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9780789451620

Native Americans : A History in Pictures

by ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780789451620

  • ISBN10:

    078945162X

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2000-04-19
  • Publisher: DK Publishing, Inc.
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List Price: $24.95

Summary

An amazing photographic history of the Native American experience.

Table of Contents

Foreword 6(2)
Beverly Wright
Introduction 8(8)
A conflict of Cultures Ancestral Times to 1850s 16(40)
Ancestral Native Life
18(4)
The Spirit World
22(4)
Native Voice: Black Elk
26(2)
European Penetration
28(2)
First European Contacts
30(4)
Indian Removals
34(2)
Native Voice: Tecumseh
36(2)
Nature's Harvest
38(4)
Indian Homelands Disrupted
42(4)
Opening up the West
46(2)
Arrival of the Missionaries
48(6)
A Traditional Indian Childhood
54(2)
Dispossession and Loss 1780s to 1860s 56(22)
Time for Talking
58(2)
Native Voice: Harold Cardinal
60(2)
Indians in the Civil War
62(2)
The Santee Dakota Revolt
64(4)
Native Voice: Little Crow
68(2)
Massacre at Sand Creek
70(4)
The Navajo Long Walk
74(2)
Native Voice: Manuelito
76(2)
War Against Native Peoples 1860s to 1890s 78(60)
Southern Plains Conflict
80(6)
The Staff of Life
86(2)
War for the Northern Plains
88(4)
Battles for the West
92(2)
Battle of the Little Bighorn
94(4)
Wild West Myths
98(2)
Canada Past and Present
100(2)
The Riel Rebellions
102(2)
Native Voice: Louis Riel
104(4)
Wars for the West
108(4)
Native Voice: Sarah Winnemucca
112(2)
The Nez Perce War
114(2)
Apaches Hold Out
116(4)
Native Voice: Eskiminzin
120(2)
Carving up Reservations
122(4)
Native Voice: Carl Sweezy
126(2)
Boarding Schools
128(4)
The End of Armed Resistance
132(4)
Native Voice: American Horse
136(2)
Resurgence and Renewal 1900 to Present Day 138(48)
Life on the Reservations
140(6)
Native Voice: Pretty-Shield
146(2)
Struggle for a New Deal
148(4)
On Military Service
152(4)
Termination and Relocation
156(2)
Trading an Image
158(4)
The March of Red Power
162(4)
Native Voice: Adam Fortunate Eagle
166(4)
The Fight Continues
170(2)
Homelands in the US Today
172(2)
Contemporary Indian Life
174(6)
Native Voice: Wilma Mankiller
180(2)
Revitalized Cultures
182(2)
Native Voice: Ella Deloria
184(2)
Bibliography and Useful Addresses 186(2)
Index 188(4)
Acknowledgments and Credits 192

Supplemental Materials

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Excerpts


Chapter One


Ancestral Times to 1850s
------------------------

A CONFLICT
OF CULTURES


Encounters between North American Native peoples and Europeans began peaceably, but soon deteriorated as the newcomers sought to conquer the disease-weakened Native populations.


Ancestral Native Life


For at least 30,000 YEARS, long before the first arrivals of Europeans in 1500, ancient Native peoples had populated the North American landscape with a diversity of thriving societies. These first Americans regarded nature as the source of all existence and excelled at exploiting natural resources and adapting to the climates and terrains in which they lived. Many Natives today dispute scientific theories that their ancestors originally migrated across the Bering Sea land bridge from Siberia to Alaska.


Some scientists believe that the human history of North America began when small bands of Paleo-Indian hunters made their way across the Bering Sea land bridge from Siberia to Alaska. Eventually these people and their descendants spread throughout North and South America, and they, the scientists say, are the ancestors of all subsequent generations of Native peoples. The best known of the early arrivals are estimated to have occurred between 30,000 and 50,000 years ago, but some archaeologists extend this period back to 100,000 years.

    Many Native peoples, however, argue that their ancestors originated in the Americas, and they question the scientists' theories, citing the lack of archaeological evidence, the difficulty of the journey, and the fact that the theory does not fit with tribes' oral accounts of their origins, which have been passed on through the generations. These creation stories describe spirits ascending from the underground or the sea into the world today, and tell of spiritual beings descending from the sky. In such accounts, the spirits often create people after arriving in the present-day world.


Developing Native Cultures

By AD 1000, Native peoples had established complex societies across North America. Dense populations on the Northwest coast exploited the abundance of sea mammals and fish in the Pacific Ocean and in the tributaries of the Columbia River. A warm climate promoted the growth of vast forests of giant evergreen trees, which the Natives used to build houses and to construct giant totem poles.

    In the deserts of the Southwest, the Natives built apartment-like dwellings and practiced agriculture so successfully that, even in such arid surroundings, they could support sizable populations. In the Arctic, inhabitants adapted remarkably well to the harsh environment, becoming highly skilled hunters and fishermen and relying on sea and land mammals to provide dependable food sources. The forests of the Northeast were a natural resource for Native peoples — wood for houses, boats, tools, and fuel, as well as bark for clothing, roofing, and bedding. These forests also housed game — a source of meat for food, hides for clothing, and bones for tools.

    The famous Plains Indian culture evolved in the treeless grassland region only after the arrival of whites. Different kinds of animals, such as buffalo, antelope, deer, elk, and rabbits, lived on the grasslands and provided meat for food as well as hides, bones, and horns for shelter, clothing, and tools.


Natural Spirituality

Religion was the center of existence for these ancient peoples, who constructed their ceremonies and rituals around solstices and equinoxes. They worshiped at natural sacred sites, where they communed with their ancestors and with plants, animals, and spirits. Their daily lives were built around praying to spiritual powers and giving thanks for crop harvests and success in hunting.


The Pueblo Peoples

Around AD 800, the Pueblo Indians, began to from their distinctive cultures, living in multilevel, apartment-style adobe villages. As well as being gifted potters, they mastered irrigation, allowing them to farm in the arid environment. They also plated crops at the mouths of large washes to capture the runoff from heavy rainfall.


League of the Iroquois

Some time before the mid-fifteenth century, five nations in present-day New York State and Ontario — Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca (later jointed by the Tuscarora) — united to form the Iroquois Confederacy. Known as Haudenosaunee (People of the Longhouse), the nations form an east-to-west geographic line, just as families were arranged in a longhouse.


The Blackfeet

One of the most powerful and numerous Indian tribes, the Blackfeet controlled a huge area from the North Saskatchewan River in what is now Alberta, Canada, to the upper Missouri River in present-day Montana. They adapted to a mobile life on the open grasslands, hunting buffalo, their main food source, on foot with stone and bone arrows and lances.


The Haida

The Northwest coast provided an abundant food supply for the Haida, who lived on the Queen Charlotte Islands, off present-day British Columbia. There, they hunted sea mammals, such as seals, and fished for cod. In an area well supplied with timber, they built large houses of cedar planks; the door openings faced the sea and one or more totem poles were erected in front of each house.


The Inuits

The Inuits, formerly known in Canada as Eskimos (see p.15), have lived in Alaska, the Northwest Territories, the provinces of Newfoundland and Quebec, Siberia, and Greenland. In this mostly icebound region, some Inuits hunted walruses, seals, and whales for food, clothing, weapons, tools, and oil for lighting and cooking. Inland, others hunted caribou for meat and materials.

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