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Stuff

Stuff. Reading Notes Due on Friday If you need old reading notes come to my office Good discussion on Friday May discuss the other two chapter this Friday Watch for e-mail Remember CLASS paper due on April 24 th. Post War America and the Indian.

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Stuff

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  1. Stuff • Reading Notes Due on Friday • If you need old reading notes come to my office • Good discussion on Friday • May discuss the other two chapter this Friday • Watch for e-mail • Remember CLASS paper due on April 24th

  2. Post War America and the Indian

  3. WWII changed the world, America and life and expectations for Native Americans • Colonies around the world began to break down • Communities and countries around the world began to demand and take, a path, to Self-Determination

  4. For some white politicians WWII had taught them “new” ideas with regard to Native Americans • Having seen Native American soldiers fight with, and function effectively within, the Armed forces • In non-segregated units

  5. This “New” Idea • They believed that Indians deserved to share equally in the benefits of citizenship • Could be drawn fully into the economic, social, and cultural fabric of America • Can anyone say assimilation?

  6. By moving in this way • Native Americans could be removed from rural ghettos • No awareness of the Navajo Code Talkers • Genuinely wanted to help • Others had the same ideas • But not the same motivations

  7. Collier was tied to FDR • New deal policies came to be seen as communist • Collier’s protection of native land was damaging to business • Therefore dangerous to America • Remember Joe McCarthy

  8. Conservative politicians wanted to • Trim federal budget • See America as a single identity • Both these aims were turned to Native America • With disastrous results • The aim was to redefine the relationship • Phase out tribal government • Terminate the relationship between the federal government and Native America

  9. Brief video overview on issues of land and sovereignty

  10. Termination • We heard in the video that tribal sovereignty had never been taken away • Yet for a period of time in the 20th Century and for a few groups that is exactly what occurred

  11. After Colliers' resignation • replaced by William Brophy and John Nicholls • good men but unable to rebuff the attacks on the role of the BIA • 1950 Pres. Truman appointed Dillon S. Myer

  12. Myer had managed relocation of Japanese to camps • Believed that Japanese-Americans and others should and could be assimilated • Why? • To reduce racial tension • Turned focus to Native Americans to achieve this goal • Launched a political counter-offensive

  13. Native American cultures an Oxymoron • He argued that Native Americans had no “legitimate cultures” • Government had no business in encouraging native languages, arts, literature, and government. • End cultural pluralism • Deemphasized day schools near reservations • Enlarged boarding school process

  14. When Eisenhower assumed presidency in 1952 Myer knew he would not be reappointed • But didn’t want to lose influence and power • Volunteered support and guidance to new commissioner Glenn Emmons

  15. One of Myer first acts of help was to compose a letter to congress • Proposal suggested Termination • Policy was already doing the rounds in the halls of power • They main players • Emmons • Former banker from New Mexico • Arthur V. Watkins of Utah • Chair of Senate Committee on Indian Affairs • Abolish tax free status of reservations

  16. Conservative republicans chaired Committee of Indian Affairs in both houses • Pushed through termination bill as a • “valuable and salutary Congressional measure” • August 1st 1953 Congress unanimously passed • House Concurrent Resolution 108

  17. Concurrent Resolution 108 • Congress wanted Indians to be • “subject to the same laws and entitled to the same privileges and responsibilities” • As other Americans, listed nations in • That were prepared to have federal services withdrawn • California • New York • Wisconsin • Oregon • Montana • Kansas • Nebraska • Florida • Texas

  18. Resolution 108 was not law • But it guided Indian policy and • Two weeks later congress passed • Public Law 280 (PL 280) • Placed lands in Minnesota, Wisconsin, California, Nebraska and Oregon under • Criminal and civil legislation of the states • President Eisenhower signed it into Law noting • Congress had not included a provision • ‘asking for native consent’

  19. PL 280 reminiscent of laws in • 1830s Georgia • 1850s California • Ignored policies under Collier • Congressmen knew that Indians would oppose termination • This is why they didn’t consult • 1954 House and Senate passed laws • Terminating federal relationships with particular tribes • Ending tribal governments and constitution • Effectively forced Native Americans to be subjects of the state in which they lived

  20. US had got out of the ‘Indian Business’ • Ordered states and counties to take over • Indians could either • sell land and resources and offer per capita payments or • transfer title to a trustee • Individual Indians given title to land so they could sell them • Can anyone say allotment?

  21. Many Native Americans found out about PL 280 long after the fact. • Surprised and uprooted in one day • Others however recognized the danger • Several tribal council passed resolutions opposing it • National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) • Organized in 1944 • Mobilized against Termination in 1953

  22. Termination • An attempt to • “desegregate Indian communities and integrate Indians into the rest of society” • also intended as • “the ultimate destruction of tribal cultures and native life-styles” • Donald L. Fixico • Creek, Seminole, Shawnee Sac and Fox

  23. Many Native Americans found out about PL 280 long after the fact. • Surprised and uprooted in one day • Others however recognized the danger • Several tribal council passed resolutions opposing it • National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) • Organized in 1944 • Mobilized against Termination in 1953

  24. Lead figure in the National Congress of American Indian (NCAI) and their opposition to PL 280 • Joseph Garry • Former Marine and Chair of Coeur d’Alene tribe • NCAI argument was that: • Only Native Americans, not congress, could end tribal-government relationship

  25. As with many issues Native American ironic black humor appeared in the condemnation of termination • Earl Old Person • Blackfeet elder • Native translation for Termination: wipe out, kill off • Planning your future under the threat of termination like cooking • “a meal in your tipi when someone is standing outside trying to burn the tipi down”

  26. Another strong campaigner • Lucy Covington • Colville Confederated tribe • Some members waivered towards terminating • Covington took the lead • “Lucy Covington single-handily stopped the Coalvilles from terminating” • Tribal member

  27. With help of Commissioner of Indian Affairs Philleo Nash • She successfully fought Washington Senator Henry Jackson • Prevented termination in 1966

  28. Not the result for all tribes • Finally congress terminated 109 tribes • 3 % of federally recognized tribes • Together owned 3.2% of native lands • 1958 “rancheria bill” part of the attack on California where 41 reservations were terminated • Most from any single state

  29. Two of most well known acts of termination era • 1954 Klamath Termination Act • And • 1961 Menominee Termination Act • But before we get to these two cases

  30. New documentary series

  31. 1958 congress authorized sale of forests to private companies • 1,659 Klamaths (77%) voted to terminate • Received one time payment of $43,000 • To pay for this government agents sold 717,000 acres • Remaining 474 Klamath (23%) voted to retain tribal status had 145,000 acres

  32. Klamath Termination • 1954 act passed • Allowed natives on Klamath reservation to • A) remain with the tribe and placing unsold part of reservation into trust • B) sever relationship with tribe and federal government • Those who severed received share of tribal assets

  33. Klamath identified for termination due to • Rich timber resources • Relative prosperity • $2 million gross annual income from sale of tribal timber • Leader for termination was Wade Crawford a tribal member – lived of the reservation

  34. 1974 these people voted to terminate • Per capita payment $173,000 • Despite this all Klamath continued to identify as Indians • 1975 readopted tribal constitution • Klamath Tribe of Oregon • Asserted water, hunting and fishing rights as provided in treaty • Lobbied congress to restore tribal status • 1978 congress recognized the Klamath and restored federal status

  35. Friday Termination cont. and discussion

  36. Menominee Termination • 1961 act passed • First proposed 1954 • 1953 Menominee had been seeking distribution of earlier settlement • Senator Watkins of Utah • Supporter of termination • Added amendment to payment • Termination precondition to payment • Led to confusion on reservation

  37. Menominee voted unanimously for termination • Of 3,254 members of the tribe on 200 actually voted • Most Menominee refused to vote to show opposition to even discussing or recognizing termination as a policy • 1961 created Menominee Enterprises Inc • To operate their lumber mills and lands

  38. Termination proved to be disastrous • Had to close tribal hospital • Tuberculosis, had been on decline, rose again • 1965 1/3 of tribe were positive for the disease • infant mortality 200% above national average • And children who survived no longer recognized as Indian • tribal rolls had been closed in 1954 with termination

  39. Unemployment on reservation rose to 25% • Forcing tribe to sell land to non natives along lakes and in prime hunting grounds • 1970 formed • Determination of Rights and Unity for Menominee Shareholders (DRUMS) • Led by Ada Deer • December 22 1973 President Nixon signed the Menominee Restoration Act

  40. This act effectively ended Termination era • Federal government neither • A) Got out of Indian business • 1953 – 1973 BIA grew in budget and staff • B) Saved money • Federal government spent vast sums on • Welfare, public health, and Social Security • Native Americans did not enter melting pot • But helped ignite a new activism among Native Americans

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