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Recommendations for Indian Policy 1886
The Native Americans lead a strong resistance against their forced relocation evidenced in
the Battle of the Greasy Grass, Red Cloud’s war, the Nez Perce trail, etc. Write a
government policy arguing one of the following solutions for Native American-White
relations. Mention specific ways in which it could be implemented. Present your
policy.
1. State the purpose of the policy.
2. Give a reason for the policy.
3. Discuss the implementation of the policy.
POLICY OPTIONS
a. No regulation
b. Return to Homeland
c. Reservation System
d. Assimilation
e. Annihilation
Homestead Act - 1862

• Legal mandate for Manifest Destiny
• 160 acres for a small fee
Fort Laramie Treaty - 1868

• Cedes the Black hills to the Sioux
• Black Hills = Gold
• Black Hills war
• Custer’s Last Stand / Custer’s Bluster
http://www.custerwest.org/accueileng.htm
In a letter to General Sheridan of date October 15, 1868
General Sherman said:
"As to extermination; it is for the Indians themselves to determine… As brave men,
and as the soldiers of a government which has exhausted its peace efforts, we, in the
performance of a most unpleasant duty, accept the war begun by our enemies, and
hereby resolve to make its end final.
If it results in the utter annihilation of these Indians, it is but the result of what they
have been warned again and again, and for which they seem fully prepared.
I will say nothing and do nothing to restrain our troops from doing what they deem
proper on the spot, and will allow no mere vague general charges of cruelty and
inhumanity to tie their hands, but will use all the powers confided to me to the end
that these Indians, the enemies of our race and of our civilization, shall not again be
able to begin and carry on their barbarous warfare on any kind of pretext that they
may choose to allege.”
Battle of the Little Big Horn
Crazy Horse 1877
We had buffalo for food, and their hides for clothing and for our tepees. We
preferred hunting to a life of idleness on the reservation, where we were
driven against our will. At times we did not get enough to eat, and we were
not allowed to leave the reservation to hunt.
We preferred our own way of living. We were no expense for the government.
All we wanted was peace and to be left alone. Soldiers were sent out in the
winter, who destroyed our villages.
The “Long Hair” [Custer] came in the same way. They say we massacred him ,
but he would do the same thing to us had we not defended ourselves and
fought to the last. Our first impulse was to escape with our [women], but we
were so hemmed in that we had to fight.
Sitting Bull
What treaty have the Sioux made with the white man that we have
broken? Not one. What treaty have the white man ever made with us that
they have kept? Not one. When I was a boy the Sioux owned the world;
the sun rose and set on their land; they sent ten thousand men to battle.
Where are the warriors today? Who slew them? Where are our lands?
Who owns them?....What law have I broken? Is it wrong for me to love my
own? Is it wicked for me because my skin is red? Because I am a Sioux;
because I was born where my father lived; because I would die for my
people and my country?
The Dawes Act - 1887
“The more Indians we can kill this year, the less will have to be killed the next war, for the
more I see of these Indians, the more convinced I am that they all have to be killed or be
maintained as a species of paupers.”
- General William Tecumseh Sherman 1867
[to be civilized is to]… "wear civilized clothes...cultivate the ground, live in houses, ride in
Studebaker wagons, send children to school, drink whiskey [and] own property."
– Congressman Henry Dawes
The Dawes Act - 1887

•The Dawes Act divided tribal lands into individual parcels.
Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado was one of the most outspoken
opponents of allotment.
In 1881, he said that allotment was a policy "to despoil the Indians of their
lands and to make them vagabonds on the face of the earth."
Teller also said,
"the real aim [of allotment] was "to get at the Indian lands and open them up
to settlement. The provisions for the apparent benefit of the Indians are but
the pretext to get at his lands and occupy them....If this were done in the
name of Greed, it would be bad enough; but to do it in the name of
Humanity...is infinitely worse."
VISION:
The Dawes Act codified the idea of dividing Indian lands into individual holdings to promote
assimilation by deliberately destroying tribal relations. Surplus land was given to whites.
Allotted land for specific tribe and left other tribal allotments to the discretion of the President.
“Civilize” the Indians through education, private property, and introduction of agriculture.
Support from paternalistic Easterners

REALITY:
Supporters of the Dawes Act either knew or should have known that in many cases it would mean
allotting land that could not be farmed.
The Indians, for the most part, did not become self-supporting farmers or ranchers.
Inheritance caused problems as allotments were further and further subdivided.
The Dawes Act prescribed the assimilation of Native Americans and the loss of their traditional ways of
agriculture, but most significantly, it resulted in the loss of Indian lands.
Native Americans didn’t get the right to vote until 1924.
Oklahoma Land Runs - 1889

•

September 22, 1891: Land run to settle Iowa, Sac and Fox, Pottawatomie, and Shawnee
lands.

•

April 19, 1892: Land run to settle the Cheyenne and Arapaho lands.

•

September 16, 1893: Cherokee Strip Land Run. The Run of the Cherokee Strip opened nearly
7,000,000 acres (28,000 km²) to settlement on September 16, 1893. The land was purchased
from the Cherokees for $7,000,000.

•

May 23, 1895: Land run to settle the Kickapoo lands.
Ghost Dance - 1888

• Wovoka
• Native American apocalypse
• A return to life without the white man
Wounded Knee - 1890
The frozen body of one of the victims at Wounded Knee. The caption written on this photograph identifies him as the
medicine man who triggered the conflict with a handful of dust tossed into the air to illustrate how the power of the Ghost
Dance would sweep the whites from the plains. (Library of Congress)
Dee Brown, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee
When the madness ended, Big Foot and more than half of his people were dead or
seriously wounded; 153 were known dead, but many of the wounded crwaled away to
die afterward. One estimate placed the final total of dead very nearly 300 of the
original 350 men, women and children. The soldiers lost 25 dead and 39 wounded,
most of them struck by their own bullets or shrapnel.
A detail of soldiers went over to the Wounded Knee battlefield, gathering up Indians
who were still alive and loading them into wagons. As it was apparent by the end of
the day that a blizzard was approaching, the dead Indians were left lying where they
had fallen. (After the blizzard, when a burial party returned to Wounded Knee, they
found the bodies, including Big Foot’s, frozen into grotesque shapes.)
The wagonloads of wounded Sioux reached Pine Ridge after dark. Because all available
barracks were filled with soldiers, they were left lying in the open wagons in the bitter
cold while an inept Army officer searched for shelter. Finally the Episcopal mission was
opened, the benches taken out and hay scattered over the rough flooring.
In was the fourth day after Christmas. When the first torn and bleeding bodies were
carried into the candlelit church, those who were conscious could see the Christmas
greenery hanging from the open rafters. Across the chancel front above the pulpit was
strung a crudely lettered banner: PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TOWARD MEN.
Assimilation
“A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one, and that high sanction of
his destruction has been an enormous factor in promoting Indian massacres. In a sense, I
agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be
dead. Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.”
-Richard H. Pratt, founder of the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania, 1892
20 Century
th

•
•
•
•

Pan-Indian identity
American Indian Movement (AIM)
Incident at Oglala (1975)
Wounded Knee Occupation (1973)

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Native American Policy Recommendations 1886

  • 1. Recommendations for Indian Policy 1886 The Native Americans lead a strong resistance against their forced relocation evidenced in the Battle of the Greasy Grass, Red Cloud’s war, the Nez Perce trail, etc. Write a government policy arguing one of the following solutions for Native American-White relations. Mention specific ways in which it could be implemented. Present your policy. 1. State the purpose of the policy. 2. Give a reason for the policy. 3. Discuss the implementation of the policy. POLICY OPTIONS a. No regulation b. Return to Homeland c. Reservation System d. Assimilation e. Annihilation
  • 2. Homestead Act - 1862 • Legal mandate for Manifest Destiny • 160 acres for a small fee
  • 3. Fort Laramie Treaty - 1868 • Cedes the Black hills to the Sioux • Black Hills = Gold • Black Hills war • Custer’s Last Stand / Custer’s Bluster http://www.custerwest.org/accueileng.htm
  • 4.
  • 5. In a letter to General Sheridan of date October 15, 1868 General Sherman said: "As to extermination; it is for the Indians themselves to determine… As brave men, and as the soldiers of a government which has exhausted its peace efforts, we, in the performance of a most unpleasant duty, accept the war begun by our enemies, and hereby resolve to make its end final. If it results in the utter annihilation of these Indians, it is but the result of what they have been warned again and again, and for which they seem fully prepared. I will say nothing and do nothing to restrain our troops from doing what they deem proper on the spot, and will allow no mere vague general charges of cruelty and inhumanity to tie their hands, but will use all the powers confided to me to the end that these Indians, the enemies of our race and of our civilization, shall not again be able to begin and carry on their barbarous warfare on any kind of pretext that they may choose to allege.”
  • 6. Battle of the Little Big Horn
  • 7. Crazy Horse 1877 We had buffalo for food, and their hides for clothing and for our tepees. We preferred hunting to a life of idleness on the reservation, where we were driven against our will. At times we did not get enough to eat, and we were not allowed to leave the reservation to hunt. We preferred our own way of living. We were no expense for the government. All we wanted was peace and to be left alone. Soldiers were sent out in the winter, who destroyed our villages. The “Long Hair” [Custer] came in the same way. They say we massacred him , but he would do the same thing to us had we not defended ourselves and fought to the last. Our first impulse was to escape with our [women], but we were so hemmed in that we had to fight.
  • 8. Sitting Bull What treaty have the Sioux made with the white man that we have broken? Not one. What treaty have the white man ever made with us that they have kept? Not one. When I was a boy the Sioux owned the world; the sun rose and set on their land; they sent ten thousand men to battle. Where are the warriors today? Who slew them? Where are our lands? Who owns them?....What law have I broken? Is it wrong for me to love my own? Is it wicked for me because my skin is red? Because I am a Sioux; because I was born where my father lived; because I would die for my people and my country?
  • 9. The Dawes Act - 1887 “The more Indians we can kill this year, the less will have to be killed the next war, for the more I see of these Indians, the more convinced I am that they all have to be killed or be maintained as a species of paupers.” - General William Tecumseh Sherman 1867 [to be civilized is to]… "wear civilized clothes...cultivate the ground, live in houses, ride in Studebaker wagons, send children to school, drink whiskey [and] own property." – Congressman Henry Dawes
  • 10. The Dawes Act - 1887 •The Dawes Act divided tribal lands into individual parcels.
  • 11. Senator Henry M. Teller of Colorado was one of the most outspoken opponents of allotment. In 1881, he said that allotment was a policy "to despoil the Indians of their lands and to make them vagabonds on the face of the earth." Teller also said, "the real aim [of allotment] was "to get at the Indian lands and open them up to settlement. The provisions for the apparent benefit of the Indians are but the pretext to get at his lands and occupy them....If this were done in the name of Greed, it would be bad enough; but to do it in the name of Humanity...is infinitely worse."
  • 12. VISION: The Dawes Act codified the idea of dividing Indian lands into individual holdings to promote assimilation by deliberately destroying tribal relations. Surplus land was given to whites. Allotted land for specific tribe and left other tribal allotments to the discretion of the President. “Civilize” the Indians through education, private property, and introduction of agriculture. Support from paternalistic Easterners REALITY: Supporters of the Dawes Act either knew or should have known that in many cases it would mean allotting land that could not be farmed. The Indians, for the most part, did not become self-supporting farmers or ranchers. Inheritance caused problems as allotments were further and further subdivided. The Dawes Act prescribed the assimilation of Native Americans and the loss of their traditional ways of agriculture, but most significantly, it resulted in the loss of Indian lands. Native Americans didn’t get the right to vote until 1924.
  • 13.
  • 14.
  • 15. Oklahoma Land Runs - 1889 • September 22, 1891: Land run to settle Iowa, Sac and Fox, Pottawatomie, and Shawnee lands. • April 19, 1892: Land run to settle the Cheyenne and Arapaho lands. • September 16, 1893: Cherokee Strip Land Run. The Run of the Cherokee Strip opened nearly 7,000,000 acres (28,000 km²) to settlement on September 16, 1893. The land was purchased from the Cherokees for $7,000,000. • May 23, 1895: Land run to settle the Kickapoo lands.
  • 16. Ghost Dance - 1888 • Wovoka • Native American apocalypse • A return to life without the white man
  • 18. The frozen body of one of the victims at Wounded Knee. The caption written on this photograph identifies him as the medicine man who triggered the conflict with a handful of dust tossed into the air to illustrate how the power of the Ghost Dance would sweep the whites from the plains. (Library of Congress)
  • 19. Dee Brown, Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee When the madness ended, Big Foot and more than half of his people were dead or seriously wounded; 153 were known dead, but many of the wounded crwaled away to die afterward. One estimate placed the final total of dead very nearly 300 of the original 350 men, women and children. The soldiers lost 25 dead and 39 wounded, most of them struck by their own bullets or shrapnel. A detail of soldiers went over to the Wounded Knee battlefield, gathering up Indians who were still alive and loading them into wagons. As it was apparent by the end of the day that a blizzard was approaching, the dead Indians were left lying where they had fallen. (After the blizzard, when a burial party returned to Wounded Knee, they found the bodies, including Big Foot’s, frozen into grotesque shapes.) The wagonloads of wounded Sioux reached Pine Ridge after dark. Because all available barracks were filled with soldiers, they were left lying in the open wagons in the bitter cold while an inept Army officer searched for shelter. Finally the Episcopal mission was opened, the benches taken out and hay scattered over the rough flooring. In was the fourth day after Christmas. When the first torn and bleeding bodies were carried into the candlelit church, those who were conscious could see the Christmas greenery hanging from the open rafters. Across the chancel front above the pulpit was strung a crudely lettered banner: PEACE ON EARTH, GOOD WILL TOWARD MEN.
  • 21. “A great general has said that the only good Indian is a dead one, and that high sanction of his destruction has been an enormous factor in promoting Indian massacres. In a sense, I agree with the sentiment, but only in this: that all the Indian there is in the race should be dead. Kill the Indian in him, and save the man.” -Richard H. Pratt, founder of the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania, 1892
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24. 20 Century th • • • • Pan-Indian identity American Indian Movement (AIM) Incident at Oglala (1975) Wounded Knee Occupation (1973)

Notas del editor

  1. Built house out of sod for lack of trees Deep cold, swarms of grasshoppers ate crops. Drought. Populism grew out of farmers that feel into debt because of fluctuations in crop prices. A sort of socialism. The Act was signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln on May 20, 1862. Eventually 1.6 million homesteads were granted and 270 million acres was privatized between 1862 and 1964. A total of 10% of all lands in the United States. The person to whom title was granted had to be at least 21 years of age, white, and free, to have built on the section, and to have farmed on it for 5 years, and to have a house on it that was at least 12 by 14 feet (3.6 x 4.3 m) in size.
  2. Ended Red Cloud’s war – one real victory of Native Americans. Fetterman’s Massacre (Crazy Horse) took place during the war. From the 1860s through the 1870s the American frontier was filled with Indian wars and skirmishes. In 1865 a congressional committee began a study of the Indian uprisings and wars in the West, resulting in a Report on the Condition of the Indian Tribes , which was released in 1867. This study and report by the congressional committee led to an act to establish an Indian Peace Commission to end the wars and prevent future Indian conflicts. The United States government set out to establish a series of Indian treaties that would force the Indians to give up their lands and move further west onto reservations. In the spring of 1868 a conference was held at Fort Laramie, in present day Wyoming, that resulted in a treaty with the Sioux. This treaty was to bring peace between the whites and the Sioux who agreed to settle within the Black Hills reservation in the Dakota Territory. The Black Hills of Dakota are sacred to the Sioux Indians. In the 1868 treaty, signed at Fort Laramie and other military posts in Sioux country, the United States recognized the Black Hills as part of the Great Sioux Reservation, set aside for exclusive use by the Sioux people. In 1874, however, General George A. Custer led an expedition into the Black Hills accompanied by miners who were seeking gold. Once gold was found in the Black Hills, miners were soon moving into the Sioux hunting grounds and demanding protection from the United States Army. Soon, the Army was ordered to move against wandering bands of Sioux hunting on the range in accordance with their treaty rights. In 1876, Custer, leading an army detachment, encountered the encampment of Sioux and Cheyenne at the Little Bighorn River. Custer's detachment was annihilated, but the United States would continue its battle against the Sioux in the Black Hills until the government confiscated the land in 1877. To this day, ownership of the Black Hills remains the subject of a legal dispute between the U.S. government and the Sioux. We packed them... on top of the ammunition boxes in the wagons.... Could not tell Cavalry from the Infantry. All dead bodies stripped naked, crushed skulls, with war clubs, ears, nose and legs had been cut off, scalps torn away and the bodies pierced with bullets and arrows, wrists, feet and ankles leaving each attached by a tendon... We walked on their internals and did not know it in the high grass. Picked them up, that is their internals, did not know the soldier they belonged to, so you see the cavalry man got an infantry man's guts and an infantry man got a cavalry man's guts. Private John Guthrie describing Fetterman’s Massacre http://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/sioux-treaty/ http://www-cgsc.army.mil/carl/resources/csi/sioux/sioux.asp
  3. http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~nalakota/wotw/mlyhbb/medlodge_wotw0838.htm
  4. Native Americans lost more than 90 million acres of Indian land. The Indian estate amounted in 1887 to 136,394,985 acres. By 1920 it had shrunk to 72,660,316 acres, of which 17,575,033 acres were leased to whites. In Congress, the bill was pushed through not by greedy Western land speculators, but by Eastern humanitarians that felt that “communal landholding was an obstacle to the civilization they wanted Indians to acquire.” They also feared that by doing nothing the Indians would succumb totally to Westward expansion; the government doing little or nothing to stop it.
  5. Native Americans lost more than 90 million acres of Indian land. The Indian estate amounted in 1887 to 136,394,985 acres. By 1920 it had shrunk to 72,660,316 acres, of which 17,575,033 acres were leased to whites. In Congress, the bill was pushed through not by greedy Western land speculators, but by Eastern humanitarians that felt that “communal landholding was an obstacle to the civilization they wanted Indians to acquire.” They also feared that by doing nothing the Indians would succumb totally to Westward expansion; the government doing little or nothing to stop it.
  6. Even reservations that were still unallotted by 1904 lost land, however. Even with the addition of new reservations after 1887, statistics for 47 unallotted reservations, agencies and tribal units shows that more than 37 percent of their land was alienated between 1887 and 1904.
  7. A 1911 ad offering former reservation land for sale. Most of the land sold the previous year (1910) was Sioux land. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_Ridge_Indian_Reservation
  8. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bia-map-indian-reservations-usa.png
  9. The person to whom title was granted had to be at least 21 years of age, white, and free, to have built on the section, and to have farmed on it for 5 years, and to have a house on it that was at least 12 by 14 feet (3.6 x 4.3 m) in size. The Act was signed into law by President Abraham Lincoln on May 20, 1862. Eventually 1.6 million homesteads were granted and 270 million acres was privatized between 1862 and 1964. A total of 10% of all lands in the United States.
  10. Carlisle, Penn. 1879-1917. At the Carlisle school Pratt was instructed to recruit 36 children from each of the reservations. Parents were persuaded to send their children. If their children were literate, maybe they could prevent the mistakes of the past.