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Out West (UNIT 1.1) : US Settlers Meet The Great Plains Indians

The document provides information about the settlement of the Great Plains by US settlers and their interactions with the indigenous Great Plains Indians. It describes how the GPI traditionally lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers following buffalo herds. The introduction of horses and guns by Europeans in the 16th century allowed the GPI to become skilled buffalo hunters. However, the influx of American settlers and gold miners in the mid-19th century disrupted the GPI's way of life and led to increasing tensions and violence between the groups over land use and rights. This culminated in events like the Sand Creek and Wounded Knee massacres, which nearly wiped out entire tribes. The US government enacted policies like the reservation system and

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views

Out West (UNIT 1.1) : US Settlers Meet The Great Plains Indians

The document provides information about the settlement of the Great Plains by US settlers and their interactions with the indigenous Great Plains Indians. It describes how the GPI traditionally lived as nomadic hunter-gatherers following buffalo herds. The introduction of horses and guns by Europeans in the 16th century allowed the GPI to become skilled buffalo hunters. However, the influx of American settlers and gold miners in the mid-19th century disrupted the GPI's way of life and led to increasing tensions and violence between the groups over land use and rights. This culminated in events like the Sand Creek and Wounded Knee massacres, which nearly wiped out entire tribes. The US government enacted policies like the reservation system and

Uploaded by

zowy
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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OUT WEST

(UNIT 1.1)
US settlers meet the Great Plains Indians
WHAT THE HECK IS A GREAT
PLAIN?!
▪ The Great Plains is the grassland in western-central US
▪ What’s missing in the picture?
THE GREAT PLAINS INDIANS
▪ In 1598 the Spanish brought a “good” to New
Mexico that changed life in NA-→
▪ the HORSE
▪ Before Euro’s brought horses and guns, the GPI
farmed and, hunted, gathered
▪ After guns/horses GPI stuck only to hunting--
▪ →BUFFALO (BISON)
BUFFALO FOR BREAKFAST,
LUNCH, DINNER, AND...
SHOES
▪ The Buffalo were literally the entire
livelihood of the GPI
▪ Skin used for teepees, clothes, shoes,
blankets
▪ Bones used for tools, eating utensils
▪ Meat was dried to make jerky or
pemmican
When you have no trees to burn
THE CULTURE OF THE GREAT
PLAINS INDIANS
▪ Families were small (hint: tepee size)
▪ Men: hunter/warriors
▪ Women: butchered meat/ prepped hides
▪ Children: learned assigned roles
▪ Believed spirits controlled everything (medicine man/shaman= priest)
▪ Government was communal (no dominant leader)
▪ “Leaders” ruled the people by counsel instead of force 
LAND: the thing that divides
▪ GPI believed that land could NOT be owned
(nomadic/followed buffalo/viewd themselves as caretakers of the earth)
▪      -Settlers believed owning land was CRUCIAL; gave them a stake in the
country, ability to farm, status...
▪ Consider the size of Europe vs the US
▪ (This is why settlers were called “settlers”; the GPI were “unsettled” or always
moving)

VS
THESE GOLD RUSHERS ARE
MESSY
▪ The Gold Rush forced 100’s of thousands of
American miners out west to look for gold
▪ These “gold diggers” would only set up
temporary towns with slovenly shacks and
wooden streets called “boomtowns”
▪ Gold rushers not only destroyed the beauty of
the prairies, but imposed on GPI hunting land
▪ GPI became upset
GREAT PLAINS BEFORE GOLD
RUSH
AFTER
US GOVERNMENT RESTRICTS GPI
▪ In 1834 US gov’t made one large
reservation for the GPI (pres. Jackson)
▪ In 1850’s, gov’t changed policy to
creating specific boundaries per tribe
▪ GPI ignored ridiculous boundaries and
clashed w/ white settlers (they can’t
hunt buffalo in one place!!)
  Review
1. When Spain introduced the ______ in the 17th
Word Bank:
century to America, it essentially caused the GPI
to forget how to farm.  ● Ghost
2. _______ viewed land as potential private ● GPI
property. ● Settlers
3. _______ viewed land as a shared, communal ● Boom
resource. ● Horse
4. Gold Rushers would build ______towns to
temporarily accommodate them while they
mined. When the Gold dried up, the towns were
deserted and referred to as _______towns.
BACK AND FORTH
VIOLENCE
Great Plains Indians and the US military
MASSACRE AT SAND CREEK
(FIRST MASSACRE)
▪ 1864 (winter)
▪ General S.R. Curtis wrote to a
Colonel, “I want no Peace till
the Indians suffer more.”
▪ US Army of the West led a
company to attack Cheyenne
and Arapaho in CO.
▪ 150 GPI were slaughtered Native American/US military Peace
Delegation meeting 2 months before
(mostly women and children) Sand Creek massacre
GPI “MASSACRE BACK” (1866)
▪ Fetterman’s Massacre/Battle of the 100 slain 1866
▪ White settlers settled on trail that ran through Sioux
hunting grounds called Bozeman Trail
▪ Sioux asked US gov’t to end white settlement there, but
gov’t did nothing (where Sioux hunted)
▪ In Dec. 1866, Crazy Horse (GPI warrior) led an
ambush on a nearby army company killing 80
soldiers
CUSTER’S LAST STAND
▪ The Battle of Little Bighorn was the height of the Sioux Wars
▪ 1876; The tenacious Lt. Colonel Custer led the 7th regiment on an attack
of the Sioux
▪ Crazy Horse, Sitting Bull, and many other Sioux were ready and
enraged
▪ At Little Bighorn River in Montana the Sioux slaughtered Custer AND
his entire Army regiment!! (268 US dead)
▪ Only 36 Sioux were killed
▪ Vengeful mutilation of soldiers
▪ US still redrew boundaries for more white settlers
SURRENDER OF THE SIOUX
▪ Years after the Battle, Sitting Bull surrendered
the Sioux to the US in 1885 to avoid starvation
of his people
▪ Sitting Bull ended up in a Wild West Show
▪ (from great leader/warrior TO cheap entertainer)

So… What do we do with all of
these conquered people?
▪ Despite hostilities, many sympathized with the
GPI
▪ ASSIMILATION: the term used for
“americanizing” the GPI (they’d have to
abandon beliefs, cut their hair, and be educated)
I like him better all Native Americany
Boom. Assimilated.
Americanized.
ALL OVER UNIT TEST...
▪ One way the gov’t practiced assimilation was by passing the Dawes
Act in 1887...
▪ This Act broke up the reservation land given to the GPI into small
pieces.
▪ 160 acres per family, 80 acres for single adult
▪ There was plenty of reserve land left over after giving pieces to GPI
▪ So gov’t sold the rest of GPI reserve land to
▪ US SETTLERS!!!
Can you find
the Dawes
Act?
SO NOW WHAT?..
▪ GPI hunt buffalo for everything.
▪ THEY DON’T KNOW HOW TO FARM
▪ Some GPI sell their “Dawes” land to settlers for little money
▪ This creates huge problems for GPI (forced to live like white settlers,
but can’t)
▪ GPI still impoverished today
▪ But at least the gov’t made some money, settled out west, and opened up
some land for railroads...
INSULT TO INJURY
▪ Not only are GPI restricted to small
plots, but bison are made (almost)
extinct
▪ 1800: 65,000,000 bison in NA
▪ 1890: 25 bison in NA
▪ 1900: 1 herd preserved in Yellowstone
▪ Tourists, fur traders, and sport hunters
destroyed GPI’s livelihood
STOP DANCING LIKE THAT
YOU'RE FREAKIN’ ME OUT!
▪ The poor, embittered Sioux turned to their tribal prophet for advice
▪ He proposed what anyone would propose in the midst of complete
annihilation:
▪ a dance.
▪ THE GHOST DANCE
▪ Ghost Dance catches on w/ 25,000 Sioux in 1890
▪ becomes a social movement
▪ Settlers are freaked out US orders arrest of Sitting Bull
▪ SB is shot dead when his bodyguard opens fire on police (1890)
*BATTLE* OF WOUNDED
KNEE...THE END
▪ Dec. 28, 1890
▪ US soldiers (7th Cavalry!) round up 350
starving/freezing Sioux in Wounded Knee Creek in SD
▪ All guns were taken from Sioux, except one...
▪ An unknown shot is fired...
▪ US opened fire on all 350 men women children with
cannon, gatling guns, and rifles
▪ All dead were left to freeze on ground
▪ Sioux wars and GPI violence end as a result
BUFFALO SOURCES ASSIGNMENT
ON TEAMS...

Wed/Thurs
8-26 & 27
US CITIZENS FILL UP THE
WEST QUICK!
▪ By 1900 over 25 million people had moved
to the West
▪ 4 Reasons:
1 Free Land
2 Gold
3 The Railroad
4 Fleeing discrimination
▪ RR companies began laying tracks in the
1860’s (Union Pacific went West to Omaha
and Central Pacific went East from CA)
CONNECTING THE EAST TO
THE WEST
▪ US Gov’t granted land (used by GPI) to RR to connect
the east and west (manifest destiny)
▪ 10-20 square miles were given to RR for every MILE of
track laid.
▪ In the end the gov’t gave RR 170 million acres!! Worth
half a BILLION dollars!! (manifest destiny)
▪ By 1869 the US had a transcontinental RR
▪ FIRST IN THE WORLD!!
▪ RR sold extra gov’t-given land to farmers (by now
you can tell RR owners were greedy)
Manifest Destiny
US GOV’T URGES WESTERN
SETTLEMENT WITH FREEBIES
▪ HOMESTEAD ACT of 1862: Congress
GAVE 160 acres of free land on the Great
Plains to anyone heading west to settle
▪ Land today in a suburban neighborhood runs
about $160,000 an acre!!!!
▪ From 1862 to 1900, 600,000 families took this
offer
▪ These families are referred to as
HOMESTEADERS
Homestead Act and Dawes Act
open up former Indian land for
sale to American settlers and
businesses

https://www.youtube.c
om/watch?v=k5IRCC
CPOzI
Not just settlers...
▪ 600,000 families acquired free land from
the Homestead Act of 1862
▪ They only took up 10% of all
Homestead Act land 
▪ Business owners such as miners and
woodcutters would claim free land for
its natural resources and make huge
PROFITS!
NO RACISTS ON THE QUIET
PRAIRIES
▪ A large portion of homesteaders who were
granted gov’t land were African Americans
from the South—former slaves who were being
tormented by the South’s Jim Crow system
▪ African Americans who left the post-
Reconstruction south for settlement out west
on the Great Plains were called,
EXODUSTERS
▪ EXODUS - TERS
CHALLENGES FOR SETTLERS

▪ Floods, fires, locusts, droughts, and


Indian raids were all real threats for new
settlers
▪ But by 1900, 1/3 of US population had
settled west for new opportunities
▪ US population in 1900
▪ 77 million (25 million out west!)
▪ 318 million today
NO, THEY DIDN’T LIVE IN
PRETTY LOG CABINS
▪ Because of the lack of trees on the Great
PLAINS, many settlers did either 1 of 2
things for housing
▪ 1. dig a “cave” out of the side of a hill
and make it a home (dugouts)
▪ 2. stack pieces of the dry sod from the
ground to make a house (soddies)
▪ Soddies were well insulated (dirt), but
frequently had snakes and leaked
EVERY time it rained
Summing up thus far...
▪ GOLD and FREE LAND enticed
Americans to move west
▪ The Railroad made it much
easier to get there (by 1869-
transcontinental RR)
▪ Some moved to escape
discrimination
▪ 25 million people would live in
the West by 1900
▪ Now what?
▪ Economy?
▪ How do they make $$?
NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR
FARMERS (GOOD AND BAD)
▪ As a farmers filled the Great Plains, an AGRARIAN MOVEMENT took
place (c. 1890)
▪ 35% of the country farmed the Plains!
▪ Increased farming spurred the need for more productive farm technology
▪ Steel Plow (1837) broke tough roots
▪ Reaper (1847) made harvest quick saving crops
▪ Grain Drill (1841) planted seeds quickly
▪ New farm tools changed 3 hour tasks down to 10 minutes (seeding a field)
▪ So this is the Good part of farming technology
Steam Plow
Steam Tractor
Reaper
THE BAD SIDE OF NEW
TECHNOLOGY
▪ Farming Equipment was expensive, therefore farmers had to get loans to buy them
▪ This put farmers in debt to…
▪ BANKS!!
▪ Also with new technology gave greater production (25% more output per farm)
▪ More production meant…
lower prices!!!!
▪ This meant that farmers were paid less per crop
▪ Farmers were now in debt AND receiving LESS pay!!
SUM UP THAT LAST SLIDE
▪ Better technology→
▪ more crops produced→
▪ higher supply of crops in market→
▪ demand of those crops stays constant→
▪ prices go down
CITY-FOLK CAN’T FARM…
▪ ToYET
educate the many new western settlers trying
to farm on their own, the gov’t passed the Morrill
Act of 1862
▪ The Morrill Act gave federal land to states so the
states could finance agricultural colleges
▪ Because the plains were usually dry, new
irrigation techniques like the windmill came out of these
colleges
THE EFFECT OF WESTERN
EXPANSION ON THE CHINESE
▪ In 1849 (gold rush), Chinese immigration to San
Francisco spiked dramatically
▪ 12 million between 1850 and 1882
▪ By 1860, the rush ended and many Chinese took RR
jobs
▪ Once TCRR was complete, anti-Chinese sentiment grew
as they began to take what few jobs existed in the west.
CHINESE EXCLUSION ACT 1882
▪ In resisting discrimination, the Chinese formed enclaves
throughout CA
San Francisco,
c. 1900

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