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Published byMarjorie Mills Modified over 8 years ago
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Thank you for being wonderful while I was out. I’ll fill you in on the Wild West DBQ after the bell rings. Please take out your BYOD device and log onto the school’s wireless network. If you’re device can’t access the wireless network, share with someone who can. Go to: www.understandingprejudice.org/nativeiq/ www.understandingprejudice.org/nativeiq/ Read the introduction and take the quiz to test your Native IQ!
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How do these images demonstrate assimilation?
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Today’s LEQ: What successes and failures emerged for a growing American society?
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To settlers, the railroad represents progress To Indians, it threatens their very existence Battled for survival = Indian Wars
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NON-NATIVE AMERICANS Land can be bought, sold, and owned Buffalo killed for food, fun, and to starve out the Native Americans NATIVE AMERICANS Land cannot be bought, sold, or owned Buffalo was their livelihood (used ever bit of the Buffalo for survival)
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During the 1830s, President Andrew Jackson had removed all Indians East of the Mississippi (Indian Removal Act of 1830) Trail of Tears
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Conflict erupts again when settlers begin moving West; they view N.A. as obstacles Some tribes sign treaties and are put on reservations (federal land set aside for N.A. tribes) Many tribes fight to defend homelands and ways of life
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In 1868, the Sioux (a.k.a. Lakota) signed a treaty that was intended to bring peace between the whites and the Sioux Sioux agreed to settle within the Black Hills reservation of the Dakota Territory In this treaty, what did the U.S. government promise to the Sioux? What does the U.S. government require the Sioux to do (or not do)? Less than 10 years later, gold was discovered in the region and white miners started settling in lands sacred to the tribe U.S. gov’t unable to remove the settlers and unable to persuade the Lakota to sell Conflict was inevitable!
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Policy aimed at assimilation Absorption of Indians into the dominant culture “white men’s ways” Each family granted its own plot of land Land not good for farming Not interested in farming
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By the 1890s, improved agriculture and ranching techniques made many white Americans realize the Indian territory in Oklahoma was very valuable Gov’t began to allow and encourage settlement there; gave away 2 million acres of Indian land to whites in a race At noon on April 22, 1889 – Great Race – over 10,000 settlers raced for claims
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Boomer – settler who rushed into the land legally Sooner – settler who marked land before the race illegally
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