Zusammenfassung der Ressource
American West:
Reservation Policy
- Living on Reservations
- Land
- Land that was not wanted by white men
- Not very fertile
- Lack of minerals
- Survival became very difficult for tribes
- Agency Police
- Indians joined this force to control reservation
- Received better clothing
- Received better shelter
- Conditions
- Rations were very poor
- Crops often failed
- Poor medical care
- The flu
- Agents
- Indians appointed to manage the tribe reservation
- Were often corrupt
- Rations and supplied intended for
reservations didn't arrive
- Society
- Beliefs were banned
- Feasts
- Dances and ceremonies
- Reduced power of medicine men
- Converted to Christianity
- De-skilled
- Not allowed to hunt
- Affected lifestyle and clothing
- Taught farming techniques
- Ploughing, sowing, reaping
- Had no horses
- No fighting or hunting
- Lost excellent fighting ability
- Tribal Chiefs lost power
- Chronology
- One Big Reservation
1825
- All land West of a North to South line was given to the Native Americans.
Some tribes were forced to move because of this.
- Big Reservations
1850s
- Following early conflicts between tribes and whites, reservation land was
divided up under the Fort Laramie Treaty (1851), with each tribe agreeing
to its own large reservation.
- The Battle of Little Bighorn
1867
- The Battle of Little Bighorn was a victory for the Native Americans
against the US Army, led by Custer. However, it led to a big effort from
the Government to crush the Native Americans.
- Smaller Reservations
1860s
- Further conflicts led to reservations being cut in size. The Fort Lyon
Treaty (1861) and the Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek (1867) created
smaller reservations.
- Massacre at Wounded Knee
1876
- The Sioux Resistance was brought down in 1876, and the entire Native
American way of life became under threat as they were forced on to
reservations.
- Schooling
- Children of natives sent to American schools
- Punished for using their own language
- Could not respect their culture
- No longer fitted in own culture, still not accepted by whites either
- Taught American values
- Converted to Christianity