Conflict On The Plains Flashcards
Why was the permanent Indian fortier broken?
Gold was discovered that changed ideas, the land was no longer viewed as worthless and the Indians were seem as wasting the land
Manifest destiny also contributed
What were the exterminators?
The exterminators were the white settlers that had conflict with the Indians due to the fact that they were settling on their land. They developed negative attitudes towards the indians and wanted them gone.
- they had more influence as they were living on the plains and the army would usually side with them
What were the negotiators?
These were mainly the government and east, they did not share the same views as the exterminators and thought that through talking they could solve there differences
Why did the US government and Plains Indians end up at war?
- Reservations - the land given to the plains indians was not very good for farming on, moreover the plains indians wanted to continue hunting the buffalo which they could not do on the reservations
- Manifest Destiny - Indians were not part of the American Dream by the end of the 1800s and they were not wanted as manifest destiny was about taking over the whole continent
- New Indian Leaders- Indians such as sitting bull and crazy horse had witnessed the hardships faced by the Indians after Little Crows war, they became popular as they didn’t want to put up with the hardships and crap that the government gave them.
- Violence - by the second half of the 1800s both sides had committed horrible acts of violence and the army was on constant standby
What was the permanent indian fortier?
It was created when the US government did not want any of the land as they thought it was not profitable as it was desert land
Describe the events of the battle of little bighorn?
- In June 1876 sitting bull and crazy horse along with 2000 warriors from sioux set up camp on bighorn river outside the sioux reservation
- the army began to prepare an attack
- on the 17th June 1876 the battle of rosebud took place and crazy horse and some warriors attacked general crooks column, they killed or injured soldiers before retreating therefore crook could no longer attack as he was so weak
- terry and gibson joined forces, the seventh Calvary led by Custer would attack from the south, Custer refused extra weapons and men
- Custer traveled day and night to reach the sioux camp
- arrived a day earlier but were exhausted
- scouts reported the Indian camp were packing up and leaving so they attacked the
- Custer split men into three groups to attack from different sides
- Renos and Benteens failed and retreated
- Custer carried on, he was outnumbered, outgunned, all fought to end but died, they were scalped or mutated
Did the Indians win or lose the Battle of Little Bighorn?
+ sitting bull managed to unite 7000 Indians under his leadership
+ changed battle tactics to defeat US army
+ wiped out all of Custer’s company
+ in military terms they definitely won
- news of defeat reached the east on 4th July 1876 100th anniversary
- loss remaining government put under pressure to eliminate them
- humiliation of defeat made the army re-examine its strength, 2 new forts and 2500 extra soldiers
- Indian unity ended after battle as they all dissolved
- eventually starving and without ammunition they surrendered
- force to sell black hills and other land
- homes and weapons taken away
- Crazy horse captured and killed in 1877
- sitting bull surrendered in 1881 - lost 2 inspiring and determined fighters
- Sioux’s last stand destroyed there way of life
How was the Native American way of life destroyed?
- Railroads
- excursion trains
- enables soldiers to be transported around quickly
- brought homesteaders onto the plains and moved the Indians out
- crossed the traditional hunting grounds
- encouraged cattle drives - Government
- passed Dawes act in 1887
- came up with the idea of reservations - supported railroads
- supported and funded army, homesteaders and there were never enough money for reservations
- gave away land promised to Indians at events such as the Oklahoma land grab in 1889 - Army
- used Indian scouts
- nothing to do when the civil war ended
- waged total war on Indians destroying homes and belongings so they had no choice but to move onto the reservations
- forts and bases on plains
- fought in winter when Indians did not
What was the Dawes act?
It divided Indian reservations into 160 acres parcels
- adults got 160 acres
- children got 80 acres
The rest of the land was sold to white settlers
What was the problems with the Dawes act?
- many Indians refused land or sold it for a fraction of what it was worth
- didn’t want the farming lifestyle
- became more dependent on handouts
- proud people which demoralised them
What happened to the battle of wounded knee in 1890?
- Life was bad and there was no food, horses and weapons
- They wanted to make things better so they asked the spirit world for help
- They danced the ghost dance which was illegal under reservation law
- The 7th Calvary moved in to arrest the ring leaders, sitting bull was the first victim and was shot by a sioux victim
- On the 29th December a scuffle broke out between ghost dance followers and army, this was lead by Big Foot
- The Calvary opened fire killing 146 Indians including 7 babies
- this was the end of the resistance
How did the life on the reservations differ to traditional life?
- nomadic
Lived in one area - bands were left by chiefs who were advised by leaders
They were supervised by the government which appointed Indian agents, they were dishonest and often cheated Indians - hunted buffalo for everything
Farmed the land which was often poor quality and relied on government handouts - horses were the most important thing in an Indian life as wealth was measured by horses
They were forced to live without horses and weapons
Why did the buffalo become extinct?
- Destruction of habitat
- homesteaders fenced off land which destroyed natural migration patterns
- not enough grazing land due to cattle ranches - Hunting for sport
- transcontinental railroads ran excursion trains
- employed hunters to supply buffalo meat for there workers and to keep them clear out of tracks
- if they passed a herd they would stop and encouraged passengers to shoot them - Hunting for hides
- after 1871 a new method of making leather was discovered and buffalo hides became very valuable
- high powered rifles were very important
- bone pickers would wait for caucuses to rote then take bones and hooves to sell - Deliberate extermination
- US gov and army deliberately wiped them out
- Indians had no food source and was forced to live on reservations
- army gave free ammunition to buffalo hunters
How was Indian culture was dismantled?
- Territorial
- spirit tribes into smaller groups so they could not work together
- Dawes act allowed Indian farmers to claim homesteads further weakening tribal bonds - Political
- chiefs did not work on reservations and Indian agents were in charge
- system of honours and elders was destroyed
- lost power to punish tribes
- become self-sufficient - Economic
- lack of horses and buffalo meant no trade system
- not allowed to hunt buffalo or steal horses - Religious
- old ceremonies banned
- Christian missionaries ran reservations
- couldn’t seek visions and power of medicine men undermined - Educational
- children sent to military style boarding schools
- not allowed to speak their own language, learn their history or follow their beliefs
- destroyed entire sense of nationality and made sure they could never return to there way of life
- alienated them
- parents were unable to prevent
Fort Laramie 1851
in 1849 the government made deals with the Comanche and Kiowa Indians this means the Indians would not attack travellers in return for land, Thomas Fitzpat4rick thought he could get a similar agreement with the Chyenne and Arapaho Indians, he did and they stopped attacking travellers along the Oregon trail in return for land, the government promised to protect them and pay the tribes/ broke treaty in 1859 when gold was discovered in 1859, white men surged through the Indians land, the Indians took their revenge and attacked travellers and railroad surveyers, the government made a new treaty which made the Indians abadon the terms of fort Laramie and were gave land among the rockies, some warriors refused to accept this and went on the warpath 1861 – fort wise treaty