Title: Closing the Frontier
1Closing the Frontier
- The Indian Problem and the Chinese Experience
2Indian Culture on the Great Plains
- Impact of the Horse
- Strengthened the more nomadic tribes
- Sioux, Kiowa, Cheyenne
- More Nomadic, more warlike
- Dependence on the Buffalo
3Romantic View of Indians Hunting Buffalo
4Indians on the Plains
5The Traditional View of the West
6William Buffalo Bill Codys Wild West Show
7The Real and Romanticized
8Buffalo Bill Cody Sitting Bull
9Realism or Romanticism?
10Realism
11Sources of Conflict
- Land
- Whites assumed expansion into the plains
- Necessary to reach California and Oregon before
1860 - After 1860, gold and Homestead Act attracted
settlers
12Sources of Conflict
- Cultural Differences
- To whites, Indians and lifestyle were
uncivilized - Policy of assimilation Indians must accept white
ways - Christianity
- Private property
13Sources of Conflict
- Land
- Indians refused to surrender lifestyle and
Culture - Anger over white violations of treaties
- War was only alternative
14Indian Wars
- More or less continuous conflict, 1865-1877
- Bozeman Trail and Gold
- Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIR) Corruption
- Railroad and Mining Intrusion onto Indian Land
15 The Settlement of the Trans-Mississippi West,
18601890
16The Oklahoma Land Rush, 18891906
17The Mining and Cattle Frontiers, 18601890
18Transcontinental Railroads and Federal Land
Grants, 18501900
19Major Indian-White Clashes in the West
20The Battle of Little Big Horn1876
Gen. GeorgeArmstrong Custer
Chief Sitting Bull
21Battle of the Little Big Horn
227th Cavalry Headstones on Last Stand Hill
23Geronimo
- Led Comanche Resistance
- Surrendered 1886
24Chief Joseph I will fight no more
forever!
Nez Percé tribal retreat (1877)
25Results Of Conflict
- Defeat and decimation of remaining tribes
- Destruction of the Buffalo
- Only 228,000 remain by 1890
- The Dawes Act (1887)
26Destruction of the Buffalo
27Helen Hunt Jackson
A Century of Dishonor (1881)
28The Dawes Act
- Goals
- Restrict Indian to Reservations
- Assimilate via land ownership
29The Dawes Act
- Provisions
- Tribes lose legal status as nations
- Tribes lose legal claims to territory
- Indians become citizens
- Head of Household receives 160 acres
- Surplus land held in trust by U.S. government
for 25 years
30The Dawes Act
- Consequences
- Cultural disaster alcoholism and despair
- Poverty Land unsuitable to agriculture
- Corruption Bureau of Indian Affairs misuses
trust 138,000 acres reduced to 48,000 by 1934.
31The Ghost Dance
- Origin
- Despair of life under the Dawes Act
- Longing for a return to the old ways
- Wovokas vision
- Paiute shaman
- during an eclipse of the sun in
- saw the second coming of Christ and received a
warning about the evils of the white man.
32The Ghost Dance
- Origin
- converts of the new religion were supposed to
take part in the Ghost Dance to hasten the
arrival of the new era as promised by the messiah
33Ghost Dance Song
- The whole world is coming,A nation is coming, a
nation is coming,The eagle has brought the
message to the tribe.The Father says so, the
Father says so.Over the whole earth they are
coming,The buffalo are coming, the buffalo are
coming,The crow has brought the message to the
tribe,The Father says so, the Father says so.
34The Ghost Dance and Wounded Knee
- Whites fear dance as preparation for war
- Dance Banned by BIA
- Sioux continue
- Soldiers sent to arrest leaders and disarm men
35Ghost Dance Shirt
36Massacre at Wounded Knee
- 150-300 Sioux men, women and children killed
Ironically - by U.S. 7th Cavalry - Symbolizes the end of Indian resistance to white
settlement
37Ghost Dance Shield
38Frozen Corpses at Wounded Knee
39Mass Grave at Wounded Knee
40The Battle of Wounded Knee
- Consequences
- Officially 146 Indian men, women and children
Killed by 7th Cavalry troops - Some claim as many as 300 died
- Most killed as they ran
- Signaled the end of Indian resistance
41Western Indian Reservations, 1890
42(No Transcript)
43The Chinese-American Experience
- In the mid-19th century, Chinese came to "Gold
Mountain," as they called America, to join the
"Gold Rush" that began at Sutters Mill,
Sacramento, California.
44Chinese Labor
- Chinese became a significant part of the labor
force that laid the economic foundation of the
American West. - Chinese are best known for their contribution to
the construction of the Transcontinental
Railroad, the completion of which united the
country economically and culturally.
45Chinese Labor
- Some migrated to the east coast
46The Chinese-American Experience
- Chinese suffered severe exploitation and
discrimination. - White workers viewed them as economic competitors
and racial inferiors. - Discriminatory laws were passed
- The commission of widespread acts of violence
against the Chinese followed.
47The Chinese-American Experience
- Under the racist slogan, "Chinese must go!" an
anti-Chinese movement emerged that worked to
deprive the Chinese of a means of making a living
in the general economy. - Hostility hindered efforts by the Chinese to
become American. - It forced them to flee to the Chinatowns on the
coasts, - In these ghettos, they were isolated from the
rest of the population, making it difficult if
not impossible to assimilate into mainstream
society. - Native-born Americans criticized them for their
alleged unassimilability.
48American nativism
- According to historian John Higham
- No variety of anti-European sentiment has ever
approached the violent extremes to which
anti-Chinese agitation went in the 1870s and
1880s. Lynching, boycotts, and mass
expulsionsharassed the Chinese.
49Discrimination
50The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882
- Identified for the first time a specific group of
people by name as undesirable for immigration to
the United States, - The act marked a fateful departure from the
traditional American policy of unrestricted
immigration.
51The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882
- After China became an ally during World War II,
the exclusion laws were finally repealed by the
Magnuson Act in 1943. - This bill made it possible for Chinese to become
naturalized citizens and gave them an annual
quota of 105 (!!) immigrants.