Welcome to the Official Website of the Sakochee Tribe!
Welcome to the Official Website of the Sakochee Tribe!
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The Sakochee Tribe is proud to announce the future development of our Tribal Reservation and Cultural Heritage Site—a 300-acre sanctuary located in Coburg, Oregon, to be leased under a 100-year agreement. This land will serve as the permanent cultural, spiritual, and operational home of the Sakochee Nation. It will be a place of healing, celebration, tradition, and renewal—for all mixed-blood Native Americans seeking connection, recognition, and community.
The Sakochee Tribe is proud to announce the future development of our Tribal Reservation and Cultural Heritage Site—a 300-acre sanctuary located in Coburg, Oregon, to be leased under a 100-year agreement. This land will serve as the permanent cultural, spiritual, and operational home of the Sakochee Nation. It will be a place of healing, celebration, tradition, and renewal—for all mixed-blood Native Americans seeking connection, recognition, and community.
Location: Coburg, Oregon
Size: 300 acres of rolling hills, natural springs, and forested trails
Lease Terms:
$50,000 annually, 100-year lease, and 25% share of tribal enterprise profits
This long-term lease empowers the Sakochee Tribe to build a thriving, self-sustaining homeland without forfeiting control, culture, or vision.
Our Coburg reservation is more than land—it’s a living project of restoration and cultural empowerment. Features will include:
AT THE SAKOCHEE TRIBE
This reservation is not just for Sakochee members—it is a sacred space for all mixed-blood Native Americans who have been historically erased or excluded from federally recognized systems.
Here, you are seen. You are valued. You are home.
Each year, we will host the Sakochee Tribal Powwow—a vibrant celebration of dance, song, food, and reconnection. Visitors and members from across Turtle Island will gather here to honor their heritage and forge new bonds.
“We are building not just a reservation—but a reclamation. A place for every ancestor who was never forgotten.”— Chief Alexander Ziwahatan
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