Sitting Bull By: Celia Sprong. Contents Who What Where When Why.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cultures Clash on the Prairie. Red River War  The Kiowa and Comanche tribes were in war for six years before the Red River War.  U.S. Army took the.
Advertisements

Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West
How did western settlement affect the Plains Indians?
Warm Up – Write down two facts from looking at the maps. (You must use more than one map)
Native American Struggles The Battle for the West.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Native American Struggles The Battle for the West.
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.
The South and West Transformed ( )
Chapter 15: The Old West and Native American Resettlement.
Problems in the Great Plains
 Which has higher value in Native American culture, the individual or the community?
“HOW THE WEST WAS WON”  Plains Indians. PLAINS INDIANS  Plains stretched from Central Canada to Southern Texas  Native Tribes relied on horses and.
Conflict in the West Pgs
The “Wild” West Indians Methods of Displacement 1. Reservations.
Native Americans Fight to Survive
Life changed after the Civil War. Native Americans Interaction and Conflict All information taken from the curriculum guide; images from a variety of.
Conflict with Native Americans
Three legends: Sitting Bull Chief Joseph Germonimo.
Chapter 7 The Indian Wars. Indian Conflicts Between , known as the Indian Wars Period Geronimo, 1858, led a band of warriors on raids against.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Chapter 5, section 1.  The gov’t expected Native Americans to stay on the reservations  It was a problem because that made buffalo hunting almost impossible.
Native American Conflicts Objective Natives live in the Great Plains. Natives followed: –Tribal law –Hunted –Traded –Produced beautifully crafted.
Objective 4.02 Evaluate the impact that settlement in the West had upon different groups of people and the environment.
..   1860 – 360,000 Indians in the West  In the path of migrating settlers  Impacted by diseases (ex. Cholera, typhoid, smallpox)  Reduction of buffalo.
Communication The Pony Express (1860) Goes from St. Louis to San Francisco in 10 days Pony Express lasts about 2 years. The Telegraph Samuel Morse develops.
Sitting Bull. By : Asher Clarke. WHO Sitting Bull Born 1931 Died 1990.
TotemPolesTotemPoles Totem poles is a object which represents native families kinships and stories. The culture of Totem Poles started since the late.
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 American Persecution and Resistance. Indian Removal Act (1830s) - Forced tribes in the Southeast to move west of the Mississippi River to Indian.
Chapter 18 Section 3 Native AmericanAmerican Struggles.
Native American Conflicts Objective Plains Native Americans Hunters and gatherers Nomads—followed buffalo Extended family networks Spiritual with.
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.
Plains Indian Wars America was determined to acquire the homelands of the Native Americans. The United States used military and social solutions to deal.
Indian Wars.
 In 1851 federal government officials met with Indian nations near Fort Laramie in Wyoming.  The Indian nations signed the Fort Laramie treaty on September.
Wars for the West Section 2 Wars for the West  The Big Idea Native Americans and the U.S. government came into conflict over land in the West.
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?
Daily Assignment 1.Complete the map on Native Americans by following the directions in your packet. 2.Highlight all words on your vocabulary list that.
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.
Fate of the Indians. Sioux Originally from Northern Minnesota Nomadic, hunted bison, skilled hunters & fighters on the horse Shared labor among husband.
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.
Native Americans Navajos, Sioux, Nez Perce Apache Navajos, Sioux, Nez Perce Apache.
Indian Wars. Population changes, growth of cities, and new inventions produced interaction and often conflict between different cultural groups.
Removal of Native Americans. Broken Promises When miners first arrived out West in the 1840’s, conflict with Natives began almost immediately. In order.
Indian Battles and Policies
Chapter 19 S3: Indian people in retreat. Sitting Bull Promises made and broken Sitting bull addressed congress on white settlers coming into Indian land.
The cultures clash on the prairie. Native Americans ways of life excised on the great planes. The Osage and Iowa tribes hunted, planted and settled small.
Native Americans of the Plains
The Battle of Little Bighorn and Wounded Knee Massacre
Railroads and Expansion: Impact on Native Americans
13.1 Cultures Clash on the Prairies
Nomadic by Nature Most native Americans in the North American Plains were nomadic in nature, meaning the roamed from place to place following food, which.
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.
The Western Crossroads
Respond with 4-5 sentences
The Indian Wars Part 2 Above is Sitting Bull, George Custer, and Crazy Horse.
Native Americans Chapter 18
The South and West Transformed ( )
Native Experience.
Sitting Bull By.
Indian Wars.
Ch “A Way of Life Ends” Goals:
Sitting Bull My biography is about Sitting Bull.
Ch “A Way of Life Ends” Goals:
Indian Wars.
Indian Wars.
Presentation transcript:

Sitting Bull By: Celia Sprong

Contents Who What Where When Why

Who was Sitting Bull? He was a Native American He was a wonderful medicine man He was the hunkpapa tribe leader

What did Sitting Bull do? He supported the Ghost Dance and was arrested for it. He led many tribes against Fort Bethold, Fort Buford and Fort Stevenson He performed at Buffalo Bill Cody’s wild west show were he earned $50 every performance

Where did it take place? He was born in Grand River Dakota He supported the Ghost Dance in Standing Rock Indian Reservation

When did it take place? He performed in 1885 He was born in 1831 He died in 1890 He surrendered to the U.S. forces in 1881 He attacked the forts in the 1850’s

Why did Sitting Bull do it? He supported the Ghost Dance because it was native to all Indians He performed for the money He attacked the forts because they were rood to his tribe