Westward Expansion and the American Indians Chapter 5 Section 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ch. 18: Growth in the West Westward Expansion
Advertisements

Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed.
Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West
Warm Up – Write down two facts from looking at the maps. (You must use more than one map)
Native American Struggles The Battle for the West.
NATIVE AMERICANS History and Culture. Types of Native American Tribes  Southeast Indians  Eastern Woodlands Indians  Northwest Indians  Great Plains.
Objectives Describe the importance of the buffalo to the Native Americans of the Plains. Explain how Native Americans and settlers came into conflict.
Native American Struggles Chap. 18 Sec. 3. Following the Buffalo Many white settler started coming to the Great Plains and upsetting the Native American’s.
OBJS 1. Discuss why the United States adopted the reservation policy. 2. Explain why war erupted between the Native Americans and the US Government. 3.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. Native American Struggles.
TEKS 8C: Calculate percent composition and empirical and molecular formulas. reservation – specific area set aside by the federal government for the Indians’
Chapter 6.  The South Remained largely agricultural and poor after the Civil War  Farming became more diversified; grain, tobacco, and fruit crops.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War BeginsWestward Expansion and the American Indians Section 2 Chapter 15 Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American.
Native American Conflicts and Policies
Objectives Describe the importance of the buffalo to the Native Americans of the Plains. Explain how Native Americans and settlers came into conflict.
Native Americans Fight to Survive
Conflict with Native Americans
Bell Ringer Which of the following statements do you most agree:
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Objectives – Lessons 3  Students will identify ways in which the U.S. government attempted to force Native Americans off their land.  Students will analyze.
Chapter 25 Section 1 The Cold War Begins Section 2 Westward Expansion and the American Indians Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed.
Warm-ups (Ch.7 – 09/13) In 1849, miners discovered a precious substance in California: gold. Within a year, prospectors flocked to California determined.
Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee The West
CH. 13; SECT. 1 STD: 2.6 The Fight For the West. Stage Set for Conflict Many diff. Native American nations make up the plains Indians Buffalo  Main source.
 What conflicts would have arisen between all the different types of people who were settling the last (western) frontier of America? And who was the.
The Wild West I shall not be there. I shall rise and pass. Bury my heart at Wounded Knee. Stephen Vincent Benet.
The End of the Indians Another Tribe Season Ends In Defeat.
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
The Closing of the Western Frontier.
Native American Struggles “Let me be a freeman – free to travel, free to stop, free to work, free to trade where I choose, free to choose my own teachers,
Cultures Clash on the Prairie Section 13-1 pp
Exploring American History Unit VI – A Growing America Chapter 18 Section 2 – War for the West.
Cultures Clash on the Prairie: Chapter 13 Ms. Garvin US History I.
Bell Ringer 1.Get with your partner and finish your posters. 2.When you are finished hang your poster on the right side of the bulletin board. 3.Do not.
Conflict with Native Americans. Cultures Under Pressure  Though there were many tribes present on the Plains, they all shared a common idea– that they.
TOPIC 3: Challenges in the Late 1800s ( )
What does the term “Wild West” mean to you and why?
Westward Expansion Explain the social and economic effects of westward expansion on Native Americans; including opposing views on land ownership,
Westward Expansion & the American Indians
Native American Struggles
13.1 Cultures Clash on the Prairies
Ch Notes Native American Struggles
US Government Relations with Indians Aim - How did the movement west help to end the Native American way of life? Broken Promises U.S. government makes.
Native Americans Conflict with American Expansion
ENTRY #7 ENTRY #7, PART A: (start film at 11:51 mark)
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
The Native American Wars
Native Americans of the West
Warm-ups (Ch.7 – 09/13) In 1849, miners discovered a precious substance in California: gold. Within a year, prospectors flocked to California determined.
Native Americans on the Plains
Native Experience.
Daily Warm Up Name as many Native American tools/weapons, materials as you can In what ways are Native American and “White” American culture different.
Objectives – Lessons 3 Students will identify ways in which the U.S. government attempted to force Native Americans off their land. Students will analyze.
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Westward Expansion and the American Indians
Cultures Clash on the Plains
Westward Expansion American History.
Chapter 18 – Americans Move West
Native American Struggles
Native American Struggles
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Chapter 15 Section 2: Westward Expansion and the Native Americans
Native American Struggles
Conflict on the Great Plains
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Chapter 14 “Looking to the West”
Conflicts on the Plains
Objectives Compare the ways Native Americans and white settlers viewed and used the land. Describe the conflicts between white settlers and Indians.
Plains Indians -Great Plains or Great American Desert
Presentation transcript:

Westward Expansion and the American Indians Chapter 5 Section 1

"Do not misunderstand me [and] my affection for the land. I never said the land was mine to do with as I chose. The one who has the right to dispose of it is the one who has created it. I claim a right to live on my land, and accord you the privilege to live on yours. The earth is the mother of all people and all people should have equal rights upon it. “You might as well expect the rivers to run backward as that any man who was born a free man should be contented when penned up and denied liberty to go where he pleases...” -Chief Joseph

Who is Chief Joseph? Nez Perces group fled to Canada banished to Oklahoma, DC to lobby for mercy What point is Chief Joseph making about Indian ownership of the land? How did the white man's use of land differ from the Indian's use of land? How did the white man's view of land ownership differ from the Indian's view? Do Native Americans own land today? Do you agree with Chief Joseph's view of land ownership?

Background Sole power for regulating trade with Native Americans went to federal government Native Americans resettle west of Mississippi Pressure from white settlers!

Diverse Cultures Pacific Northwest: Klamaths Chinooks Shastas Fish and forest animals

Diverse Cultures (cont.) Farther south small bands of hunter gatherers struggled to exist on: Small game Insects Berries Acorns and roots

Diverse Cultures (cont.) New Mexico/Arizona: Pueblos Irrigated land for: Corn, squash, beans Adobe homes Navajos Mud homes, hogans

Diverse Cultures (cont.) Plains Indians *most numerous Sioux Blackfeet Crows Cheyenne Comanches Expert horseman and hunters BUFFALO!!- lodging, clothing, food and tools.

View of Nature Native Americans White people They were part of nature, sacred Nature was a resource to produce wealth

Threatened by Advancing Settlers President Jackson- moved Cherokee to Great Plains Native Americans welcome to Great American Desert Why? Staggering Blows to Natives Reservations Disease Buffalo

New Settlers and Native Americans Clash Rebellion Sioux vs Minnesota Sand Creek Massacre Peace Plan? Fort Laramie Treaty Bureau of Indian Affairs- set up to distribute adequate land/supplies

End of the Indian Wars Red River War- BUFFALO Battle of Little Big Horn - GOLD Black Hills Gold Rush (1875) Chief Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull vs. General Custer

End of the Indian Wars (cont.) Wounded Knee- Ghost Dance (goal was to banish white settlers and restore buffalo to the Plains) Sitting Bull arrest ordered/killed

Government Promotes Assimilation Reservation policy= failure Assimilation- adopting the main culture of a society Buffalo extinction? Dawes Act