Cultures Clash on the Prairie Western business boomed out west while the culture of the Plains natives declined.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Changes on the Western Frontier
Advertisements

American Indian History
The Fight for the West The Main Idea
First Five Questions Name as many Native American tools/weapons, materials as you can Name as many Native American tools/weapons, materials as you can.
Ch. 18: Growth in the West Westward Expansion
Cultures Clash on the Prairie terms
Chapter 5 Cultures Clash on the Prairie
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed.
Native Americans in the West (1850’s)
Location – Which battles took place on American Indian land?
Conflict Between Peoples Native Americans & The United States Government.
Objectives Describe the importance of the buffalo to the Native Americans of the Plains. Explain how Native Americans and settlers came into conflict.
The South and West Transformed ( )
 Which has higher value in Native American culture, the individual or the community?
Warm-Up: describe this painting
Homestead Act New Technology Life on the Farm Decline of Farming Life on the Plains Plains Indians American Interests Indian Restrictions Indian Wars Assimilation.
Native American Conflicts and Policies
Native Americans Fight to Survive
Conflict with Native Americans
..   1860 – 360,000 Indians in the West  In the path of migrating settlers  Impacted by diseases (ex. Cholera, typhoid, smallpox)  Reduction of buffalo.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed.
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee The West
CH. 13; SECT. 1 STD: 2.6 The Fight For the West. Stage Set for Conflict Many diff. Native American nations make up the plains Indians Buffalo  Main source.
Native Americans in the West (1850’s). The Plains Indians way of life Nomadic on the Great Plains since not in one spot, Americans thought the land was.
Indian Wars.
Westward Migration and Wars with Native Americans.
Culture Clash Chapter 13, section 1 Main ideas and key terms The cattle industry boomed in the late 1800’s, as the culture of the Plains Indians declined.
By: Abby Toller, Tobin Niebrugge, Hailey Daniels Indians at War.
Chapter 5 Section 1.  Many tribes had established themselves on the Great Plains before settlers moved westward Osage & Iowa were farmers/planters Sioux.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Native American Removal & Displacement In the West.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie Section 13-1 pp
Westward Expansion Standard Indian removal policies Policies of the federal government towards the Native Americans changed in response to the.
Western Settlements Indians Treaties & Acts Indian Wars Misc. $100 $200 $300 $400 $500.
Exploring American History Unit VI – A Growing America Chapter 18 Section 2 – War for the West.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie: Chapter 13 Ms. Garvin US History I.
 Native American Tribes   Many tribes of the Great Plains were nomads  Followed buffalo herds for food, shelter, tools  Americans forced natives.
Chapter 5 The West. Cultures Clash on the Prairie Read pages and answer the following questions: 1.What was the culture of the Plain Native Americans?
The Great Plains are located in the west-central USA
Westward Migration and Wars with Native Americans
Westward Expansion & the American Indians
U.S. History Goal 4 Objective 4.02
CH 13 Section 1 Harassing the Indians..
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.
Native Americans Conflict with American Expansion
Changes on the Western Frontier 1877 – 1900 Chapter 13 – The Americans
Native American Wars.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie terms
Wars for the West U.S. history 8.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
The South and West Transformed ( )
Bell Ringer Use Note Sheet 28 “Mining and Ranching” and also the daily warm-up Questions.
The West and the Closing of the American Frontier
Native Experience.
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.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
CH 13 Section 1 Harassing the Indians..
Cultures Clash on the Plains
Westward Expansion American History.
Chapter 18 – Americans Move West
U.S. History and Geography
Native American Struggles
Conflict on the Plains Chapter 7, Lesson 4.
UNIT 2 – THE AMERICAN WEST
Chapter 15 Section 2: Westward Expansion and the Native Americans
Unit 1 Chapter 5 Section 1: The American West
Chapter 14 “Looking to the West”
“Native Americans” Chapter 8 Section 3.
Objectives Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed and used the land. Describe the conflicts between white settlers and Indians.
Presentation transcript:

Cultures Clash on the Prairie Western business boomed out west while the culture of the Plains natives declined.

An Influence for Adolf Hitler? Hitler's concept of concentration camps as well as the practicality of genocide owed much, so he claimed, to his studies of English and United States history. He often praised to his inner circle the efficiency of America's extermination—by starvation and uneven combat—of the red savages who could not be tamed by captivity. He was very interested in the way the Indian population had rapidly declined due to epidemics and starvation when the United States government forced them to live on the reservations. He thought the American government's forced migrations of the Indians over great distances to barren reservation land was a deliberate policy of extermination. Just how much Hitler took from the American example of the destruction of the Indian nations is hard to say; however, frightening parallels can be drawn

The West/Plains Diverse groups of native tribes Mix of nomadic/stationary tribes Native Groups – Cheyenne – Sioux – Nez Perce – Comanche – Apache – Navajo – Shoshone

The Horse and the Buffalo Horses introduced by the Spanish Plains natives became mostly nomadic hunters Buffalo provided – Food – Clothing – Shelter – tools

Native vs. Settler Views Toward Land Native Land was not owned by members of tribe Held in communal use for the greater good Settler Individual ownership of land encouraged Ownership of land provided great opportunities for individuals – Businesses – Farming

Settlers vs. Natives

Why go West? Lure of silver and gold Availability of cheap land Business opportunities in the mining industry Expansion of the Railroads

Clash With Natives U.S. government systematically confines native tribes to reservations Natives continued to use traditional hunting grounds Clash was inevitable

Massacres/Skirmishes Sand Creek (1864): 150 Cheyenne women and children killed by U.S. troops Bozeman Trail: frequent skirmishes between Sioux and white settlers Treaty of Laramie (1868) – Attempted to end disputes – Map on next slide

War! George Custer and about 250 federal troops killed at Battle of Little Bighorn Defeated by a combination of Sioux and Cheyenne Eventually native resistance surrendered

Assimilation Dawes Act of 1887 Reservations divided into individual plots of land Natives also encouraged to give up their culture Assimilate into American culture

The “Battle” of Wounded Knee (1890) The Ghost Dance Movement 350 Sioux rounded up at Wounded Knee Creek About 300 unarmed Sioux were killed Marked the end of the wars on the Plains