Download Chronology of Native American Land and Conflict

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Nonintercourse Act wikipedia , lookup

Indian Reorganization Act wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
Chronology of Native American Land and Conflict
Background: Starting with the first contact with European settlers and escalating in the 1830’s with
Jackson’s Indian Removal Policy, the United States government and white settlers gradually claimed land
traditionally held by Indian tribes. In addition to losing vast amounts of territory, the Indian population
dramatically declined throughout the 19th century.
Directions: Read the time line below and complete the graphic organizer on the reverse to figure out
how the United States and white settlers “won” the west while Indian tribes lost land, population and
culture.
Timeline:
1830: Indian Removal Act, calls for relocation of eastern Indians to an Indian territory west of the
Mississippi River. Cherokees contest it in court, and in 1832, the Supreme Court decides in their favor,
but Andrew Jackson ignores the decision. From 1831-39, the Five Civilized tribes of the Southeast are
relocated to the Indian Territory. The Cherokee "Trail of Tears" takes place in 1838-39.
1835-42: Second Seminole War. Chief Osceola dies in prison in 1838.
1837: Smallpox epidemic among Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara tribes of the upper Missouri. From 183770, at least four different smallpox epidemics ravage western tribes.
1845-48: War between the United States and Mexico over the American annexation of Texas. With the
Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848, the Spanish Southwest and its many Indian tribes become part of
the United States.
1846: Oregon Country becomes part of the United States as a result of a settlement with England.
1847: Outbreak of measles among the Cayuses—no immunity.
1848-49: Gold discovered in California. White settlers descend upon Indian land.
1850-60: Cholera epidemic among the Indians of the Great Basin and southern plains.
1853-54: Northern portion of the Indian Territory is taken back by the U.S. government and divided
into Kansas and Nebraska Territory.
1853-56: United States acquires 174 million acres of Indian lands through 52 treaties, all of which are
subsequently broken by whites.
1861-65: Civil War. Most tribes remain neutral. The South, however, makes promises to Indians
concerning the return of their tribal lands to encourage their support. After the war, as punishment for
their support of the Confederacy, the Five Civilized Tribes are forced to accept a treaty giving up the
western half of the Indian Territory to 20 tribes from Kansas and Nebraska.
1862: Homestead Act opens up Indian land in Kansas and Nebraska to white homesteaders, who are
deeded 160-acre plots after inhabiting them for five years.
1866: Railroad Enabling Act takes Indian lands for railway use.
1868: Indians are denied the right to vote as a result of the 14th Amendment.
1869: Transcontinental railroad completed; the Union Pacific and Central Pacific join up in Utah.
1869-70: Smallpox epidemic among Canadian Plains Indian including Blackfeet, Piegans, and Bloods.
1871: White hunters begin wholesale killing of buffalo.
1871: Indian burial grounds invaded by whites seeking bones for manufacture of buttons.
1874: Gold discovered in the Black Hills of South Dakota. Treaties protecting Indians ignored by miners.
1876-77: Sioux War for the Black Hills, involving the Sioux, Cheyennes, and Arapahos, under Sitting
Bull and Crazy Horse. In 1876, the Battle of Little Bighorn.
1881: Sitting Bull and his band of 187 surrender to officials at Fort Buford, North Dakota.
1885: Last great herd of buffalo exterminated.
1887: Congress passes the General Allotment Act (the Dawes Act) in which reservation lands are given
to individual Indians in parcels. Indian lose millions of acres of land.
1890: Ghost Dance Movement led by the Paiute prophet Wovoka gains influence among western Indians.
At Wounded Knee, United States troops massacre 350 Sioux Indians en route to a Ghost Dance
celebration.
American Policies and Strategies for Dealing with Indians
List 3 strategies or policies the United States used towards Native Americans during the 1800’s.
Give examples of each of these policies from the timeline.



List at least 3 examples of Native American resistance to the United States from the timeline.



Give 2 examples of treaties between Native American tribes and the United States. Briefly
explain the terms of the treaties and how long they lasted.


List and explain 2 specific events/reasons that caused white Americans to ignore Native American
treaties or land rights.


List 3 examples from the timeline of non-military causes of the decline in the Native American
population.