Title: Native American Treaty Making
1Native American Treaty Making
Dr. Zoltan Grossman Faculty member in
Geography and Native American Studies, The
Evergreen State College, Olympia,
Washingtonhttp//academic.evergreen.edu/g/grossma
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Supreme Law of the Land (U.S. Constitution
Article VI )
Adapted for Bowlings WA State History
Class Lincoln Center, LHS Tacoma, Washington
2European/settlerimagery of Indiansas evil threat
Parallels with earlier Euro. views of pagans/
witches/ Satan in the forest
3European Treaty Law
- Native nations legal owners of land, so
acquisition needs to be through legal contract or
treaty - (Francisco De Vitoria, 1537)
- British implicitly recognize Native nationhood
through treaties saw as sovereignty in
European terms - European need for single tribe and sovereign
(king) often centralizes Native bands and
leadership
4Treaties
Treaties are agreements between sovereign
nations. 371 treaties signed by U.S. Native
nations to 1871, implied recognition of
sovereignty. Only federal government can
negotiate a treaty State laws cannot impinge
5Early U.S. Presence
- Lewis and Clark
- Astoria at Columbia mouth, 1805
- U.S. Britain jointly occupy
- Oregon Country, 1818
- American Fur Co. vs. Hudson Bay Co.
- (Bostons vs. King Georges Men)
- Christian missionnaires
- Protestants in Walla Walla (1836-47) and
- Nez Perce Catholics in Cowlitz, 1838
6Oregon Territory
- Oregon Trail, 1843
- Huge influx of settlers
- U.S. -British boundary, 1846
- Set at 49 degrees British get Vancouver I.
- Oregon Land Donation Act
- Settlers promised 320 acres each, 1850
- Treaties fail, 1851-53
-
7Washington Territory
- Gov. Isaac Stevens, 1853
- Territorial Governor, BIA Superintendent,
- Transcontinental Railroad planner
- Threats toward tribes to
- cede land for settlers, RR
- Haste, high pressure, and no little
- chicanery on the part of the whites
- was predominant throughout the
- meetings from start to finish.
- --William Brown
- British, Meeker favored better
- trade relations with tribes
-
8Stevens Treaties
- 64 million acres (100,000 sq. mi.)
- ceded tribal title extinguished,
- 1854-55
- lt 6 million acres retained by tribes
- Goal to consolidate on 2-3 large reservations
- Pay purchase price over 20 years
- Supply farm tools assumed tribes
- will assimilate
-
9Tribes retain fishing rights
- The right of taking fish at usual and
accustomed grounds - and stations is further secured to said
Indians, - in common with all citizens of the United
States - and of erecting temporary houses for the
purpose of curing - together with the privilege of hunting and
gathering roots and - berries on open and unclaimed lands. Provided,
however, - That they shall not take shell-fish from any
beds staked or - cultivated by citizens. (Point Elliot
Treaty, 1855)
10(No Transcript)
11Medicine Creek Treaty
- Dec. 26, 1854, Nisqually Delta
- 2.24 million acres ceded for
- 32,400 (paid over 20 years)
- Nisqually, Puyallup, Squaxin
- each get 1,280-acre reservations
- (Nisqually put on rocky plain, not river)
- Squaxin Island Reservation
- each village (inlet) had own name
Nisqually Chief Leschi refuses to sign treaty
12Medicine Creek Treaty Tree
13Point Elliot Treaty
- Jan. 1855, Mukilteo
- (included Seattle, Everett, Bellingham)
- Settlers move in before treaty ratification.
- Pit Muckleshoot
- (upriver)
- vs. Duwamish
- (downriver)
- by lumping
- together
14Chief Leschi
- Refused to sign treaty because
- Nisqually did not have quantity
- or quality of land for survival
- (Pushed onto reservations to die)
- Many local settlers respected
- and cooperated with him
- Launched war against territorial
- government to force changes
Leschi (Nisqually/Klickitat)
15Puget Sound War, 1855-56
- Nisqually, Klickitat raid Seattle village,
warship cannon attacks Jan. 1855 - Chief Sealth refuses to join Leschi, alerts
settlers - Muckleshoots attack along settlements along White
River - Yakamas defeat U.S. in Toppenish battle, Oct.
1855 - Settlers Volunteers attack Native resisters,
civilians - Gen. Wool criticizes but is removed
- Settlers kill, mutilate Peopeo Moxmox under
(white flag of truce)
16Nisqually Reservation
- Moved to Nisqually River,
- expanded to 4,700 acres
- Lost 70 to Fort Lewis, 1917
17Puyallup Reservation
- Expanded and moved to
- Puyallup River mouth at
- Commencement Bay
- Lost reservation land to
- railroad and settlers in
- Allotment Era
18Leschi execution
Leschi
- Brother Quiemuth killed
- in Governors office
- Leschi arrested for killing
- of Army officer in war
- Despite widespread support
- and two hung juries, executed
- near Fort Steilacoom, Feb. 19, 1858
- Judges in retrial clear
- Leschis name, Dec. 2004
Quiemuth