TOPIC 3: Challenges in the Late 1800s ( )

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch. 18: Growth in the West Westward Expansion
Advertisements

Westward the Course of Empire Emmanuel Leutze, 1860
Native Americans Culture and Change. Culture Some Native Americans were farmers, most were nomads following buffalo herds Native Am lived in extended.
Think – Pair – Share Assimilation or Annihilation.
Conflict Between Peoples Native Americans & The United States Government.
Native Americans and Western Settlement Focus Question: How did the pressures of westward expansion impact Native Americans?
Conflict with Native Americans
Aim: Why did settlers come into conflict with the Native Americans in the Western US?
The Wild West: Native American’s Plight American encroachment on the Great Plains.
Objectives – Lessons 3  Students will identify ways in which the U.S. government attempted to force Native Americans off their land.  Students will analyze.
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee The West
 What conflicts would have arisen between all the different types of people who were settling the last (western) frontier of America? And who was the.
The End of the Indians Another Tribe Season Ends In Defeat.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Treaty of Ft. Laramie (1851) Colorado Gold Rush (1859) 1 st Reservation Policy.
The Closing of the Western Frontier.
Westward Expansion Standard Indian removal policies Policies of the federal government towards the Native Americans changed in response to the.
U.S. American Indian Struggle. Treaty of Fort Laramie Year: 1851 Partcipants: Federal Governmnet, Cheyenne, Sioux Causes: settlers fears of attack, government.
American Indians Under Pressure !
Westward Expansion Explain the social and economic effects of westward expansion on Native Americans; including opposing views on land ownership,
Conflict with Native Americans. Cultures Under Pressure  Though there were many tribes present on the Plains, they all shared a common idea– that they.
Westward Expansion Explain the social and economic effects of westward expansion on Native Americans; including opposing views on land ownership,
Westward Migration and Wars with Native Americans
Westward Expansion & the American Indians
Native American Struggles
U.S. History Goal 4 Objective 4.02
13.1: Cultures Clash HW: - GR Chapter 13
Objectives Describe the importance of the buffalo to the Native Americans of the Plains. Explain how Native Americans and settlers came into conflict.
Native Americans Chapter 2 Lesson 3.
US Government Relations with Indians Aim - How did the movement west help to end the Native American way of life? Broken Promises U.S. government makes.
Respond with 4-5 sentences
How did Westward Expansion impact Native Americans?
The Indian Wars Part 2 Above is Sitting Bull, George Custer, and Crazy Horse.
Native American Wars.
1st Block Why were the buffalo important to the Native Americans?
American Indians Under Pressure !
Cultures Clash on the Prairie terms
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
The Native American Wars
America’s Last Frontier
Native Americans on the Plains
Bell Ringer Use Note Sheet 28 “Mining and Ranching” and also the daily warm-up Questions.
Native Experience.
American Interests After
Cultures Clash on the Prairie
Daily Warm Up Name as many Native American tools/weapons, materials as you can In what ways are Native American and “White” American culture different.
Objectives – Lessons 3 Students will identify ways in which the U.S. government attempted to force Native Americans off their land. Students will analyze.
Indian Wars.
The Great West and the Agricultural Revolution
UNIT 11.2 NATIVE AMERICANS FIGHT TO SURVIVE MR LANGHORST.
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Natives in the West Semester 2, Day 15.
Cultures Clash on the Plains
Westward Expansion American History.
Chapter 18 – Americans Move West
Native Americans Based on your previous studies, give examples of how Native Americans have been forced to leave their land. Answer in paragraph form (3.
Native American Struggles
Westward Expansion Part 2
Bellwork What was the highlight of your winter break?
Cultures Clash on the Prairie
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Native American Struggles
Conflict on the Great Plains
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Chapter 14 “Looking to the West”
Native Americans in the West
Indian Wars.
Indian Wars.
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Presentation transcript:

TOPIC 3: Challenges in the Late 1800s (1865-1914) Lesson 1 American Indians Under Pressure

Learning Objectives Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed and used the land. Describe the conflicts between white settlers and Indians. Analyze the impact of the Indian Wars. Evaluate the effectiveness of the government’s Americanization and reservation policies towards American Indians.

Background Following Revolution decades of disagreement, battles, forced migrations of Native Americans from their ancestral homes in the east 1830s: most Native American tribes forced to settle west of the Mississippi River in Indian territory (Oklahoma) or North/South Dakota (Great Sioux Reservation) Land was supposed to be “forever free” from white encroachment

Background 1840s/1850s: beginning of Manifest Destiny Early 1850s: series of treaties signed to create the beginning of the reservation system Specific areas set aside for Native American use Often resulted in forced migration of the tribes onto the reservation by the army 1863: creation of the transcontinental railroad= massive white expansion westward

Indian Wars Nomadic hunters on the Great Plains: Sioux, Blackfeet, Crow, Cheyenne, Comanche Relied on the buffalo to sustain their civilization Railroad brought white buffalo hunters west How did reservation life impact these tribes? Indian wars following Civil War= aggressive and brutal on both sides Sand Creek Massacre 1864: 150-200 Arapaho/Cheyenne killed by US army Sioux warriors massacred Captain William Fetterman’s soldiers and civilians in Montana goldfields

The Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians gathered at Sand Creek on November 29, 1864. Many women and children died in the massacre.

Indian Wars Treaty of Fort Laramie 1868: guaranteed the Black Hills to the Sioux tribe Corruption prevalent in the Bureau of Indian Affairs Gold discovered in the Black Hills 1875 The Battle of Little Bighorn: Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse to drive them out vs. Colonel George Custer 250 US army vs. 2,000 Native Americans Ghost Dance: religious revival (stop white expansion, return of the buffalo)= fear by white Americans Increased troops, disarming Sioux and chasing some in hiding Massacre at Wounded Knee 1890: estimated 150 men, women and children killed

The U.S. government relocated many Native American groups following the Civil War. Analyze Maps Describe the process of how Native Americans lost their land.

These Navajo Indians were forced to relocate from the lands they knew and relegated to the Bosque Redondo reservation in present-day Arizona and eastern New Mexico.

Assimilation Buffalo hunted to near extinction= Native Americans forced to live off of the government A Century of Dishonor, by Helen Hunt Jackson (reformer perspective)- assimilation Dawes Allotment Act (Severalty Act) 1887: tribes gave up tribal land in exchange for 160 acre plot of land for family Farming; private property= Americanization Missionary boarding schools- Carlisle Indian School “kill the Indian, save the man”

Quiz: Cultures Forced to Adapt Why was the popularity of buffalo hunting among white tourists so threatening to Native American civilizations in the West? A. The sport brought great numbers of white settlers to the area for the first time. B. Arriving white tourists damaged lands on which Native Americans mined gold and silver. C. Native Americans experienced challenges finding enough resources to meet their basic needs. D. Native Americans were forced to abandon their traditional western lands and move to reservations in the east.

Quiz: Settlers and Native Americans Collide How did white settlers’ belief in manifest destiny affect Native Americans? A. Native Americans engaged in multiple battles with white settlers. B. Native Americans settled and adapted to the ways of white settlers. C. Native Americans were given tools and resources to farm new land. D. Native Americans lost more territory due to white settler expansion.

Quiz: The Indian Wars Conclude What is the most likely reason Chief Joseph said, “I will fight no more forever”? A. Fighting went against his religious beliefs. B. He wanted to prevent further death and destruction. C. His will and means to fight had diminished. D. He had permission to return to his homeland.

Quiz: The Government Encourages Assimilation The Dawes General Allotment Act is an example of the Americanization movement because it A. encouraged Indians to own private property. B. required the payment of property taxes for schools. C. asked Indians to form representative governments. D. required farmers to meet production quotas.