Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMagdalen Martin Modified over 9 years ago
1
Native American History European Treatment Spanish Policy -millions of Native Americans died as a result of warfare, enslavement, and diseases -Spaniards intermarried with natives and Africans -rigid class system developed and dominated by pure-blooded Spaniards
2
English Policy -In New England, settlers coexisted and traded with Native Americans -peaceful relations turned to open warfare as the English desired more land -Natives were not respected and their culture was viewed as primitive and “savage” French Policy -Maintained relatively good relations with natives in the Great Lakes region -Desired to control the fur trade and established trading partnerships with the natives -French were viewed as less of a threat by the natives because they had few settlers, farms, and large towns
3
Iroquois Confederacy -lived in permanent settlements called “longhouses” -alliance of tribes in Northeast to confront colonial expansion, allies of the British defeated in American Revolution Battle of Fallen Timbers (1794) -tribes defeated in northwestern Ohio, Treaty of Greenville (1795) surrendered land and promised to open it up to settlement Battle of Tippecanoe (1811) -William Henry Harrison defeated tribes of Indiana territory, Americans blamed the British for instigating the rebellion -war hawks desired to destroy Native American resistance on the frontier in War of 1812
4
Migration -tribes were persuaded or driven westward as white settlers moved into their homeland -forced to move west by treaty or military action -Great Plains tribes who lived a nomadic hunters could more easily resist Indian Removal Act (1830) -forced the resettlement of tribes west of the Mississippi -“Trail of Tears” (1838) forced Cherokee out of Georgia -more than 4,000 died = 1/4 of the people removed Assimilationists -Helen Hunt Jackson, A Century of Dishonor (1881) = created sympathy for the struggle -reformers focused on education, Christianity, teaching white culture, farming, and industrial skills
5
Reservation Policy -western expansion and growth of the railroad lead to the establishment of reservations in 1851 -the government assigned tribes large tracts of land with defined boundaries -most tribes continued to follow the migrating buffalo herds -buffalo hunting in the early 1880s greatly impacted the nomadic life of the tribes Removal after the Civil War -tribes lost their land and the freedom to live according to their traditions -conflicts with the U.S. government were the result of white Americans having little understanding of the Plains people’s loose tribal organization and nomadic lifestyle
6
Bison skulls collected in order to be ground into fertilizer, late 1800s
7
Dawes Severalty Act (1887) -designed to break up tribal organizations -tribal land divided into smaller plots depending on family size -U.S. citizenship granted to those who stayed on the land for 25 years -policy was a failure as the best land was sold to speculators, white settlers, or Native Americans -disease and poverty continued to plague native communities Ghost Dance Movement (1890) -religious movement that focused on a peaceful end to white expansion through cooperation by tribes -Lakota Sioux interpreted the movement to call for a removal of all whites from their land
8
Wounded Knee Massacre (1890) -Sioux men, women, and children were gunned down by U.S. army -tragedy marked a bloody end to the Indian Wars Indian Reorganization Act (1934) -New Deal program to promote the reestablishment of tribal organizations and culture -large tracts of land were returned to various tribes for the next twenty years
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.