Winter Counts (a closer look) – PowerPoint II

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Tariq Khan Sociology 65 Professor Thorne
Advertisements

The Lone Dog Winter Count
The 2 Treaties of Fort Laramie
The Lone Dog Winter Count Winter Counts (a closer look) – PowerPoint II Click  You will be shown textual representations of winter count images.  Draw.
Battles for the West. Cochise – Chiricahua Apache Image: Fort Tularosa Apache Pass.
American Indians and Their Land
People of the plains CORE LESSON 4 – PAGES
Native American Struggles Chap. 18 Sec. 3. Following the Buffalo Many white settler started coming to the Great Plains and upsetting the Native American’s.
Problems in the Great Plains
Native Americans The Native Americans comprise almost an infinity of cultures in North, Central and South America, and the islands of the Caribbean. There.
The Indians that lived in the West had a peaceful life. They enjoyed roaming the plains, hunting, and living with their families, until the 1800s.
U.S. v. Indian Wars Chapter 12.
The Role of American Indians and Conflict with White Settlers Western Expansion Unit (Chapters 5 -6)
United States History Mr. Bach
Chapter 5 Part 1: The Native Americans Government policy and conflict.
The Culture of the Plains Indians
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee The West
Plains Indian Wars America was determined to acquire the homelands of the Native Americans. The United States used military and social solutions to deal.
U.S. History I Chapter 13- Changes On Western Frontier Section 1- Native American Cultures In Crisis.
What were the effects of westward expansion on the American Indians of the Great Plains?
Westward Expansion and its Impact on Native Americans.
AMERICAN HISTORY UNIT #1 – SETTLING THE WEST LESSON #3 – NATIVE AMERICANS (83-87)
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Chapter 3 Section 2. II. Indian Tribe Territories a.Apache- Present day Texas and Oklahoma. b.Comanche- “ “ c.Cheyenne- Different regions across the central.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie. Treaty of Fort Laramie Bozeman Trail closed by government Sioux agreed to live on a Reservation on the Missouri River.
Native American Wars IGCSE American History (US) Kofa High School.
Wounded knee By Cadet N. L.. The Wounded Knee Massacre occurred on the banks of Wounded Knee Creek about twenty five miles west of current day town of.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie: Chapter 13 Ms. Garvin US History I.
THE IMPACT OF WESTWARD MOVEMENT ON THE AMERICAN INDIANS.
NAIMIK PATEL 4.2 ASSIGNMENT The Paradox of Westward Expansion.
Industrialization Notes: Native Americans. Plains Indians  Dakota Sioux- Uprising (1862)  Over 650 killed  Afterwards, over 300 Sioux warriors were.
The Battle of Little Bighorn and Wounded Knee Massacre
Cultures clash on the Prairie
13.1: Cultures Clash HW: - GR Chapter 13
Native Americans Chapter 2 Lesson 3.
How did Native Americans resist against their poor treatment?
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.
Starter: What is the story behind this image?
The Indian Wars Part 2 Above is Sitting Bull, George Custer, and Crazy Horse.
Native Americans Conflict with American Expansion
Native Americans Chapter 18
Chapter 11 Section 3 By: Tina, Austin, Brock
Native American Wars.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
The Native American Wars
Plains Indian Wars.
The Lone Dog Winter Count
UNIT 11.2 NATIVE AMERICANS FIGHT TO SURVIVE MR LANGHORST.
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Red cloud By Travon Charles.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Lakota Society Warrior Society … “Counting Coup” … Tall Ones Kit Fox
Fall of the Native American Tribes
INDIANS! chapter 7, section 2.
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.
Westward Expansion Part 2
American West – The Indian Wars,
The Battle of the Little Big Horn
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Changes in the West: Native Americans
Conflict on the Great Plains
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Chapter 14 “Looking to the West”
“Native Americans” Chapter 8 Section 3.
Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West
The Battle of Little Big Horn
NATIVE Americans On the Plains
Chapter 7 The Indian Wars
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Red Cloud By Chris Mooney.
Presentation transcript:

Winter Counts (a closer look) – PowerPoint II   You will be shown textual representations of winter count images. Draw an image of the event described. Compare/contrast your drawing with the original keeper of the winter count. Good Luck! The Lone Dog Winter Count   Click

Winter Count: Cloud Shield (1840 – 1841) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Cloud Shield (1840 – 1841) They stole many horses from the Snakes [Shoshoni]. American Horse says that his father, Sitting Bear, and others stole 200 horses from the Flatheads (Corbusier 1886:140). American Horse has this for 1840-41, too. ?   Click

Winter Count: Flame (1843 – 1844) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Flame (1843 – 1844) Buffalo is scarce; an Indian makes medicine and brings them to the suffering. Mato Sapa says: Dakotas were starving; made medicine to Great Spirit by painting buffalo head on their lodges; plenty came (Mallery 1886:118-19). ?   Click

? Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Swan (1859 – 1860) A Minneconjou Dakota, named Big Crow, was killed by the Crow Indians. Notes: He had received his name from killing a Crow Indian of unusual size (Mallery 1886:123). Several other calendars record this man's death. ?   Click

Winter Count: : Battiste Good (1877 – 1878) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: : Battiste Good (1877 – 1878) Crazy Horse came to make peace and was killed with his hands stretched out winter. Notes: This refers to the well-known killing of the chief Crazy Horse while a prisoner (Mallery 1893:327). The Oglala warrior was killed when taken into custody at Fort Robinson, Nebraska. ?   Click

Winter Count: Long Soldier (1880 – 1881) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Long Soldier (1880 – 1881) Soldiers fired into Sioux and captured Indians. Infantry, artillery and cavalry represented. ?   Click

Winter Count: Rosebud (1880 – 1881) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Rosebud (1880 – 1881) Children sent to school. Notes: Battiste Good records this event for the previous year, as do the counts of Firethunder and Wounded Bear. This may note the first time Sicangu children were sent to school, as indicated by the human figures inside a log building. ?   Click

? Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Cloud Shield (1788 – 1789) The winter was so cold that crows froze to death. Several counts mark this year when the winter was so cold, crows froze, including Rosebud, Flame, Good and White Cow Killer. White Cow Killer calls it "Many-black-crows-died winter" (Corbusier 1886:132). American Horse and No Ears mark it for the following year 1789-90. ?   Click

Winter Count: : Lone Dog (1800 – 1801) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: : Lone Dog (1800 – 1801) Thirty Dakotas were killed by Crow Indians. Notes: The device consists of thirty parallel lines in three columns, the outer lines being united. In this chart, such black lines always signify the death of Dakotas killed by their enemies. The Absaroka or Crow tribe, although belonging to the Siouan [language] family, has nearly always been at war with the Dakotas. ?   Click

? Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Lone Dog (1803 – 1804) They stole some "curly horses" from the Crows. Notes: Some of these horses are still on the plains, the hair growing in closely curling tufts. The device is a horse with black marks for the tufts. The Crows are known to have been early in the possession of horses (Mallery 1893:273). ?   Click

Winter Count: Flame (1813-1814) Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Winter Count: Flame (1813-1814) Many Indians died of cold (consumption) (Mallery 1886:108). Notes: Most accounts agree that the disease was whooping cough. The discrepancy between diseases may simply be one of translation. Some diseases were new to the Indians, having been brought to North America inadvertently by Europeans. ?   Click

Winter Counts (a closer look) - PowerPoint   Content provided by: Smithsonian: Natural Museum of Natural History Lakota Winter Counts -An Online Exhibit- Lesson and PowerPoint provided by: South Dakota Office of Indian Education & South Dakota Public Broadcasting The Lone Dog Winter Count   Click