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Native American struggles. Chapter 18 Section 3. Following the buffalo. Starting in the mid-1850’s, miners, railroads, cattle drives, and farmers came to the Plains. As each new group arrived, the Native Americans were dealt another blow
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Native American struggles Chapter 18 Section 3
Following the buffalo • Starting in the mid-1850’s, miners, railroads, cattle drives, and farmers came to the Plains. • As each new group arrived, the Native Americans were dealt another blow • Most of the Plains Indians (Sioux, Comanche, Blackfeet) lived a nomadic life following herds of buffalo. • Plains Indian people who numbered the thousands, were divided into bands consisting of up to 500 people. • A governing council headed each band.
Following the buffalo • Women reared the children, cooked, and prepared hides. • Men hunted, traded, and supervised the military life of the band. • Most Plains Indians practiced a religion based on the belief of the spiritual power of the natural world.
Threats to the buffalo • The Plains Indians had millions of buffalo to supply their need. • After the Civil War, American hunters hired by the railroads began slaughtering the animals to feed the crews building the railroads. • The railroad companies also wanted to prevent herds from blocking the trains. • William Cody, hired by Kansas Pacific Railroad, once claimed that he had killed more than 4,000 buffalo in less than 18 months. He became known as Buffalo Bill. • Beginning in 1872, hunters targeted buffalo to sell hides to the East.
conflict • Reservation Policy • In 1867, the federal government appointed the Indian Peace Commission to develop policy toward Native Americans. • The recommendation was to move Native Americans to a few large reservations – tracts of land set aside specifically for them. • One large reservation was in Oklahoma and another in the Dakota Territory. Managing the reservations was the job of the federal Bureau of Indian Affairs. • Some moved to reservations and other refused. The land that was set aside for reservations was often of poor quality. Some tried the reservation life and abandoned it.
conflict • Conflict on the Plains • During the 1860’s many armed conflicts between Native Americans and whites took place. • Minnesota was the site of one especially bloody confrontation. • Sioux warriors, led by Little Crow, burned and looted white settlers’ homes in the summer of 1862. • Hundreds died before troops arrived and put down the uprising. The army continued to send patrols far out to the Northern Plains. • A branch of the Sioux, the nomadic Lakota, fought troops hard to keep their hunting grounds.
conflict • In November 1864, Chief Black Kettle, brought several hundred Cheyenne to negotiate a peace deal. Colonel John Chivington led an attack on the unsuspecting Cheyenne. Hundreds of Cheyenne died. • Chief Black Kettle was enraged and provoked widespread uprisings. • The Sioux, Cheyenne, and Arapaho warriors, staged a series of attacks from 1865 to 1867. • The bloodiest incident occurred on December 21, 1866. A Sioux leader, Crazy Horse, acted as a decoy and lured troops into a deadly trap. Crazy Horse acted as a decoy and an detachment of about 80 men followed him into an ambush. • The entire detachment was wiped out. This incident was known as Fetterman Massacre.
conflict • Little Bighorn • The government promised that “No white person or persons shall be permitted to settle upon or occupy” or even “to pass through” the Black Hills of the Dakotas; however, the hills were rumored to contain gold. • In 1874, Custer led an army expedition to check on the rumors and confirmed there was gold. Prospectors swarmed the area. • The government then tried to buy the hills. • Sitting Bull, an important leader of the Lakota Sioux refused. • Sitting Bull gathered Sioux and Cheyenne warriors along the Little Bighorn River (present day Montana). They were joined by Crazy Horse, another Sioux chief, and his warriors.
conflict • The army was ordered to round up the warriors and move them to reservations. • On June 25, 1876, Colonel George Custer, divided his regiment and attacked the Native Americans. • Custer, with about 250 soldiers, faced forces of thousands of Sioux and Cheyenne warriors. Custer and his entire command lost their lives. • The triumph at Little Bighorn did not last long. • The army soon defeated the uprising. • By 1881, exhausted and starving, the Lakota and Cheyenne agreed to live on a reservation.
conflict • The Apache Wars • Most of the Apache had been moved to the San Carlos reservation in Arizona. • The Apache leader, Geronimo, escaped and fled to Mexico. He later, in the 1880’s, led raids against settlers and the army in Arizona. • In 1886, Geronimo was the last Native American to formally surrender to the United States.
conflict • A Changing Culture • Many things contributed to changing the traditional way of life of the Native Americans: movement of whites to their land, the slaughter of the buffalo, the US army attacks, and the reservation policy • Other changes occurred when some reformers tried to abolish reservations and absorb Native Americans into white American culture. • The Dawes Act in1887 proposed to break up the reservations and to end identification with a tribal group. The goal was to encourage native peoples to become farmers and eventually, American citizens.
conflict • Wounded Knee • In 1890, the Sioux, distraught as their way of life was being robbed from them, looked to a prophet, Wovoka, for advice. • Wovoka claimed that the Sioux could regain their former greatness if they performed a ritual known as the Ghost Dance. • Eventually, as the ritual spread, the reservation officials decided to ban the dance. • Believing that Sitting Bull was the leader of the movement, police went to arrest him. During a scuffle Sitting Bull was shot. • Several hundred Lakota Sioux fled and gathered at a creek called Wounded Knee. On December 29, 1890, the army went to collect the Sioux’s weapons. Fighting started and more than 300 Sioux and 25 soldiers were killed.