California tribe that lost 90% of land during Gold Rush to get site to serve as gateway to redwoods

California Gov. Gavin Newsom tours a salmon restoration project on Monday, Jan. 29, 2024, at Prairie Creek which runs from Redwood National and State Parks, Calif., and flows through land that will be returned to the Yurok Tribe. The tribe which lost 90 percent of its ancestral land during the Gold Rush in the mid-19th century, will get back a slice of its territory under an agreement signed Tuesday, March 19, 2024, with California and the National Park Service. This 125-acre parcel will be transferred to the Tribe, in 2026. (AP Photo/Terry Chea, File)

California's Yurok Tribe, which had 90% of its territory taken from it during the Gold Rush of the mid-1800s, will be getting a slice of its land back to serve as a new gateway to Redwood National and State Parks visited by 1 million people a year.

The Yurok will be the first Native people to manage tribal land with the National Park Service under a historic memorandum of understanding signed Tuesday by the tribe, Redwood National and State Parks and the nonprofit Save the Redwoods League.

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