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European and American Explorers Chapters 5&6
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Motives: God, Gold and Glory!, Seven Cities of Cibola Coronado: searching for Cibola but found pueblos, treated natives badly, followed a Pawnee to Quivira (Wichita village), Pawnee choked to death, chiefs swore oath to Spain
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Do Campo: with Friar Juan de Padilla tried to set up a Catholic mission, attacked by Kaw tribe and held captive a year, took five years to get back due to carrying wooden cross, “Trail of the Cross” is better route than Coronado’s Onate: governor of Spanish colony on Rio Grande near present-day Santa Fe, searched for Quivira but found villages
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Spanish saw expeditions as failures---No gold, land useless Information about OK was gained from the reports. Spain claimed all the land on western side of Mississippi River
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Louisiana: 1682, La Salle claimed Mississippi River Valley for France, trade with natives and Spanish in Santa Fe Du Tisne: negotiated with Osage and Wichita tribes La Harpe: set up post on Red, negotiated with the Wichitas
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Wichitas and Osages became dependent on trade goods from the French, became commerical hunters and warriors Coureurs de bois: runners of the woods, French traders Deer Creek Village: Wichitas were laborers at a stockyard and meat- processing plant
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Wichita-Osage Conflict: the Wichita were attacked by the Osage and moved to the Red Twin Villages: one on either side of Red, Wichitas were brokers between Southern plains tribes and French, fortified, Spanish unsuccessfully attacked
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France lost to England in French and Indian War In Treaty of Paris in 1763, France gave up claim to land west of Mississippi to Spain
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There for 150 years Thought it was useful land Treated natives as equals Place-names and surnames Natives lost traditions and skills, hunted for trade, fought each other
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When Napoleon Bonaparte was Emperor of France, he invaded Spain In Treaty of San Ildefonso in 1800, France regained lands west of Mississippi in North America from Spain
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Napoleon needed money for his wars and sold Louisiana to the United States for $15 million in 1803. President Jefferson saw the new territory as the foundation of a great American empire. He knew the U.S. needed more knowledge of the land and sent out expeditions.
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Sparks Expedition: 1806, Red River to Twin Villages, but was turned back by Spanish, boundaries not known Pike-Wilkinson Expedition: 1806,Pike went to Rocky Mtns.; Wilkinson traveled the Arkansas in canoes, brutal winter, reported warfare, salt prairie, trappers Sibley Expedition: 1811, searched for salt, found Great Salt Plains
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Long-Bell Expedition: 1820, Bell went down Arkansas River, very rough, had Say (zoologist) with him to keep records; Long thought he was on the Red but was actually on the Canadian, James (botanist) with him, “Great American Desert” Nuttall Expedition: 1819, English botanist, gathered most information on Oklahoma
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These explorers were there for the money not knowledge. Red River Traders: Anthony Glass traded with the Wichita at Twin Villages Three Forks Traders: Where Arkansas, Verdigris, and Grand Rivers connect; Chouteau Brothers, Joseph Bogy, Nathaniel Pryor, A.P. Chouteau
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Santa Fe Traders: 1819 Adams-Onis Treaty defined southern boundary of Louisiana Purchase, 1821 Mexico declares independence from Spain, maybe now U.S. traders could trade in Santa Fe; Thomas James, Hugh Glen, Jacob Fowler, William Bucknell got to Santa Fe first “Father of Santa Fe Trade”
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Knowledge gained by explorers. Not an ideal place for farmers. Considered a place for resettling the Native Americans.
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