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NCSCOS Goal 4 Page 27

Plains Indians

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Plains Indians. NCSCOS Goal 4 Page 27. Thursday Warm-Up. Grab a Goal 4 Syllabus and stick it in your notebook!. What do we already know about how Native Americans are treated by the U.S. Government?. Post Test Fun!. Turn in your test and answer sheet - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Plains Indians

NCSCOS Goal 4Page 27

Page 2: Plains Indians

Thursday Warm-Up

Grab a Goal 4 Syllabus and stick it in your notebook!

What do we already know about how

Native Americans are treated by the U.S.

Government?

Page 3: Plains Indians
Page 4: Plains Indians

Post Test Fun!1. Turn in your test and answer sheet

2. Grab a “Indian War” sheet and shout out card3. Read the front and complete the back then

show me

What do we already know about how

Native Americans are treated by the U.S.

Government?

Page 5: Plains Indians

Plains Indians-Great Plains or Great American Desert

-Nomadic lifestyleMove around to hunt

-importance of the horse and buffalo

Increased mobility and provided food

Increased warfare among tribes-communal living

-common use of the tribe’s landDo not believe in individual land ownership

-Sioux, Lakota, Cheyenne, Apache, Nez Pierce, Blackfeet

Page 6: Plains Indians

The buffalo provided the Plains Indians with more than just a high-protein

food source:

1. The skull of the buffalo was considered sacred and was used in many Native American rituals.

2. The horns were carved into bowls and spoons.

3. The bones of the buffalo were made into hide scrappers, tool handles, sled runners, and hoe blades. The hoofs were ground up and used as glue.

4. The hide was by far the most precious part of the buffalo. Native American clothing, tepees, and even arrow shields were made from buffalo hide.

Page 7: Plains Indians

American Interests-Lands given by treaty to Indian groups

-California Gold Rush, 1848-Homestead Act, 1862Government allowed settlers to get 160 acres of land if farmed it for 5 consecutive years

-transcontinental railroad buildingMassacre of the buffalo herdsRR goes across the continentCentral and Union Pacific RailroadsIrish and Chinese ImmigrantsBuilding RRPromontory Point, Utah, 1869Point where Union and Central Railroads meet - golden spike driven

Page 8: Plains Indians

Posters such as these would promote free or reasonably cheap

land in the West, attracting more and more white settlers.

Page 9: Plains Indians

In their race to build railroads, the Central and Union Pacific Railroad

Companies would recruit immigrants, most notably the Chinese, to work on the rails.

The completion of the Transcontinental Railroad by the

Union and Pacific Railroad companies marked a major

accomplishment in U.S. transportation. For the first time in

American history, East and West coasts were linked by the railroad, making transportation of people

and goods from East to West much easier and faster.

Page 10: Plains Indians

Completion of the Transcontinental Railroad at Promontory Point, Utah, in 1869

Page 11: Plains Indians

Indian Restrictions- Treaties were broken

-Indians forced onto reservationsLands set aside just for Native AmericansUsually desolate land

-Government payment and supplies were not delivered as promised

-Indian Uprisings-Dakota Uprising, 1862Indians angry because did not receive promised land

Raid villagesLargest mass execution in US History – 38 Indians killed

Many treaties that the U.S. government made with the Native Americans were broken, such as

the treaty between the U.S. and the Dakota Indians. When the U.S. did not pay the money promised to the Dakota, they reacted violently in

1862, killing many.

Page 12: Plains Indians
Page 13: Plains Indians

Indian Restrictions-Massacre at Sand Creek, 1864John Chivington leads Army unit in massacre of Cheyenne• Surprise attack at dawn

kills over 400 natives, mostly women and children

-Fetterman’s Massacre, 1866• 80 soldiers killed

-Fetterman’s small army band crushed by Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse, and Red Cloud’s warriors

Page 14: Plains Indians

Indian Wars-Gold found in the Black Hills of the Dakotas

-Sioux try to defend area promised to them

• In Laramie Treaty-Army sends George Armstrong Custer

•To move Sioux off the land-Little Bighorn, 1876Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull lead warriors as Custer and all his men were killed

•“Custer’s Last Stand”

Page 15: Plains Indians

Indian Wars

-Nez Perce Indians, 1877-Led by Chief Joseph, they refused to go to reservation

•Fled into Canada with the Army chasing them down-chased by the Army for over 1000 miles until captured-”I will fight no more forever”

“Hear me, my chiefs, my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I will fight no more against

the white man.”~Chief Joseph

Page 16: Plains Indians

Assimilation-”Century of Dishonor”Helen Hunt JacksonBelieved US treated Indians terribly and should try to live in peace with them

-Some people supported assimilation of IndiansNatives give up beliefs and way of life for white culture

-Dawes Act passed, 1887160 acres to each family (to farm) Goes against land ownership beliefsmost of land was eventually taken

Page 17: Plains Indians

“The history of the Government connections with the Indians is a shameful record of broken

treaties and unfulfilled promises.”

“There is not among these three hundred bands of Indians one which has not suffered cruelly at the hands either of the Government or of white

settlers”

“It makes little difference…where one opens the record of the history of the Indians; every page

and every year has its dark stains.”

~Helen Hunt Jackson, A Century of Dishonor

Page 18: Plains Indians

End of the Indian Lifestyle

-Assimilationeducation of Indians to be more like whites

-Destruction of the buffalo•Shot for sport, railroads•Ended Native way of life•Less than 1000 remained on plains in 1900

“We have been taught to hunt and live on the game. You tell us that we must learn to farm, live in one house, and

take on your ways. Suppose the people living beyond the great sea should come and tell you that you must stop farming, and kill your

cattle, and take your houses and land, what would you do? Would you not

fight them?” ~Sioux Warrior Gall

“Wherever the whites are established, the buffalo is gone, and the red hunter must die of

hunger.” ~Sioux Chief

Page 19: Plains Indians

End of the Indian Lifestyle

-Ghost Dance Movement•Dance to renew and save Native way of life from destructionSioux spiritual danceDance was outlawed

•Scared white people•Sitting Bull performs dance, is arrested, and eventually shot

-Wounded Knee, 1890massacre of several hundred Sioux (300)

•U.S. troops round up and unarm Sioux group

•Massacre entire group-Indian era comes to an end

Page 20: Plains Indians

“I did not know then how much was ended. When I look back now from this high hill of old age, I can still see the

butchered women and children lying heaped and scattered all along the crooked gulch as plain as when I

saw them with eyes still young. And I can see that something else died there in the bloody mud, and was buried in the blizzard. A people’s dream died there. It

was a beautiful dream.” ~Black Elk