Title: Reservations
1Reservations
2Purpose of Reservations
- By the mid-1800s, it became clear that U.S.
expansion was heading west of the Mississippi
River - Americans believed in Manifest Destiny- that it
was their destiny, ordained by God, to acquire
all lands to the Pacific Ocean - Unspecified tracts of land in Indian Territory
had to be more sharply defined and measured into
reservations, to make room for white settlement
3Effects of Reservations
- Indian people were infuriated by the policy of
reservations and resisted giving up their
homelands - Leaders and chiefs emerged to resist the
reservation policy - A series of wars, the Indian Wars, began which
lasted during the last half of the 19th century
4The Fort Laramie Treaty
- In 1851, the Treaty of Fort Laramie was signed
between various tribes of the Great Plains and
the U.S. government - The treaty was intended to insure peace on the
Great Plains, as white settlement increased in
the region - Tribes had been attacking whites and warring with
each other over territory
5Terms of the Fort Laramie Treaty
- Tribes of the Plains received
- Separate tracts of land assigned to each tribe
- Tribes agreed to remain on their own land, to
cease their attacks on each other and on white
migrants - Each tribe will retain possession of its assigned
lands forever - Each tribe will be protected by U.S. troops from
white intruders - Each tribe will each receive 50,000 in supplies
and provisions annually for the next fifty years.
- The United States government received
- The right to establish roads and military
outposts within Indian territories.
6The Failure of the Fort Laramie Treaty
- Unfortunately, the chiefs who signed the Fort
Laramie Treaty did not have the authority over
their tribes that the United States negotiators
assumed
- The U.S. negotiators themselves could not deliver
the protections and fair treatment they promised. - The sacred Black Hills of the Lakota were
violated by the government and white settlers,
leading to a war over the region
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11Boarding Schools
12Purpose of Boarding Schools
- In the late 1800s, the United States supported an
educational experiment that the government hoped
would assimilate American Indians to the American
culture. - Special boarding schools were created in
locations all over the United States with the
purpose of "civilizing" American Indian youth . - Thousands of Native American children were sent
far from their homes to live in these schools and
learn the ways of white culture.
13- Tom Torlino (Navajo) as he appeared upon arrival
to the Carlisle Indian School, October 21, 1882.
- Tom Torlino (Navajo) three years later
14It's cheaper to educate Indians than to kill
them."--Indian Commissioner Thomas Morgan
speaking at theestablishment of the Phoenix
Indian School in 1891
15Apache children on arrival at the Carlisle Indian
School (Pennsylvania) wearing traditional
clothing.
16Apache children at the Carlisle School four
months later.
17Effects of Boarding Schools
- Many struggled with loneliness and fear away from
their tribal homes and familiar customs. - Some lost their lives to diseases that spread
quickly through the schools. - Others thrived despite the hardships, formed
lifelong friendships, and preserved their Indian
identities.
18Indian Wars
19Causes of the Indian Wars
- Gold was discovered in the sacred Black Hills of
the Lakota Sioux - Prospectors flooded the area, violating terms of
the Fort Laramie Treaty - Plains Indians, angered by the invasion the
reservation policy, retaliated triggering the
Indian Wars
George Armstrong Custer
20The Indian Wars
- Most of the battles within the Indian War
resulted in U.S. government victories - The Battle of Little Bighorn was an Indian
victory, including the killing of Custer - The Massacre (Battle) at Wounded Kneed ended the
Indian Wars
George Armstrong Custer
21Images from Wounded Knee, 1890 Collecting the Dead
22Images from Wounded Knee, 1890 Mass grave
23Images from Wounded Knee, 1890 Chief Bigfoot
frozen in the snow