Ntsayka Ikanum – Our Story LESSON 2

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Indian Removal Act Five major Native American groups lived in the southeastern United States: the Cherokee, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole, and Creek.
Advertisements

Why do we have war?. Major Indian-White Conflicts.
Termination 1954.
Reconstruction and Westward Expansion
 Trails helped travel become easier and more efficient.  Trails were used by farmers, ranchers, miners, and business men.  They were used for migration.
California Native American History
The Cherokee, Shawnee and Chickasaw Indians
The Mississippian Culture was the last pre-historic development in North America, thriving from about 1000 AD until the arrival of European explorers.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
Native American Removal from Georgia October 1, 2012.
The South and West Transformed ( )
Indian Removal The Big Idea President Jackson supported a policy of Indian removal. Main Ideas The Indian Removal Act authorized the relocation of Native.
The Age of Jackson. Learning Targets I can define “Jacksonian Democracy” as it relates to the “common man”. I can compare and contrast the relationship.
  Based on the living conditions of Americans and Natives, was the Indian Removal Act justified?
  The United States was not always divided into 50 states. Many distinct Indian tribes originally inhabited each of the regions that are now part of.
  . Indian Lands The Trail The Cherokee Seal Indian Removal Act Lasting Effects.
Pre Columbian America. North America Greenland Canada United States Mexico.
 You will be able to explain the causes and effects of Jackson’s Indian Removal Act.  Who lived in the U.S. before European explorers and colonists arrived.
The Iroquois and Algonquins Native American cultures of the Eastern Woodlands.
By: Nicholas Maknoon.  Some of the most famous tribes of the southwest lived in and were located in Arizona, New Mexico, and Colorado. The most well.
Trail of Tears Lesson 1 in Westward Expansion: Native Americans.
Bellwork Questions Day One
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s
Native Americans & White Settlers As the U.S. expanded west, settlers wanted the Native American lands, and the Native Americans didn’t want people taking.
Native American Tribes
2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt 2pt 3 pt 4 pt 5 pt 1 pt 2 pt 3 pt 4pt 5 pt 1pt Native American Cultures Shelters.
America moves West. Plain Indians land holdings Close to the Civil War Native Americans inhabited nearly half the United States. By 1880 most of the population.
Unit 7: Creek & Cherokee Nations ( ). KIM Vocabulary Strategy K =Key Vocabulary Word Example: William McIntosh I = Information/Definition Example:
Trail of Tears Lesson 1 in Westward Expansion: Native Americans.
The Five Indian Culture Areas  The map shows the five Indian culture areas.  In what area can you find the Cherokee?  In the Eastern Woodland culture.
Trail of Tears & Indian Removal Forced Removal of Native Americans Under the Jackson Administration.
Removal of Native Americans Balancing Nationalism and Sectionalism Part 5.
American Indian Federal Policy
Battle of New Orleans British launch an attack on New Orleans, an important port at the mouth of Mississippi Andrew Jackson leads an American force made.
Unit 7: Creek & Cherokee Nations ( ). KIM Vocabulary Strategy K =Key Vocabulary Word Example: William McIntosh I = Information/Definition Example:
By: Nick & Claire. The move was through 1790 and The dotted route is the land route, blue is water route, green other major routes.
Jackson and the Indians Vs.. Indians in the Southeast By the 1820s, only about 100,000 still lived east of the Mississippi, and most of them were in the.
Cherokee Indians.
Texas And It’s Natural People. The First Texans Archaeologists often divide the time span between the arrival of the first American Indians and the arrival.
JACKSONIAN DEMOCRACY Key events of Andrew Jackson’s Presidential Term.
NATIVE AMERICANS Terrika Finnie.  Content Area: Social Studies  Grade Level: 7th  Summary: The purpose of this instructional power point is to have.
North American Tribes The first Americans descended, or came from immigrants who originated in Asia. These were the first people to live in North America.
The Removal of Native Americans Chapter 10, Section 2 California State Standards - 8.8,
The Frontier Wars By the end of this section, you should be able to: –Explain why American Leaders and Native American Leaders agreed that Indians should.
Westward Expansion Standard Indian removal policies Policies of the federal government towards the Native Americans changed in response to the.
VOCABULARY LIST The West ( ). Frontier Definition: A distant area where few people live. Example of frontier in a sentence. Americans settled.
United States Native American leaders and their legacies 6 th grade western geography.
2.1b - Native Americans 2.1b- Summarize the impact of the westward movement on nationalism and democracy, including the expansion of the franchise, the.
The Earliest Americans Native Americans and the New World.
North Carolina. What role do the visual arts play in Native American culture?
Native American Geographic Groups Prior to the arrival of European settlers, many groups of Native Americans existed in America.  Northeast: forest dwellers;
THE CONFEDERATE CHEROKEE IN THE CIVIL WAR JOSHUA GOLDMAN HISTORY 121 DECEMBER 1, 2015.
Native Americans. Native American Geographic Groups Prior to the arrival of European settlers, many groups of Native Americans existed in America. Northeast:
By: Trever & Bethany FEDERAL AND STATE POLICIES. WAR OF 1812 The U.S negotiated more than 200 treaties with Indian Nations which involved ceding land.
Indians in America.  Since 1600, white settlers had pushed Native Americans westward as they took more and more of their land.  By the 1820s, about.
Westward Expansion Answering the questions of the leaders of Idontknowwhere…
 Summarize the collective and individual aspects of the Native American culture of the Eastern Woodlands tribal group, including the Catawba, Cherokee,
New Mexico History “This session will be recorded for learning purposes. Learning purposes include: a lesson review for students who are absent, students.
War & Expansion in United States
What was the U.S. government’s policy towards Plains Indians?
Indian Removal Act Mr. Drabinski’s 8th grade history class
Who (and What) Is a Native American?
Topic: Andrew Jackson & Indian Removal Act
The Trail of Tears Trail of Tears [1942].
The South and West Transformed ( )
Chapter 10, Lesson 4 ACOS #10: Describe events between 1803 and 1860 that led to the expansion of the territory of the United States ACOS #10a: Trace.
Kalapuya Ilihi We acknowledge that we are here on Kalapuya Ilihi--the traditional Indigenous homeland of Kalapuya peoples, who were dispossessed of their.
Forced to Leave Indian Removal Act.
Trail of Tears
The Trail of Tears.
Presentation transcript:

Ntsayka Ikanum – Our Story LESSON 2

REVIEW OF PREVIOUS LESSON What is a Tribe? A group of indigenous people that share similar cultural, social, political, and/or economic characteristics. What is a Band? A group of native people joined in a common purpose; to unite as a group – the band is usually a smaller part of a tribe. What is a Native American/American Indian? refers to an indigenous person of any global place - an enrolled member, member, or descendent of a Tribe – also known as Indian *Teacher note: The word Indigenous may need to be explained further for understanding.

Check for understanding: What is a Tribe? A group of people in South America. A group of indigenous people that share similar cultural, social, political, and/or economic characteristics. A type of food. None of the above. ANSWER: b

Who are the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde? ►The Ancestors of the Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon inhabited Oregon’s inland valleys and parts of the coast since time immemorial before white settlers arrived. ►More than 30 Tribes and Bands were gathered from Western Oregon, Southwestern Washington, and Northern California and removed to the Reservation after signing 7 treaties from 1853-1855.

How long have Tribes been in Oregon How long have Tribes been in Oregon? The Tribes were here since time immemorial (before European contact). ►At least 14,500 years based on oral traditions ►At least 14,300 years based on archaeological record *Teacher Note: Have student(s) mark the timeline with these dates with sticky notes or labels to start the beginning of the timeline

Discussion Question: What changes occurred because of European contact?

The Removal of Tribes Pre-Termination Lesson 2

Removal of Tribes 1855-1857 Tribes were relocated to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation. A reservation is land held for special use, in this case a place for Indians. The Grand Ronde Indians were taken by horse, wagon, and steam boat, but mostly by foot. The most memorable of these relocations is what the Tribal community today calls “Grand Ronde’s Trail of Tears.” *Teacher note: This information would be good to include on the timeline.

Grand Ronde’s Trail of Tears Native people were gathered up near Ft. Lane, at the base of Table Rock (near present day Medford) and forced to march during the winter months beginning February 23 through March 25, 1856, to the Grand Ronde Indian Reservation. The march was over 30 days long. During this march 8 people died and 8 babies were born, so the military officers supervising the march were able to state that “they had arrived with the number of people they had left with.”

Photo of Table Rock

Gertrude Mercier and Martha Jane Sands (left to right) were on the Grand Ronde Trail of Tears

The Hudson Family was on the Grand Ronde Trail of Tears

Solomon Riggs was on the Grand Ronde Trail of Tears

Jenny Riggs was on the Grand Ronde Trail of Tears

Discussion Questions/Journaling What would it be like to be taken from your home permanently and forced to go to a reservation? How would you react to being told that you could not leave the reservation or talk with any of your family or friends outside of the reservation? What changes did these Native Americans have to make?

The Grand Ronde Reservation The Reservation was begun by treaty arrangements in 1854 and 1855 and established by Executive Order on June 30, 1857. The original Reservation contained more than 60,000 acres. The Reservation was located on the eastern side of the coast range on the headwaters of the South Yamhill River, about 60 miles southwest of Portland and about 25 miles from the ocean. *Teacher Note: This slide contains information for the timeline.

Early Reservation Ft. Yamhill was established and manned by the U.S. Army. The soldiers were responsible for keeping Indians on the Reservation and white settlers off the Reservation. It contained about 30 Tribes and bands.

Reservation Life There were few jobs at the Reservation; Indians were paid ½ wages. Many people left the Reservation to work in agriculture. Many men worked in logging. Others worked in hops and bean fields. Others worked in canneries.

Reservation Life Tribal members adapted to the changing times. Many intertribal marriages took place. Tribal people now have relations at nearly all Reservations in Oregon.

Reservation Life Tribal people participate in traditional activities.

BINGO

Closing: The next lesson will… Discuss the 5 principle Tribes that make up the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde and review Grand Ronde’s early Tribal Leaders.