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The Indian Wars

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Title: The Indian Wars


1
The Indian Wars
AHII Unit 1 Part A Conflict
2
1st Treaty of Fort Laramie
  • 1851
  • 8 Native American groups agreed to specific
    limited geographic boundaries in return for the
    US government promising to honor those boundaries
    forever

3
Settlers Move Into the Great Plains
  • Deprived natives of their hunting grounds
  • Ignored treaties signed by US government
  • Forced the Indians to move further west
  • Occasionally, Indian groups would resist or
    retaliate

4
The Buffalo
  • Plains Indians relied on the buffalo as their
    primary source of food, clothing, shelter
  • As more settlers entered the plains, the buffalo
    hunting grounds were disturbed

5
The Buffalo Start to Disappear
  • Settlers killed animals to protect their crops
  • Professional hunters killed many for their hides
    which were popular in the east
  • Sport hunters killed many just for fun
  • Railroad companies hired sharpshooters to kill
    buffalo to keep them from blocking the tracks
  • The US Army killed many to deprive the Indians of
    food and force them onto the reservations

6
Dakota Sioux Uprising
  • Dakota Sioux had agreed to stay on a reservation
    in Minnesota
  • US government had agreed to pay annuities to
    Indians on the reservation
  • Corrupt traders and officials often cheated
    Indians out of their annuities
  • In 1862, Congress delayed paying the annuities
    due to the Civil War, resulting in widespread
    hunger among the Sioux

7
Chief Little Crow
  • Asked traders to sell the Sioux food on credit
    until the annuities were paid
  • Traders refused one replied let them eat grass
    or their own dung
  • In desperation, the Sioux took up arms
  • Little Crow tried to limit the violence, but
    angry Indians killed hundreds of white settlers
    before federal troops arrived

8
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9
Sioux Uprising Ends
  • Military courts sentenced 307 Dakota Sioux to
    death, but President Lincoln reduced the number
    to 38
  • Many of the Sioux left Minnesota and took refuge
    in the Dakota Territory

10
Sand Creek Massacre (1864)
  • US forced Cheyenne to give up lands promised to
    them by treaty
  • Cheyenne retaliated by attacking settlements in
    Colorado
  • Colorado governor ordered the Cheyenne to
    surrender at Ft. Lyon or face the consequences
  • Cheyenne under Chief Black Kettle arrived at Ft.
    Lyon to negotiate a peace treaty and made camp at
    Sand Creek
  • US forces attacked the unsuspecting Cheyenne,
    killing about 270, including women and children
    in retaliation for the Cheyennes earlier attacks
    on settlers

11
Lakota Sioux Vow to Defend Their Territory
  • After the trouble with the Dakota Sioux, US Army
    began to patrol into the Great Plains to prevent
    other Sioux from organizing
  • The nomadic Lakota Sioux were determined to
    defend their territory against incursion by both
    white settlers and the Army
  • Several conflicts ensued

12
Red Cloud
  • 1822 1909
  • Lakota Sioux
  • Led Sioux in Red Clouds War (1866-68)
  • Later traveled to Washington and met with Pres.
    Grant
  • Did not take part in later Sioux uprisings,
    instead pursuing more peaceful efforts

13
Fetterman Massacre (1866)
  • Capt. William Fetterman and 80 soldiers were
    lured out of their fort along the Bozeman Trail
    in Wyoming by Lakota Chief Red Cloud
  • They walked into an ambush and were wiped out by
    the Lakota

14
Indian Peace Commission
  • Formed by Congress in 1867, toured the Great
    Plains
  • Concluded problems were due to incursions by
    whites into Indian territory
  • Proposed creating 2 large reservations on the
    plains which would be managed by agents of the
    Bureau of Indian Affairs
  • US Army would be given full authority to deal
    with Indians who did not move to the reservations
  • Plan didnt work due to resistance from the
    Indians

15
2nd Treaty of Ft. Laramie (1868)
  • Also called the Sioux Treaty of 1868
  • Guaranteed the Lakota ownership of the Black
    Hills in the Dakotas, as well as hunting rights
    elsewhere
  • Gold miners would violate the treaty, triggering
    later uprisings
  • The Lakota sued the US government in 1980 for
    violation of this treaty, winning 120 million in
    damages Lakota refused the money and continue to
    press for return of their lands

16
Crazy Horse
  • 1840 1877
  • Lakota Sioux
  • Took part in the Fetterman Massacre
  • Later led the Sioux in the Battle of Little Big
    Horn in 1876
  • After surrendering to US troops in 1877, he was
    shot while resisting his guards

17
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18
George Armstrong Custer
  • 1839 1876
  • Civil War veteran
  • Graduated last in his class at West Point
  • Flamboyant officer whose career was marked by
    scandals and a failed effort to accept command of
    the Mexican Army under Benito Juarez
  • Sent to fight Indians to get him away from
    Washington

19
Battle of Little Big Horn
  • Custers Last Stand
  • June 25, 1876
  • Custer launched a cavalry attack on a group of
    2500 Sioux Cheyenne warriors
  • The Indians repulsed the attack, then surrounded
    Custers detachment and killed him and all 210 of
    his men
  • Last major Indian victory

20
The Ghost Dance
  • Lakota had finally relented in 1877 and settled
    on a reservation under Chief Sitting Bull
  • Lakota had begun performing a ritual known as the
    Ghost Dance, a celebration of a hoped-for day
    when the white settlers would disappear, the
    buffalo would return, and all of the Indians
    dead ancestors would come back
  • In 1890, federal agents ordered an end to the
    Ghost Dance, but the Lakota ignored the order

21
Sitting Bull
  • 1831 1890
  • Holy man, and one of the Sioux leaders at Little
    Big Horn
  • Sitting Bull was blamed for the Lakotas defiance
    over the Ghost Dance and ordered arrested
  • Police were sent to arrest Sitting Bull, but his
    supporters resisted his arrest a gun battle
    broke out and Sitting Bull and 13 others were
    killed

22
Wounded Knee
  • Angered over Sitting Bulls death, the Ghost
    Dancers left the reservation, breaking their
    treaty agreement
  • US troops pursued
  • Dec. 29, 1890 the two groups met at Wounded Knee
    Creek, resulting in a battle
  • 25 US soldiers and about 200 Lakota (mostly
    women, children, and the elderly) died

23
Chief Joseph the Nez Perce
  • Nez Perce refused to give up their assigned
    reservation in Idaho in 1877
  • US Army threatened to forcibly relocate them
    violence broke out and the Nez Perce fled, trying
    to reach Canada
  • Retreated 1300 miles and got within 30 miles of
    Canadian border before being cut off by the Army
    and surrendering
  • Forced to relocate to the Indian Territory
    (Oklahoma)

24
Helen Hunt Jackson
  • 1830 1885
  • Wrote A Century of Dishonor (1881)
  • Exposed the shameful way the US government and
    Army had treated the Indians, chastised Congress
    to make amends
  • Created concern for the plight, led Congress to
    try to find a new approach to Indian relations

25
The Dawes Act of 1887
  • Sponsored by Sen. Henry Dawes of Massachusetts
  • Abolished tribal organizations
  • Broke up communally held reservation land by
    allotting each Indian head of household 160 acres
    for farming single adults received 80 acres,
    children each received 40 acres
  • Remaining reservation land was sold to white
    settlers with the money going into a trust set
    aside for Native Americans

26
Assimilation
  • Dawes Act was a failure
  • Land allotted was of poor quality
  • Indians had little interest or experience in
    farming, didnt want to be assimilated into
    American-style of life
  • Many sold their allotments
  • Didnt like loss of reservation land to white
    settlers
  • Agents put in charge were often corrupt or biased
  • Indian problem was solved by the decrease in
    Indian population due to hunger and disease

27
Reservations Today
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