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Plains Indians and Government Policy: The Battle for Land

Learn about the Plains Indians' struggle to protect their lands from white settlers, the government's policies on Native Americans, and the major conflicts that ensued. From the Sand Creek Massacre to the Battle of Little Bighorn, discover the impact of these events on the Plains Indians' way of life.

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Plains Indians and Government Policy: The Battle for Land

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  1. Bell Ringer • What was the most important animal to the Plains Indians? • What was a male’s main role in the tribe? • Why did white settlers kill buffalo?

  2. The Indian Wars Mr. Turner

  3. Government Policy on Native Americans • Early 1800s- the US government moved Indians to lands West • Indian Removal Act of 1830- moved the five civilized tribes to land west of the Mississippi River • Indians were left alone in the West until gold and silver was discovered in 1850s • Then Indians were placed on reservations

  4. Government Policy on Native Americans • White settlers began to want Native American Lands in the west after the Civil War • Native Americans desperately wanted to protect their lands • In 1862- the government waged war against a band of Sioux, who then moved into the Dakotas • Plains Indians began to attack settlements and stagecoaches in efforts to protect their lands

  5. Sand Creek Massacre • In 1864- Colorado Militia came upon a group of Cheyenne and Arapaho Indians at Sand Creek • The Indians were under the protection of the U.S. government but • Colorado militia fired on the camp and ended up killing a lot of men, women, and children • This led to more warfare between Plains Indians and whites • After the Civil War, the government hired troops to maintain peace in the West

  6. Peace Plans Fail • The Government wanted to build a road through Sioux Hunting grounds • 1866- Indian Warrior Red Cloud ambushed Captain William Fettermen and his troops and killed them all • This led to two ideas on Native Americans- education or control • The government established the Indian Peace Commission • peace would come if Indians would settle on farms and become educated

  7. Peace Plans Fail • The government signed a treaty with Indians in Sioux country • they would not build the road if Indians would settle on a reservation • Indians did not receive the supplies, or money promised through the treaty • The Federal Government would go on to break many treaties with the Native Americans

  8. Red River War • A series of major and minor battles that ended with the defeat of Southern Plains Indians, the Kiowas and Comanches • The US did not abide by the treaty of Medicine Lodge of 1867 • White settlers killed buffalo herds in the South West • Food and supplies were not given as promised

  9. Red River War • Indians attacked Texans at the Red River in 1874 • The war ended when the final Comanches surrendered in June of 1875 • The results of the War: • it ended the buffalo herds in the South West and • opened the western part of the Texas panhandle to white settlers

  10. Battle of Little Bighorn • Gold Rush 1874 - led prospectors to invade Sioux hunting grounds (black hills) • Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull gathered warriors to drive out the prospectors • The US government sent the Cavalry to stop Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull • In June 1876- Gen. George Custer arrived a day ahead of the majority of the troops

  11. Battle of Little Bighorn • He and 250 men ran into 2,000 Native Americans led by Crazy Horse; Custer and all of his men were killed • US sent more troops to round up the Indians - Sitting Bull and some of his followers escaped to Canada, while Crazy Horse and his followers surrendered

  12. Chief Joseph and the Nez Percés • In Idaho in 1877 - the government wanted to move the Nez Percés to make room for white settles • A lot of the Nez Percés were Christians who had become cattle farmers • Chief Joseph wanted to be left alone so he tried to lead a group of Indians to Canada - a 1,300 mile journey • They were caught just short of the Canadian border and forced to surrender • They were sent to a reservation in Oklahoma

  13. Wounded Knee Massacre • The Ghost Dance became a religious movement among many Native Americans • if Indians danced God would banish white people and bring back the buffalo and loved ones • This scared the Federal government and they wanted to stop it

  14. Wounded Knee Massacre • In 1890, the government sent troops to arrest Sitting Bull because he was an influential leader • In trying to arrest Sitting Bull gunfire broke out the US Cavalry ended up killing over 100 men, women, and children

  15. Government Policy Changes • The Reservation Policy did NOT work - many people were killed, and it was expensive • The government decided it wanted to assimilate Indians - make them part of US culture • Some people criticized the government's treatment of the Native Americans and the destruction of their way of life

  16. Government Policy Changes • Helen Hunt Jackson wrote A Century of Dishonor - focused on the injustices the Native Americans had faced • Susette La Flesche fought for Indians in the court system

  17. Government Policy Changes • In 1871 Congress passed a law stating Native American tribes were not independent nations and therefore were part of the US population • This led to passage of The Dawes General Allotment Act • Reservations were abolished and each Indian head of household would be given 160 acres of land to farm

  18. Dawes Act • The land could not be sold for 25 years so that white settlers would not cheat the indians out of their land • Hoped to make Native Americans embrace the idea of farming • Missionaries and churches began to build boarding schools in the west to speed assimilation and teach Indian children how to act in White Civilization

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