Welcome To The Menominee Tribal Clinic
We believe in promoting the best patient care to our community through education, prevention, health care maintenance and intervention. The team approach is necessary to ensure that the community needs, preferences, and conditions are addressed in a manner appropriate to deliver quality health care.
The values, dignity and spiritual needs are critical to the well-being and self-esteem of the individual and of the community. The individuals who work in the Clinic are the source of our strength and the foundation for quality health care services.
Menominee Nation Receives ROBERT WOOD JOHNSON FOUNDATION Culture Of Health Prize for innovative efforts to help residents lead healthier lives.
Menominee Tribal Clinic • W3275 Wolf River Rd • Keshena, WI 54135 • 715-799-3361
Clinic Website: https://mtclinic.org/
Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin
Posoh Mawanew Weyak
(Hello Everyone!)
Tribe’s Main Website: http://www.menominee-nsn.gov/
The Menominee Tribe’s history is unique because our origin or creation begins at the mouth of the Menominee River, a mere 60 miles east of our present Menominee Indian Reservation. This is where our five clans: ancestral Bear, Eagle, Wolf, Moose, and Crane were created. Not many tribes in this region can attest to the fact their origin place exists close or near to their present reservation. This is where our history begins. Explore and feel the history of the Menominee Indian Tribe from past to present.
Brief Menominee Indian Tribal History
The Menominee Indian Tribe’s rich culture, history, and residency in the area now known as the State of Wisconsin, and parts of the States of Michigan and Illinois, dates back 10,000 years. At the start of the Treaty Era in the early 1800’s, the Menominee occupied a land base estimated at 10 million acres; however, through a series of seven treaties entered into with the United States Government during the 1800’s, the Tribe witnessed its land base erode to little more than 235,000 acres today. The Tribe experienced further setbacks in the 1950’s with the U.S. Congress’ passage of the Menominee Termination Act, which removed federal recognition over the Tribe and threatened to deprive Menominee people of their cultural identity. Fortunately, the Tribe won back its federal recognition in 1973 through a long and difficult grassroots movement that culminated with the passage of the Menominee Restoration Act, Public Law 93-197, on December 22, 1973.
Menominee Indian Reservation
The seat of government for the Menominee Tribe is located approximately 45 miles northwest of Green Bay, Wisconsin, on the Menominee Indian Reservation, in the Village of Keshena. The Reservation shares nearly coterminous geopolitical boundaries with Menominee County, is situated on the ancestral homelands of its 8,551 tribal members, and includes 5 main communities: Keshena, Neopit, Middle Village, Zoar, and South Branch. The Reservation is comprised of 235,523 acres, or approximately 357.96 square miles, and includes over 407 miles of improved and unimproved roads, 187 rivers and streams, and 53 lakes. The Reservation is located in the 8th Congressional District for the State of Wisconsin.