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Native American Treaty Making

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Native nations legal 'owners' of land, so acquisition needs to be ... (included Seattle, Everett, Bellingham) Settlers move in before treaty ratification. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Native American Treaty Making


1
Native 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
z
Supreme Law of the Land (U.S. Constitution
Article VI )
Adapted for Bowlings WA State History
Class Lincoln Center, LHS Tacoma, Washington
2
European/settlerimagery of Indiansas evil threat
Parallels with earlier Euro. views of pagans/
witches/ Satan in the forest
3
European 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

4
Treaties
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
5
Early 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

6
Oregon 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

7
Washington 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

8
Stevens 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

9
Tribes 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)
11
Medicine 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
12
Medicine Creek Treaty Tree
13
Point Elliot Treaty
  • Jan. 1855, Mukilteo
  • (included Seattle, Everett, Bellingham)
  • Settlers move in before treaty ratification.
  • Pit Muckleshoot
  • (upriver)
  • vs. Duwamish
  • (downriver)
  • by lumping
  • together

14
Chief 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)
15
Puget 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)

16
Nisqually Reservation
  • Moved to Nisqually River,
  • expanded to 4,700 acres
  • Lost 70 to Fort Lewis, 1917

17
Puyallup Reservation
  • Expanded and moved to
  • Puyallup River mouth at
  • Commencement Bay
  • Lost reservation land to
  • railroad and settlers in
  • Allotment Era

18
Leschi 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
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