Zusammenfassung der Ressource
History American West GCSE kings
school
- Plains Indians
- Beliefs and way of life
- WakanTanka
- "The great spirit"
- They had to serve him
- All creatures have his spirit so must be shown respect
- After life called the "Happy hunting ground"
- Could contact him through:
- Dance
- Involved lots of self-harm
- "Sun dance"
- Entirely voluntary
- Lots of torture
- Pierced themselves
- In July
- Could last for days
- Lead by the "Medicine man"
- Did it to try and contact the "Great spirit"
- Songs
- Pipes
- Every man had a medicine bag to help bim contact the great spirit
- Changes in life to 1851
- Indian removal act
- 1830
- Jackson
- East to west
- 15000 died
- 46000 moved
- 1500 km
- Bureau for Indian affairs
- 1832
- War department
- Manage relatonship
- Trade and intercourse
act
- 1834
- inviolable agreement
- Great plains to indins
- 95th meridian is the permanent indian
frontier
- Whites didn't want
the Great American
desert
- No selling guns or alcohol
- Policed
- Whites interest in the land
- 40's- Oregon Trail
- '49- Gold in California
- PI's Annoyed with whites
- 1850
- 55,000 wagons trespassed indian lands
- Killed Buffalo
- Fouled the water holes
- denuded pasturage
- Spread diseases
- Broke the permanent indian frontier
- The indian appropriations act
- 1851
- Funds for reservations
- PI threat to expansion
- PI threat to economy
- PI had different laws
- needed protection
- Fort Laramie
- Planning
- Fitzpatrick told PI's
- Bribed them with gifts
- Whites
details
- Admitted immigrants were reducing Buffalo
- Admitted cattle were eating grass
- Gave $50,000 of food and animals
- PI details
- September
1851
- All the northern
tribes
- 10,000 different PI's
- Granted right of passage to whites
- Allowed
forts
- Stopped tribal
wars
- Allowed whites
to:
- build rail roads
- Survey for rail
roads
- Cross the trails
- Problems
- Sioux
couldn't:
- Stop
fighting
- Stop
movement
- Be spoken for by a chief
- Whites didn't pay money
- Little crows war
- Little crow:
- Chief of a band of Dakota Sioux
- 1851- moved to 2 small reservations
- 150 miles long
- 10 miles wide
- Gave up 24000000 acres
- Paid to keep peaceful and farm
- Economic problems
- Dakota sioux had debts
- PI's not given money
until they paid off debts,
but it was impossible
- Farming problems
- Land was hard to farm
- The PI's left the reservation to hunt
- Not given supplies as a punishment
- Management problems
- Agency tricked Sioux and raised the food prices
- When the Sioux had
almost starved they
were given almost
inedible food
- Sioux retaliation
- Warrior
brotherhoods raided
agency storehouses
- Mounting tensions
- 1861 crop failed
- June 1862
- Government promised food but didn't deliver
- Local traders did not let them buy food on credit
- August 1862, all 12000 Sioux were starving
- Action from Little Crow
- Attacked the Agency that ran the reservation
- Stole food and burned buildings
- Killed 600 officers, women, and children
- Action from Whites
- Troops arrived
- Colonel Sibley rounded up 2000 Sioux
- Sentenced 307 to death
- Lincoln commuted many of the sentences
- Only 38 ringleaders were hung
- Future of the Dakota Sioux
- Little Crow fled
but was shot by a
hunter
- Sioux fled
back to the
reservation
- Moved to
smaller
harder
reservations
- Sand creek massacre
- Problems for plains indians
- Gold in Colorado mountains 1858
- 50,000 migrated across in 1859
- Used up all the grass and scared the Buffalo
- Broke Fort Laramie treaty of 1851
- Prospectors wanted to get rid of Indians
- 1861, Colorado became an official white American territory
- Treaty of Fort Lyon
- 1861
- Tribal chiefs met e.g.
Black Kettle moved to a
small reservation
- Dog soldiers, Went
on a warpath
through mining
camps and
coaches
- Chivington
- Ex civil-war
- Aim to kill and destroy Indians
- Massaccre
- November 1864
- 700 soldiers
- Killed 100 sleeping Indians
- Washington condemned Chivington, Couldn't send troops because of civil war
- Little Arkansas Treaty of 1865- offered larger
reservation and payments for survivors
- When the civil war ended they stopped the treaty
- Medicine lodge treaty
- 1867
- given half the land and no compensation
- Consequences
for Plains Indians
- Dog soldiers
felt
vindicated
and so
increased
attacks