what caused changes in the life of plains indians? how did government policies and battlefield...
TRANSCRIPT
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Conflict With Native Americans
US HistoryJacobs
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Essential Questions
What caused changes in the life of Plains Indians?
How did government policies and battlefield challenges affect the Indian wars?
What changes occurred in federal Indian policies by
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Manifest Destiny
Early in the 1800’s many white American’s believed it was their right to expand the country to the Pacific Ocean
Manifest Destiny: nation’s undeniable fate to posses the entire continent› Coined by journalist John L. O’Sullivan› Meant that God gave Americans the right
to move west and “civilize” the rest of America
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Manifest Destiny
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Life of the Plains Indians
Before the Civil War Native Americans west of the Mississippi continued to inhabit their traditional lands.
Great Plains: vast grassland between Mississippi River and Rocky Mountains
Into 1800’s bison roamed the plains› used for meat and hides› Hides used for shelters, clothing etc› Every part of bison used
Early European traders began giving Natives guns in return for hides
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The Great Plains
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Plains Indians
Spanish traded horses to natives in Mexico and southern US Other tribes acquired horses through raids
and battle Most tribes lived mainly as:
› Farmers› Hunters› Gatherers› Nomads: people who travel from place to place,
usually following available food sources, instead of living in one location
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Plains Indians
Nomads tended to follow bison and other big game herds
The rise of warrior societies led to a decline in village life, as nomadic Native Americans raided more settled groups.
White American’s and other immigrants began buying, taking, stealing native lands
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Acquiring Indian Lands
1860-1900: presidents gained lands however they could› Treaties› Land purchases› Forced relocation to reservations› Wars
After gold was found in the Black Hills on “protected” territory the government looked the other way as prospectors took the land of the natives
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Making Treaties
Government wanted to restrict nomadic movement through treaties
Limited movement to reservations› Federal lands set aside for Indians
Treaties produce misunderstanding and fraud
Government and natives often disobeyed treaties
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Making Treaties
Many natives did not know they were restricted to reservations › Continued to follow herds
BIA-Bureau of Indian Affairs › Set up to manage delivery of critical
supplies to reservations› Corruption led to supplies being stolen or
lost
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Making Treaties
Reservations had nominal protection from government from settlers
Settlers stole land, killed buffalo, diverted water, and attacked Indian settlements/camps
Natives would retaliate against settlers and settlers would then retaliate against natives
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Treaties to Conflict
Government decided treaties were useless
1871 declared no more treaties and gov’t would not recognize any more chiefs
Army sent to protect settlers from Indians but not good resolution
White profiteers selling guns to natives for profit
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Conflict
Acts of violence on both sides set off cycles of revenge
Some native groups allied to fight whites
Sometimes Army would pit certain tribes or groups against others
Most confrontations were small at this point but more would come……
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Soldier’s Life on the Frontier
Soldier’s made $13/month Left over CW uniforms and rotten food Who: former Civil War soldiers, jobless
men, and former slaves 1/3 of men deserted from military
service
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Cause of Clashes
Native view of land vs. settlers view of land
Settlers felt they could make native land more productive and thus should have the right to it
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Major Conflicts
1. Sand Creek Massacre 18642. Battle of Little Bighorn 18763. Battle of Wounded Knee 1890
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Sand Creek Massacre
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Sand Creek Massacre 1864
Cheyenne occupied plains including part of Colorado Territory
Raided settlements east of Denver Cheyenne leader Black Kettle asked
the military/governor for peace agreement
Told to camp men, women and children at Sand Creek on the plains
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Sand Creek Massacre 1864
Col. John Chivington saw chance to win victory against Cheyenne
Nov. 29, 1864 sent 700 men to Sand Creek
Black Kettle tried to surrender as Chivington and his men slaughtered his people
150-500 people were killed› mostly women and children
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Lieutenant Colonel George A. Custer
Charming, fearless with long blond curls Vain, didn’t like authority, foolhardy Received great distinction in Civil War Called “chief of thieves” by Sioux because he
was responsible for starting a gold rush in the Black Hills
Court-martialed twice for various offenses
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Battle of Little Big Horn
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Battle of Little Bighorn 1876part 1
Who: Sioux of the northern plains Where: Dakotas, Wyoming, Montana How it starts:1865 government wanted
to build Bozeman Trail through hunting grounds
Red Cloud leads two-year war to block the project
1866 Sioux kill 80 US soldiers
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Battle of Little Bighorn 1876part 2
1868 Fort Laramie Treaty- › US abandoned Bozeman Trail › created Sioux reservation in the Dakotas
Protected land in the Black Hills held sacred by Sioux
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Battle of Little Bighorn 1876part 3
1874-US sends Lt. Col. George Custer to investigate rumors of gold in Black Hills
Custer finds gold on the land that the government gives Natives
Sparks another gold rush to the Black Hills
Government offers to buy Black Hills from natives and Red Cloud
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Battle of Little Bighornpart 4
Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse (2 Sioux chiefs who have not signed Laramie Treaty leave Sioux reservation
Conflict between Sioux and US resumes
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Battle of Little Bighornpart 5
June 1876 Custer sent to round up Indians who left reservation
Leads his men towards Little Bighorn River
There he finds 2,000 Sioux warriors Sioux kill Custer and 200 other soldiers
in an hour Battle of Little Bighorn = Custer’s Last
Stand
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Battle of Little BighornOutcome
Army sent more troops to force Sioux onto reservations
Crazy Horse was killed after surrendering in 1877
Sitting Bull and other Sioux escaped to Canada but after 4 years were forced to surrender and return to reservation
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Battle of Wounded Knee 1890
Wovoka-Native American prophet› Promised return to traditional life if people
performed purification ceremonies› Ghost Dance- a ritual in which people
joined hands and whirled in a circle Caught on among Teton Sioux
Word spreads to US Army that natives are becoming restless because of Ghost Dance
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Battle of Wounded Knee 1890
Army sends same Custer’s former cavalry unit to Pine Ridge Reservation
Hoped to calm the situation Tried to arrest Sitting Bull but officers
shot and killed him 120 men and 230 women/children
surrendered to Army at Wounded Knee Creek
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Battle of Wounded Knee
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Battle of Wounded Knee 1890
As natives were being disarmed during the surrender a shot was fired
Army opened fire 200 Sioux were killed Wounded Knee was the last major
conflict in Indian wars
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New Policies Toward Native Americans
Even though many whites wanted all N.A.’s killed› Growing movement for peaceful resolution
Helen Hunt Jackson A Century of Dishonor› Protested government’s broken promises
toward natives
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Changing N.A. culture
Many still believed natives needed to be “civilized" meaning:› Christian› English speaking› Must adopt white dress and customs› Support selves through farming and trade
only All natives were to give up former
religious beliefs
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Changing N.A. Culture
1879 Capt. Richard Pratt opens U.S. Indian Training and Industrial School in Carlisle, Penn
Took children as young as 5 from homes› Coaxing, trickery or force
Assimilation=process by which one society (Indian’s) becomes a part of another more dominant society (white’s), by adopting it’s culture
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Dawes Act 1887
Traditionally all land was thought of as shared land
Divided reservation land into individual plots
Each family headed by a man received a plot of ~160 acres› Land holders granted citizenship but had to
adhere to local, state, and federal laws Thought this would create ownership
and pride
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Dawes Act
Resistance:› Having to farm offended some natives› Some natives were not interested in farming› Most reservation land was not suitable for
farming Outcome:
› Much of the land was sold or stolen by whites› 1887-1932: 138 million acres wound up in
white hands
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Opening of Indian Territory
As whites began moving into Indian Territory the US agreed to buy native claims to the land
April 22, 1889› 10’s of thousands of homesteaders lined up at
borders to stake a claim› Ended up with 2 mil acres› these settlers were called boomers› Much of land was taken by sooners (people
who sneaked by gov’t officials to stake claims early)
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Opening of Indian Territory
After 1890 remainder of Indian Territory opened to settlement
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Outcome
50+ years 1000 battles 950 US Army deaths Deaths of Indian scouts and fighters for
Army and settlers Millions of Native American men,
women, and children died in battle or on reservations› But ‘conquered’ the Native Americans
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Native AmericanNations/Homelands
Key Players Description/Outcome
Apache and Navajo Wars (1861-1886)
Apache in Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado territories; Navajo in New Mexico, Colorado territories
• Geronimo• Col.
Christopher “Kit” Carson
Carson kills or relocates many Apache to reservations in 1862. Clashes drag on until Geronmino’s surrender in 1886. Navajo told to surrender in 1863, but before they can, Carson attacks, killing hundreds, destroying homelands. Navajos moved to New Mexico reservation in 1865.
Sand Creek Massacre (1864)
Southern Cheyeene, Arapaho, in central plains
• Black Kettle• Col. John
Chivington
Cheyenne massacres prompt Chivington to kill up to 500 surrendered Cheyenne and Arapaho led by Black Kettle.
Red River War (1874-1875)
Comanche and southern branches of Cheyenne, Kiowa, and Arapaho, in southern plains
• Comanche war parties
• Gen. William T. Sherman
• Lt. Gen. Philip H. Sheridan
Southern plains Indians relocated to Oklahoma Indian Territory under 1867 Treaty of Medicin Lodge. After buffalo hunters destroy the Indians food supply, Comanche warriors race to buffalo grazing areas in Texas panhandle to kill hunters. Sherman and Sheridan defeat warriors and open panhandle to cattle ranching.
Wars/Battles
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Wars/Battles Native AmericanNations/Homelands
Key Players Description/Outcome
Battle of Little Bighorn (1876)
Northern plains Sioux in Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana territorries
• Sitting Bull• Crazy Horse• Red Cloud• Lt. Col. George A. Custer
U.S. tries to buy gold-rich Black Hills from Sioux. Talks fail. Custer’s 7th Cavalry is sent to round up Sioux, but meets huge enemy force. Custer and some 200 men perish in “Custer’s Last Stand.”
Nez Perce War (1877)
Largest branch of Nez Perce, in Wallowa Valley of Idaho and Washington territories and Oregon
• Chief Joseph• Gen. Oliver O.
Howard• Col. Nelson
Miles
Howard orders Nez Perce to Idaho reservation; violence erupts. Joseph leads some 700 men, women, and children on 1,400-mile flight. His 200 warriors hold off Miles’s 2,000 soldiers until halted 40 miles short of Canada. Sent to Indian Territory, many die of disease. In 1885, survivors moved to reservation in Washington Territory.
Battle of Wounded Knee (1890)
Sioux at Pine Ridge Reservation, South Dakota
• Sitting Bull• U.S. 7th Cavalry
Ghost Dance raises fears of Sioux uprising; Sitting Bull killed in attempted arrest. His followers surrender and camp at Wounded Knee. Shots are fired; some 200 Sioux die.