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Explore the complex relationship between Westward Expansion and Native Americans during the 19th century, including push and pull factors, conflicts, forced assimilation, and the impact of government policies.
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The West & Native Americans Fulfilling Manifest Destiny
Moving West • Push Factors • Civil war displaced persons • Available farm land • Religious repression • Open spaces sheltered outlaws • Pull Factors • Private property • Morrill Land Grant • Land to railroads • Homestead Act 1862 • 160 acres land free if you were 21 or head of family; built house, lived on it for 6 months and farmed for 5 years in a row
Moving West • 1862 Lincoln passed the Pacific Railway Act authorizing the completion of transcontinental railroad; gave huge government land grants to do it • Settlers believed they had a right to western land: • they produced more food & wealth than Native Americans • Many agreements between the Native Americans and the government fell apart because Native Americans and the settlers had different ideas of land ownership • Immigrants went west for cheap land • Exodusters –ex-slaves who moved west: • To escape racial violence in the South • To make a new beginning and farming was the skill most already knew
The Native Americans During 1800s, the federal government carried out policy of moving Indians out of the way of white settlers, encouraging attempts to take Native American Lands Indians were forced onto reservations, no longer free to roam the Plains At first Indians were moved west into Indian Territory of the Plains Frontier settlers kept pushing west pressuring government to open Indian Territory
Two other crises also threatened Native American civilizations Settlers introduced diseases to which the Natives had no immunity Disease Loss of the buffalo Settlers slaughtered all the buffalo • As more and more settlers moved west, the Native American tribes were weakened or destroyed
Assimilation • Some critics attacked the government policies and defended the Indians way of life • Most leaders and white reformers hoped that Native Americans would assimilate into American life, be “civilized” and adopt white culture • The Indian Rights Movement would grow out the outrage of how government treated the Native Americans One way the government sought to changed the Native American was by requiring them to farm individual plots of land; this went against everything the Natives believed about land ownership 1887 Dawes General Allotment Act
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