For centuries the Great Plains were home to many groups of
Native Americans. Some lived in communities as farmers and hunters,
but many were nomads who roamed vast distances, following their
main source of food the buffalo.
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When ranchers, miners, and farmers moved to the Plains
depriving the Native Americans of their hunting grounds, the Plains
Indians resisted by attacking wagon trains, stagecoaches, and
ranches.
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Occasionally, tribes were asked to relocate to new territories
or even reservations. When they refused, war erupted on the Plains.
In 1864, Colonel John Chivington attacked and killed several
hundred Cheyenne Indians in eastern Colorado. An event known as the
Sand Creek Massacre.
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In 1876 prospectors overran the Lakota Sioux reservation in the
Dakota Territory to mine gold in the Black Hills. When the Sioux
refused to leave their traditional hunting lands in the Black
Hills, the government sent in the military. The stage was set for a
big showdown between the Native Americans and government
troops.
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On June 25, 1876, Sioux and Cheyenne warriors routed Gen.
George Custer and 210 soldiers of the 7 th Calvary by killing them
all. Chief Sitting Bull Gen. George Custer
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Mount Rushmore is located in the Black Hills of South
Dakota.
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Crazy Horse MemorialBlack Hills, South Dakota
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Flight of the Nez Perce In 1877, the Nez Perce people led by
Chief Joseph, refused to move to a smaller reservation in Idaho.
When the army came to relocate them, they fled their homes and
embarked on a journey of more than 1300 miles. Finally, after three
months and several battles, the Nez Perce were forced to surrender
40 miles from the Canadian border.
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Our chiefs are killed.The little children are freezing to
death. My people.have no blankets, no food. Hear me, my chiefs; I
am tired; my heart is sick and sad. From where the sun now stands I
will fight no more forever. --Chief Joseph surrendering to General
Oliver Howard at Bear Paw Mountain, MT in 1877 Chief Joseph
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Ghost Dance Out of desperation, many Native Americans found
hope in the Ghost Dance. They believed the dance would make
settlers disappear, buffalo return, and that Native Americans would
reunite with their dead ancestors. Fearing violence, federal
authorities banned the ceremonial dance in the 1880s.
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Tragedy at Wounded Knee When a group of Lakota Ghost Dancers
fled the reservation to dance in Dec. 1890, the U.S. Government
sent troops to Wounded Knee Creek (South Dakota) to round them up.
A deadly battle ensued where approximately 200 Lakota men, women
and children were killed. Burial Party Chief Big Foot Frozen to
Death Slaughtered Lakota Sioux 7 th Cavalry Hotchiss Gun
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The Dawes Act 1887 Dawes Act or General Allotment Act,1887,
passed by the U.S. Congress to provide for the granting of
landholdings (allotments, usually 160 acres/65 hectares) to
individual Native Americans, replacing communal tribal holdings.
Allotments could be sold after a statutory period (25 years), and
surplus land not allotted was opened to settlers. The Dawes Act was
an attempt to assimilate, or absorb, Native Americans into American
society by offering them a chance to be landowners. This meant
dividing reservations into individual allotments where families
could be self-supporting.
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Failure of the Dawes Act In the end, the assimilation policy
proved a dismal failure. The Native Americans were doomed because
they were dependent on buffalo for food, clothing, fuel, and
shelter. When the herds were wiped out, Native Americans on the
Plains had no way to sustain their way of life, and few adopted
American settlers lifestyles in place of their traditional
cultures. Navaho Tom Torlino Before After