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Eisenhower’s Wish Termination Indian Reaction Where The Indians Went Tyler Long, Pd. 7SOURCES
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What Eisenhower Wants Eisenhower wanted to relocate Native Americans from their reservations in order to… – Assimilate them into mainstream American society. – Get Indians to a city where jobs were plentiful. – Also, in the 40’s and 50’s, only about 8% of Native Americans lived in the cities. – Eisenhower did not like the idea of having the Native Americans separate from the rest of the country.
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A Little Thing Called “Termination” Termination was the policy adopted by the U.S. gov’t to speed up this process of relocation. – Used by the U.S. from the mid 40’s to the mid 60’s, and was fueled by the belief that Natives would be better off as part of mainstream society. – Intention was to grant Indians all rights/privileges of citizenship, but ultimately meant ending the U.S.’s recognition of tribes and reservations across the country. – The Indians were also to be subject to state and federal taxes. – From 1953-1964, the gov’t terminated the recognition of 109 tribes, and 2.5 million acres of trust land was stripped away from the Indians and sold to the public.gov’t terminated
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More Termination All of this turmoil from the gov’t meant stripping away their traditional rights to land, hunting, fishing, and basically disabled the tribe as a whole. – Now that most tribes were heavily isolated, they didn’t have proper funding to continue to provide services to other tribe membersprovide services
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Services Sadly Interrupted Due to cut funding, the Indians couldn’t even help their own people. – Health Care and Education had been perhaps the most affected. Health CareEducation – Something called the Indian Health Service was no longer able to contribute because once the tribe was terminated, it lost it’s much needed eligibility. – Many tribes didn’t even have hospitals to go to anymore, and no means to get any type of healthcare. – Health standards fell far below the whites.
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Education Greatly Affected In Tribes Many tribes experienced up to a 75% drop-out rate! – The states were now responsible for resuming education. – Indian children faced fewer educational opportunities, and were often assimilated into schools of mixed race, or just Indian public schools. – In 1970, the BIA gave out scholarships for non-terminated tribes to go to school, but this didn’t help terminated tribes being that they weren’t allowed to apply for these at all.
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Indian Reaction Many tribal groups launched protests and lawsuits against the termination policy, considering it an attempt to wipe out Indian communities. – The Indians thought that the policy would ruin future leaders and destroy tribal culture. – Several of these protests/lawsuits played a major role in the whole termination era.lawsuits – A few tribes were able to regain federal recognition through large court battles, which cost tribes a lot of money though.
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Major Indian Lawsuits Tribal leaders John White and Ada Deer were figureheads for the Menominee Tribe. – Got their cases heard by the U.S. Congress, and eventually the Supreme Court. – The tribe got publicity through protest groups that fought against termination, with many court battles in Washington state. – The Menominee, along with 3 other tribes eventually were terminated, but were allowed to remain a sovereign state at last.
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Where The Indians Went The Act urged Native Americans to move to urban areas. There were relocation offices in major cities to assist these newcomers. This was happening while middle-class Americans left the cities to head for the suburbs. – Relocation offices set up in 9 major cities: Chicago, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose, St. Louis, Cincinnati, Cleveland, and Dallas. – Even though in the city, Indians faced harsh conditions and lived in slums/ad apartments along with poor blacks and Hispanics. – Earnings were still low. Earnings
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Earnings In The Cities In the 1950’s, wages were widespread: – Black Person: $2,000 per year – White Person: $4,000 per year – Native American on Reservation: $950 per year – American Indian couples earn $71 for every $100 earned by all U.S. married couples in the city.
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Internet Sources Used http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indian_termination_policy http://www.ihs.gov/NonMedicalPrograms/Urban/History.asp – If You Want To Know More…… Click Here If You Want To Know More…… http://www.pbs.org/indiancountry/history/relocate.html
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Links Of Interest http://www.pbs.org/indiancountry/history/as similation.html http://www.pbs.org/indiancountry/history/as similation.html http://www.ihs.gov/NonMedicalPrograms/Ur ban/History.asp http://www.ihs.gov/NonMedicalPrograms/Ur ban/History.asp
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