solving the “indian problem” u.s. policy toward native americans and their land continued its...
TRANSCRIPT
![Page 1: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Solving the “Indian Problem”
• U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War– Prior to the war, treaties clearly marked sovereign
land of Native Americans– As Americans settled ever westward, conflicts
with Native Americans increased, wars ensued– The reservation system confined tribes onto
smaller plots, until it was abandoned for a misguided policy of assimilation
![Page 2: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Map 13 of 45
![Page 3: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
*
Pyramid Lake Indian Wars in
1861
![Page 4: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
• Discovery of gold was often on Indian land.
• Some of the key battles fought were around the
mining areas.
![Page 5: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
• Sioux reservation declined over the
years…Why?
• Discovery of gold.
• Resistance to move to the reservation
• Battle of Wounded Knee
Black Hills
![Page 6: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
•1871 to 1875, the US supported the extermination of
11 million buffalo.
![Page 7: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Skull
• Take away the food
source from the Native American
and they will be forced to submit and go to the
reservations.
• Take away the food
source from the Native American
and they will be forced to submit and go to the
reservations.
![Page 8: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Indian Policy Timeline Scramble…GO!!!
![Page 9: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
![Page 10: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Dawes Act of 1887Quicker Americanization
Assimilate, mainstreamed and absorbed into US societyAdopt Christianity and White education Individual land ownership
Abandon tribe, culture and become farmers Male claimed 160 acres of landChildren would be sent to Indian schoolsFarm land for 25 years. 1924 gain citizenship and right to voteFailed policy
Indian resistance and corruption
![Page 11: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Map 26-2 p581
![Page 12: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Figure 26-1 p586
![Page 13: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Map 26-3 p585
![Page 14: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
VI. Beef Bonanzas and the Long Drive
• Problem of cattle marketing on Plains:– How to get cattle to market:
• Solved by transcontinental railroads• Cattle could now be shipped live to stockyards• Under “beef barons” like Swifts and Armours:
– Highly industrialized meatpacking business sprang into existence as a main pillar of economy
– In gigantic stockyards at Kansas City and Chicago, meatpackers shipped fresh products to East Coast in newly perfected refrigerator cars
![Page 15: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
VI. Beef Bonanzas and the Long Drive (cont.)
• Railroads made Long Drive, and railroads unmade Long Drive
• Same rails that bore cattle from open range brought out homesteaders and sheepherders:
– Intruders too numerous to be cut down by cowboys– Terrible winter of 1886-1887 left thousands of cattle
starving and freezing
• Overexpansion and overgrazing took toll, as cowboys slowly gave way to plowboys
Only escape for stockmen was to make cattle-raising a big business and avoid perils of overproduction
![Page 16: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
p585
![Page 17: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
VII. The Farmers' Frontier
• Sober sodbuster wrote final chapter of frontier history:
• Homestead Act (1862):– Allowed a settler to acquire up to 160 acres of land by living
on it for five years, improving it, and paying nominal fee of about $30
• Marked drastic departure from previous policy:– Before act, public land had been sold for revenue– Now given away to encourage rapid filling of empty space– Provide stimulus to family farm—“backbone of democracy”
![Page 18: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
VII. The Farmers' Frontier(cont.)
• Homestead Act often turned out to be a cruel hoax– Standard 160 acres frequently proved inadequate on rain-
scarce Great Plains– Thousands of homesteaders forced to give up struggle
against drought
![Page 19: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Map 26-4 p587
![Page 20: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
X. The Farm Becomes a Factory– Farming changed with growing single “cash”
crops, such as wheat or corn:– Profits bought foodstuffs and manufactured goods in town
or by mail order– Chicago firm of Aaron Montgomery Ward sent out its first
catalogue—a singe sheet—in 1872
• Farmers becoming consumers and producers• Large-scale farmers now specialists and
businesspeople– Intimately tied to banking, railroading, and manufacturing– Had to buy expensive machinery to plant and harvest crops
![Page 21: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
p594
![Page 22: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
X. The Farm Becomes a Factory(cont.)
• Mechanization of agriculture:– Speed of harvesting dramatically increased– Miracles of production, made America world's breadbasket
and butcher shop– Farm attained status of factory—an outdoor grain factory– Bonanza wheat farms of Minnesota-North Dakota enormous
» Foreshadowed gigantic agribusinesses of 1900s– Drove many farmers off land
![Page 23: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
XI. Deflation Dooms the Debtor
• Farmers' financial situations:– As long as prices stayed high all went well
• Grain framers no longer masters of their destinies:– Price of product determined in world market by world output
– Low prices and a deflated currency were chief worries of frustrated farmers
• Deflationary pinch on debtor flowed partly from static money supply:
– Simply not enough dollars to go around, and as a result, prices forced down
![Page 24: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
XI. Deflation Dooms the Debtor(cont.)
– Farmers caught on a treadmill:• Operated year after year at a loss and lived off their
fat as best they could• Farm machinery increased output of grain, lowered
the price, and drove them deeper into debt• Mortgages engulfed homesteads at an alarming rate• Ruinous rates of interest, running from 8 to 40%,
charged on mortgages• Sons and daughters cried out in despair against loan
sharks and Wall Street octopus• Farm tenancy, rather than farm ownership, spread
![Page 25: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
XII. Unhappy Farmers
– Even Mother nature conspired against farmers:• Mile-wide clouds of grasshoppers left “nothing but
the mortgage”• Cotton-boll weevil wreaked havoc in South by 1890s • Good earth going sour:
– Floods added to erosion– Expensive fertilizers urgently needed– Long successions of drought seared land
• Farmers gouged by governments:– Local, state and national over-assessed their land, causing
them to pay painful local taxes, high protective tariffs
![Page 26: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
p596
![Page 27: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
XII. Unhappy Farmers(cont.)
– Farmers “farmed” by corporations and processors– At mercy of harvester trust, barbed-wire trust and fertilizer
trust—all who controlled output and raised prices to extortionate levels
– Middlemen took juicy “cut”– Railroad octopus had grain growers in their grip
• Farmers still made up ½ of population in 1890:– Hopelessly disorganized– Farmers by nature independent and individualistic– Never organized successfully to restrict production until
forced to do so by Roosevelt's New Deal– What they did manage to organize was a monumental
political uprising
![Page 28: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
•Organized in 1867 in response to farmers’ isolation.•Helped farmers form cooperatives which bought goods in large quantities at lower prices. • The Grange also pressured government to regulate businesses on which farmers depended.
The Grange
•The Farmers’ Alliance called for political actions that many farmers could support. •The alliances won support for women’s rights. •Blacks allowed but parallel “Colored Farmers’ Alliance.”
Farmers’ Alliance
Populists •Farmers’ Alliances formed a new political party, The People’s Party or the Populists. •A national movement that was supported by farmers, the West and parts of the South….•Populists would elect a presidential candidate in the 1892 and 1896 presidential elections.
Local and state level
People’s Movement Spreads
Becomes a national movemnt
![Page 29: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Problems with the Railroads•Lack of competition lets railroads overcharge to transport grain•Farms mortgaged to buy supplies; suppliers charge high interest
The Rail-roads
![Page 30: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
•Tariffs helped farmers by protecting them against competition from farm imports.•Also hurt farmers because they raised the prices of manufactured goods, such as farm machinery.•Kept foreigners from earning U.S. money with which to buy American crops.
Farmers and
Tariffs
![Page 31: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
•Farmers wanted an increase in the money supply, the amount of money in the national economy. •WHY? Value of every dollar drops, leads to a widespread rise in prices, or inflation. •This trend would benefit people who borrow money (farmers), but it would not be good for money lenders (banks). •A decrease in the money supply would cause deflation.•Monetary policy, the federal government’s plan for the makeup and quantity of the nation’s money supply, thus emerged as a major political issue.
The Money Issue
![Page 32: Solving the “Indian Problem” U.S. policy toward native Americans and their land continued its evolution after the Civil War – Prior to the war, treaties](https://reader034.vdocuments.site/reader034/viewer/2022051517/5697c0111a28abf838ccb548/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
•Before 1873 U.S. currency was on a bimetallic standard, consisting of gold and silver. •Then Congress put the currency on a gold standard which decreased the money supply. •“Gold bugs” (big lenders) were pleased.•Farmers were furious
Gold Bugs