Title: Native America v. America
1Native America v. America
- A Tumultuous Relationship
2The Question
- Evaluate the validity of this statement The
relationship between Native Americans and
Americans (1620-present) has always been negative.
3Background Pre-colonization
- Southwest large irrigation systems, large towns,
etc
- Great Plains sedentary farming, permanent
settlements, some nomadic tribes hunted buffalo
- East greatest food sourcesfarming, hunting,
gathering all together
4Three categorizations
5As NeighborsEncounter
6Exchange
- The Good Exchange of crops, animals, farming
- The Bad Importation of disease and violence
7Relationship with Spanish
- Conquistadores, encomiendas
- came as conquerors
- way more men than women intermarriage
8Relationship with French
- fur trade
- didnt want to establish substantial towns
- needed Nat. Am help with finding fur
- some intermarriage
9Relationship with British
- Settlement, New Society
- forced to be amicable because of need
- Established trading in New England
- came to build a new society
- paganism threat to religious society
- more self-reliant, more hostile
101675 King Philips War
- Wampanoags direct response to colonial attempt to
apply their laws to tribe - Killed over 1000 settlers in 3 years
- 1676 Mohawks allied with colonists kill
Metacomet (King Philip)
11RevolutionPick Your Horse
- 13,000 warriors fought on the British side
- Americans resented tribal help to Brits
- wanted to treat them as a conquered people
12Noble Savages
- Others saw them as needing to be civilized
(Jefferson)
13Isolation and Eradication1830s-1840s
- noble savage idea had become savage
especially in West (remember common man)
14Assimilation1880s-1940s
- return to idea that Indians are civilizable
- Offshoot of Progressive era
- Kill the Indian, save the Man
15Indian Boarding Schools
- creation of Indian boarding schools
- No language
- No traditions
- No families
- Sent out to white families on breaks to work as
servants - 1879 Carlisle Indian Industrial School (PA)
16Conservation of Culture1935-1950
- Indian New Deal
- Romanticization of American Indian culture
- Many stereotypes still prevalent
17Self-DeterminationAmerican Indian Movement1970s
- AIM
- Grew out of Civil Rights Movement of 1960s
- reclamation of tribal land
- Much more forceful than other movements
- 75 takeovers of federal buildings or land
- 1969 Alcatraz, 1972 Trail of Broken Treaties,
1973 Pine Ridge (Wounded Knee)
18As Landowners
19Go West, Young Man
- Land issue
- westward movement of settlers creates tensions
with Native American tribes
20French and Indian WarStuck in the Middle with
You
- 1748 Iroquois grant trading rights to English
merchants in interior - tensions build until war breaks out in 1754 (Fort
Necessity, Fort Duquesne) - Almost all tribes aligned with French
- Iroquois aligned with GB, but also essentially
didnt fight at all
21Back to Where We Started
- War ends with Peace of Paris (1763)
- white settlers begin crossing into valley
immediately - Pontiacs Rebellion (1763)
- Proclamation of 1763
- improved British relations with Native Americans
- line didnt work
22Land in the New Republic
- Western Frontier
- Land ordinances of 1784-87 led to border conflicts
23Sign on the Dotted Line
- 1784, 85, 86 Iroquois, Choctaws, Cherokee,
Creek, Chickasaws all signed treaties with
government ceding land
24Resistance
- 1791 Little Turtle led Shawnee, Miami and
Delaware in battles near Ohio border
251795 Miami signed Treaty of Grenville
- lots of land for recognition of claim to the part
they kept - first recognition by US govt of sovereignty of
Indian nations
26More Tricky Treaties
- 1801 Jefferson assimilate or move west of
Mississippi - Give up claims in Northwest Territory
- Harrison manipulated treaties
- by 1807 US had treaty rights to Eastern
Michigan, Southern Indiana, most of IL - land taken in GA, MI, TN
27Tecumseh and the Prophet
- Rise of the Prophet (Tenskwatawa)
- brought tribes together through religion (so
rolled over to politics and military) - Prophets brother was Tecumseh
- led secular unification of all tribes of
Mississippi Valley - 1811 Battle of Tippecanoe
28 Indian Removal1830-1839
- Remember savage
- Fear of unending violence in West
- Desire for land
29Congressional Legislation
- 1830 Removal Act
- provided funds for negotiating treaties that
would remove tribes to West - 1834 Indian Intercourse Act created Indian
Territory west of Mississippi
30Dislocation of Five Civilized Tribes
- 1830 Choctaws removed
- 1835 Treaty of New Echota with Cherokee
- 1836 Creeks
- 1837 Chickasaw
- 1838 Trail of Tears
31Summary
- by 1839
- All important Indian societies moved west
- 100 mill acres of land ceded
- received 68 mill
- 32 mill acres of less usable land in exchange
32Westward Expansionthe Far West
- Government policy
- 1851 each tribe assigned its own treaty instead
of One Big Reservation idea - allowed government to take most desirable land
and separate Indians physically and politically
33Resistance
- Continual fighting from 1850s-1880s
- treaties of 1867temporary peace
- new settlers moved into lands guaranteed to
tribes in early 1870s - federal government stopped recognizing tribes as
independent entities - would no longer negotiate with chiefs
34Indian Wars End
- Fierce fighting through Civil War
- 1874-1886 Geronimo fought from bases in Mexico
and Arizona - dwindling troops as people died or gave up
- surrendered in 1886official end of fighting
betweens whites and Indians
35As Citizens
36Constitution
- Addressed Native Americans
- excluded native americans not taxed from pop
count for representation - gave Congress power to negotiate treaties with
tribes - Art. VI kept all treaties under Articles of
Confederation valid - legal standing very unclearbig issue as time
went on
37In the Courts
- Marshall made decisions that helped to clarify
political status of Native Americans
38Johnson v. McIntosh (1823)
- leaders of Illinois and Pinakeshaw tribes sold
land to white settlers (Johnson) - then ceded land to US government
- Government issued homesteads to new white
settlers (McIntosh) - Marshall favored government
- Only government could buy or take land from
Native Americans
39Cherokee Nation v. Georgia (1829)
- GA passed a law abolishing Cherokee legislature
and courts - Marshall refused to hear case Cherokee not a
foreign nation - Trust Relationship
- Tribes Government ward guardian
40Worcester v. Georgia (1832)
- GA passed law requiring any citizen wanting to
enter Cherokee territory to get permission from
governor - 2 missionaries sued claiming violation of federal
power to regulate trade - Marshall invalidated GA law
- Tribes were sovereign entities like GA, and so
they had boundaries in which their authority is
exclusive
41The Dawes Severalty Act 1887
- gradual elimination of tribal ownership of land
- 160 to head of family, 80 to a single adult or
orphan, 40 acres to each dependent child - force assimilation to white model of society
- tribal land reduced from 155 mil acres to 48 mil
acres by 1934
42Citizenship Granted
- Inconsistent citizenship
- by marrying white men
- through military service
- by allotments
- 1924 Indian Citizenship Act
43New Deal for Indians1933-1945
- 1933 John Collier commissioner of Indian Affairs
- created Indian Emergency Conservation Program
(IECP) - employed 85,000 Nat Am
- required other organizations to hire Native
Americans too
441934 Indian Reorganization Act
- ended Dawes
- provided funds for tribes to buy new land
- recognized tribal constitutions
- federal grants to provide social services
- prohibitions on language, religion and custom
lifted
45Termination Era1950s
- Attempt to reduce government involvement
- Return to assimilation
- Reduced responsibilities of BIA
- Tried to repay tribes for lands taken illegally
- HCR 108 (1953) Official end of trust relationship
- "In return for being terminated, individual
tribal members received a check for the value of
their landThe check did not compensate for the
loss of federal benefits or the new tax burdens.
It could not pay for the loss of tribal
governmental authority, or compensate for the
discrimination that followed in the state
agencies and courts. Perhaps most tragic of all,
the check could not possibly pay for the
psychological costs of "not being an Indian any
more." - Reprinted from Federal Indian Law, Getches and
Wilkinson, 2nd Ed., 1998, with permission of the
West Group.
46Self-Determination1970-present
- Native American tribes are semi-autonomous
- Independent governments
- federal government in role of protector to allow
for self-government