,000 Crows.
Crow Agency Montana is today the main town and administration centre on the Crow reservation. The first agency was established in 1868 by Captain E M Camp near Livingstone at the western end of the tribe's lands, but his successor (Fellows D Pease) relocated the agency in 1875 to the Stillwater River valley near Absaroka. In 1884 the agency site was moved again, to Crow Agency; this is in the Little Bighorn valley.
Mary Crow Dog was born on September 26, 1954, in Rosebud Reservation, South Dakota, USA.
That would take far to long to answer on this forum. If you are genuinely interested in the traditions of the Crow tribe, find the following books at your local library or buy them: The Crow by Frederick E Hoxie The Crow Indians by Robert H Lowie Crow Indian Beadwork by Wildschut and Ewers Plenty Coups Chief of the Crows by Frank B Linderman Five Indian Tribes of the Upper Missouri by Edwin Thompson Denig Two Leggings by Peter Nabokov From the Heart of the Crow Country by Herman Viola and Joseph Medicine Crow The Religion of the Crow Indians by Robert H Lowie Crow Indian Medicine Bundles by Wildschut and Ewers A Taste of Heritage: Crow Indian Recipes and Herbal Medicines by Kelly Kindscher, Alma Hogan Snell and Lisa Castle Counting Coup: Becoming a Crow Chief on the Reservation and Beyond by Joseph Medicine Crow Pretty-Shield: Medicine Woman of the Crows by Frank Bird Linderman The little people: Crow legends of creation (Indian culture series. Stories of the Crow Indians) by Flora Hatheway The Way of the Warrior: Stories of the Crow People by Phenocia Bauerle, Henry Old Coyote and Barney Old Coyote
the crow indian men hunted and protected there family in case of an attack.
The Apsáalooke (Crow tribe) lived near the Black Hills, the Rattlesnake Mountains, the Wind River Range, the Bighorn Mountains, Pryor Mountains , Wolf Mountains and Absaroka Range. By 1860 the Lakota and Cheyenne forced them out and claimed all the former Crow lands from the Black Hills of South Dakota to the Big Horn Mountains of Montana. Today, The Crow Indian Reservation in south-central Montana is 2,300,000 acres The reservation is primarily in Big Horn and Yellowstone counties with ceded lands in Rosebud, Carbon, and Treasure Counties.