3.3 Changing Government attitudes to Plains Indians Flashcards
1
Q
What were the aims of the Dawes Act 1887? (6)
A
- break up the power of the tribe and tribal chiefs, and encourage individualism
- encourage Indian families to farm for themselves, not rely on the tribe
- encourage Indians to assimilate and become US citizens
- reduce the influence of chiefs and tribal council
- reduce the cost to the federal government of running the reservation system
- free up more land for settlers
2
Q
When did the US census office declare that the Frontier was closed?
A
1890
3
Q
What were government attitudes to Native Americans
A
- Indians should assimilate into white America by becoming farmers, Christians and settle in one place
- there were pressures from whites who thought Indians were being given too much help and wanted Indian land for minerals, for farming
- Indians should be protected from whites by protecting land, signing treaties and through government support
- Indian wars proved Plains Indians were too dangerous: a threat that must be eliminated : “the only good Indian is a dead one”
- reducing food rations was a way of controlling Plains Indians
- corrupt American Indians were replaced by Christian missionaries to convert Plains Indians
4
Q
What did the closure of the Indian frontier mean?
A
that the USA had complete control of the West
5
Q
What did the Indian Appropriations act of 1871 do?
A
marked the end of Indians being treated as independent sovereign nations .
Native Americans were stripped of their power and their strength because from that point on they were considered only as individuals.
6
Q
When was the Dawes act?
A
1887
7
Q
What was the Dawes Act?
* features of the act
A
- each Indian family was allocated a 160-acre share of reservation land
- 80 acres were allotted to single Indians
- 40 acres to orphans under 18
- Indians who took their allotment and left reservation could then become American citizens
- could not sell their land allotments for 25 years
8
Q
What was the significance of the Dawes Act?
A
- By 1890, Indians had lost half the lands they had had in 1887 to whites
- those that took up allotments were not able to farm successfully: the land was too poor and they didn’t have enough land for the dry conditions
- White Americans cheated many Indians into selling their land
- Most Indians sold their land as soon as they could and ended up landless