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Cultures in Conflict Chapter 17. Native Americans Control the West ► By 1866 most American Indians had been removed from eastern Texas. However, many.

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Presentation on theme: "Cultures in Conflict Chapter 17. Native Americans Control the West ► By 1866 most American Indians had been removed from eastern Texas. However, many."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cultures in Conflict Chapter 17

2 Native Americans Control the West ► By 1866 most American Indians had been removed from eastern Texas. However, many tribes still roamed west Texas. ► Federal soldiers left western Texas to fight in the Civil War, leaving the western regions vulnerable to attack. ► Settlers in West Texas were defenseless, and some moved east to safer areas.

3 Native Americans Control the West ► To prevent further attacks, federal soldiers were stationed in West Texas. ► Forts were built too far apart, and there were not enough soldiers to prevent Indian attacks. ► American Indians had advantages because they knew the territory

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5 The Search for Peace ► In 1867 the Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek was signed. Terms of the Treaty included: 1- American Indians agreed to live on reservations in Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma). 2- Federal government would provide food and supplies, but 3- Federal troops would not be allowed on Reservations. 3- Indians would agree to stop making raids on Anglo American settlements.

6 The Search for Peace ► Many federal agents assigned by President Grant were Quakers, who did not believe in violence. ► Quaker Lawrie Tatum, the agent in Indian Territory, worked to educate the Plains people in agriculture so they could live in the Anglo world.

7 The Peace Policy Fails ► Peace did not come to western Texas because many Native American leaders did not sign the treaty. ► About one-half of the Comanches and many Kiowas refused to move to reservations.

8 The Peace Policy Fails The Peace Policy Fails ► Kiowa chief Satanta insisted that West Texas belonged to the Comanches and Kiowas. ► Known as the “Orator of the Plains”... ► he believed that without the buffalo, they could not survive on reservations.

9 The Peace Policy Fails ► Comanche chief Quanah Parker, son of Peta Nocona and Anglo American woman Cynthia Ann Parker ► Cynthia had been captured by Comanches as a child; her son Quanah, spent 10 years raiding Anglo settlers trying to stop the spread of Anglo settlements.

10 Cynthia Ann Parker Quanah Parker

11 The Peace Policy Ends ► The Peace Policy failed and the Native American raids continued. ► General William T. Sherman went to West Texas to investigate.

12 The Peace Policy Ends ► Satanta was sent to the state prison at Huntsville. He found prison life intolerable and is believed to have killed himself. ► The peace policy was then abandoned, and the army began a campaign to destroy Native American camps and force them onto reservations.

13 Native Americans Depend on the Buffalo ► Native Americans feared the decreasing numbers of buffalo would end their way of life. ► Native Americans used every part of the buffalo, including skins, horns, and sinews

14 Buffalo Herds Are Slaughtered ► The buffalo slaughter began in the 1870s, and by 1873 the herds north of Texas were gone. Hunters then began moving onto the Texas plains.

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16 Buffalo Herds Are Slaughtered ► A law was proposed in the Texas legislature to protect the buffalo, but General Philip Sheridan, commander of the U.S. military of the Southwest, helped to defeat the bill. ► Without the buffalo for food, clothing, shelter, and other necessities, the Native Americans of the Plains could not survive, so they struck back to save their culture.

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18 The Attack on Adobe Walls ► In June 1874 Quanah Parker led several hundred warriors from five Native American nations in an attack on a buffalo hunters’ camp at Adobe Walls. ► 28 men and 1 woman in camp took up a defense in a saloon and 2 stores in the town. They held the off the Native American attacks losing only 3 men.

19 The Attack on Adobe Walls ► Enraged by their inability to defeat the buffalo hunters Quanah Parker and the other warriors retreated. ► Joined by many Native Americans on reservations, the Plains people spread across 5 states and territories, killing 190 Anglo Americans in 2 months.

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21 The Red River Campaign ► President Grant put the army in charge of Native American affairs in West Texas. ► About 4,000 Comanches, Kiowas, and Cheyenne spread their camps into canyons and valleys in the Texas Panhandle.

22 The Red River Campaign The Red River Campaign ► The first battle of the Red River campaign was fought in late August 1874. ► The army did not halt the search for Native Americans’ camps until the following spring.

23 The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon ► The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon, on September 28, 1874, was the most decisive battle of the Red River campaign. ► By early November most of the Native American bands had given up and were headed toward reservations.

24 The Battle of Palo Duro Canyon ► After the Red River campaign, Native Americans rarely were seen on the prairies of Central and West Texas. ► Kickapoo and Apache warriors, however, continued their struggle for a few more years in the border country along the Rio Grande.

25 I’m just a Buffalo Soldier in the heart of America,

26 ► Native Americans called the African American troops "buffalo soldiers," a title of great respect.  Experienced campaigners, skilled in warfare on the frontier  The army recognized their courage.  Nineteen buffalo soldiers received Medals of Honor from Congress for service in the U.S. Army during the wars in the American West. Buffalo Soldiers

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28 ► Between 1528 and 1890: 95% of Texas Indians died ► 1821-1844 o 30,000 Anglo and Hispanic settlers in Texas o 15,000 Plains Indians ► By 1860, o there were less than 8,000 Indians, o and 600,000 Anglo settlers in Texas. o The Texans further had access to repeating rifles and revolvers. Time of Sadness for Native Americans

29 ► Ambitious ranchers took advantage of the lack of law and order to expand their lands and herds of cattle. ► Many poorer people, especially those of Mexican heritage, lost their lands and were mistreated in other ways. ► In many cases it was difficult to determine the true ownership of cattle. West Texas Expansion

30 ► Anglo American settlers poured into western Texas immediately after the removal of the Native Americans. ► They settled along transportation routes and quickly built new towns. ► The railroads being built west from Fort Worth and Temple brought farming communities to lands that only a few years before had been the home of the Comanche. West Texas Expansion

31 ► Large amount of land available ► Large supply of wild longhorn on the Texas frontier ► Demand for beef in the northern and eastern United States ► Longhorns were worth $40 a head in northern city packinghouses


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