Native American Tribes and Leaders Leaders Red Cloud Oglalasioux

Native American Tribes and Leaders Leaders Red Cloud Oglalasioux

Native American Tribes and Leaders Leaders ● Red Cloud ○ Oglala­Sioux chief ○ Namesake war fought in northern Wyoming ■ Signed Treaty of Laramie to end Red Cloud's war ■ that treaty led to life on Indian reservations ○ offered Sam Deon protection ○ shot Bull Bear in the head ○ Charles Wesley Allen wrote part of his “autobiography” ○ Wagon Box fight ○ letter to president asking if VT McGillycuddy be removed from office ○ attacked Fort Phil Kearney ○ Fetterman Massacre ○ Oglala Lakota chief ○ namesake war is over Powder River (Montana/Wyoming border) ○ married Pretty Owl ○ son Running Doe ● Crazy Horse ○ surrendered to US troops under General Crook ○ resisted imprisonment at Camp Robinson ○ Battle of Platte Bridge ○ Battle of Red Buttes ■ Those two battles were after the Sand Creek Massacre of his allies ○ Battle of the Hundred in the Hand ○ title of “shirt wearer” ○ birth name means “among the trees” ○ shot in the mouth by No Water ○ married Black Shawl ○ faced Anson Mills at Slim Buttes ○ faced Custer at the Battle of Little Bighorn ○ led Crow and Shoshone at the Battle of the Rosebud ○ Last Sun Dance of 1877 honored this man ○ body was first taken to Camp Sheridan after he died by his parents, but true place of his remains is now unknown ● Sacagawea ○ major guide during the Lewis and Clark expedition ○ married to French trapper Charboneau ○ son Jean­Baptiste was carried on her back during expedition with Corps of Discovery ○ Jean­Baptiste educated by Clark at the Saint Louis Academy ○ birthed a daughter Lizette ■ died of an unknown sickness ○ died in 1812 ○ may have married into Comanche tribe and died in 1884 ○ may have taken on the name Porivo and lived at Ft. Bridger in Wyoming ○ of the Shoshone tribe ○ Crunelle sculpture of her in Bismarck, ND capitol ● Tecumseh ○ his father died in Lord Dunmore’s War ■ died at the battle of Point Pleasant ○ founded a settlement after having a vision from the Master of Life ○ namesake war started when a Lenape chief died ■ that war included a faction called the Red Sticks ■ stemmed from the Treaty of Fort Wayne ○ his alleged killer used a political slogan containing his name saying “Rumpsy Dumpsy” ○ brother named Tenskwatawa ○ defeated by William Henry Harrison at the Battle of Tippecanoe ○ brother called the prophet ○ Shawnee chief ○ killed by Richard Mentor Johnson in the War of 1812 ■ this led to Johnson becoming Martin Van Buren’s VP ○ joined British general Henry Procter ○ attacked Ft. Meigs ○ resisted William Dudley’s force ○ led part of Bluejacket’s Force ○ defeated at the battle of Fallen Timbers ○ criticized chiefs who signed the Treaty of Greenville ○ died at the Battle of Thames ○ mother moved him to Missouri where he was raised by his sister who trained him to become a warrior ○ predicted the New Madrid earthquakes ○ name meant “Shooting Star” ○ set up Prophetstown ● Sitting Bull ○ accused Charles Dawes and John Logan of doing business while drunk ○ killed by Red Tomahawk ○ took bad advice of Kicking Bear ○ imprisoned for a time at Fort Randall ○ James McLaughlin antagonized him ○ lived at Standing Rock ○ associated with Gall ○ prophecy of “soldiers falling from the sky” at Rosebud ○ Hunkpapa Sioux chief ○ defeated Custer w/ Crazy Horse at Little Bighorn ○ received a gardening hoe at one meeting ○ financed by the wealthy Catherine Weldon ○ surrender at Fort Buford ○ killed by the police in South Dakota for connections w/ the Ghost Dancers ○ completed a tour with Buffalo Bill Cody’s Show ○ Lakota Sioux leader ● Black Hawk ○ General Henry Atkins fought him in his namesake war ○ Ft Dixon ○ exploits of Shabonee in his namesake conflict ○ Ft Armstrong was his base ■ that was located on Rock Island ○ rivalry with Keokuk ■ stemmed from aid of the US in the War 1812 ○ sent to Ft. Monroe after he was finally defeated ○ many members of his tribe were killed at the Bad Axe Massacre ○ led Sauk and Fox Indians ○ namesake 1832 war in Iowa and Illinois ○ Namesake War: ■ Gov. John Reynolds ■ Lifetime of Ma­ka­tai­me­she­kia­kiak ■ Fortress Monroe was where he was imprisoned ■ his base was on Rock Island ● Geronimo ○ revolted against mismanagement of Colonel George Crook ○ joined the Dutch Reformed Church ■ wanted to “take the white man’s road” ■ kicked out of the Church for gambling ○ Surrendered at the Skeleton Canyon conference to Nelson Miles ■ didn’t go back to Arizona as promised ○ placed on reservation called “Hell’s Forty Acres” ○ leader of the Chiricahua Apache ● Pontiac ○ John Bradstreet proposed treaties with this man ■ those were opposed by Thomas Gage ○ retreated to the Maumee River after winning one battle ○ won at Bloody Run ○ defeated by Bouquet at Bushy Run ○ made peace with Sir William Johnson ○ killed by a member of the Peoria ○ subject of a tragedy written by British soldier Robert Rogers ○ Francis Parkman wrote Conspiracy of this man ○ forced killed Captain James Dalyell ○ General Amherst put 200 pound bounty on him ○ killed at Cahokia ○ Namesake Rebellion in 1763­64 ■ Paxton Boys Massacre ■ Siege of Ft. Miami ■ Siege of Ft. Pitt ■ Siege of Ft. Detroit ● fought the British ■ Proclamation of 1763 was a response to it ■ Devil’s Hole Massacre ■ Battle of Bloody Run ■ Henry Gladwin defended a key outpost ■ smallpox infected blankets given to Indians ● done by Amherst at Ft. Pitt ■ occurred in the Great Lakes Region ○ Ottawa Chief ● Hiawatha ○ Leader and Co­founder of the Iroquois Confederacy ○ Longfellow wrote about him in The Song of Hiawatha ○ The Hiawathan belt, whose design would later form the flag of the Iroquois Confederacy, is named after him Tribes ● Lokata ○ same thing as Sioux ○ most prominent leader was part of its Hunkpapa group ○ Wakan Tanka ■ also called Great Mystery ■ that was the primary religious entity of this group ○ retained control over the Powder River ○ Treaty of Ft. Laramie ○ Great Plains tribe of Native Americans massacred at Wounded Knee ○ Leaders include: ■ Sitting Bull ■ Red Cloud ■ Crazy Horse ○ this tribe defeated Custer at Little Bighorn ● Shoshone ○ First National Forest named after this tribe ○ Ancestors called the Numa people ○ Some moved south to Texas and became the Comanche ○ Bear river massacre occurred when US troops killed over 400 Shoshone ○ Fought against US in Snake War from 1864­1868 ○ Joined the Bannock tribe to fight the Bannock war against US in 1878 ○ Fought the Sheepeater Indian war ○ Mike Daggot led a group of them that murdered 4 settlers in Nevada ● Shawnee ○ Fort Ancient Culture ○ Lenape are their “grandfathers” ○ chief Cornstalk ○ Lord Dunmore’s War ○ battle of Point Pleasant ○ Leaders: ■ Cornstalk ■ Tecumseh ■ Blackfish ■ Blue Jacket ■ Black Hoof ■ Black Bob ■ Charles Linney ■ The Prophet ○ Treaty of St. Louis ○ settled in the Shenandoah Valley ○ Treaty of Easton ○ Took part in Braddock’s (French and Indian) war ○ joined the Cherokee in the Chickamauga Wars ○ Treaty of Fort Meigs created three reservations: ■ Wampoughaneta ■ Hog’s Creek ■ Lewistown ○ Namesake Methodist mission in Gum River Kansas ● Sauk ○ Chief Blackhawk was Sauk ○ Used a clan system named after animals and plants ○ Settled near Saginaw Bay, Michigan ■ Often called "yellow­earth" due to the color of the soil in Saginaw area ○ Keokuk is another famous Sauk leader ○ Fought two wars against the French ■ Lost to French General Edmund Gaines in Blackhawk war ○ Sac and Fox are the two parts of this tribe when they split up ○ Jim Thorpe, the famous football player, is half Sauk ● Apache ○ one leader nicknamed “Red Sleeves” ○ John Carleton’s California column defeated this tribe at a pass in the Civil War ○ Jicarilla branch defeated John Davidson at Cieneguilla ○ Bascom Affair sparked a war ○ Pinal and Aravaipa branches ○ Camp Grant Massacre ○ Crook replaced by Miles to subdue a rebellion of its Chiricahua Branch ○ Leaders Include ■ by Striped Arrows ■ by Cochise ■ Geronimo ● was exiled to Ft. Pickens, Florida ● known as Goyathlay ■ Magnas Coloradas ● lends his name to county in SE Arizona ○ western native American tribe ○ Alma Massacre ■ started by this tribe’s member, Victorio ○ Battle of Cibecue Creek ■ after the arrest of Nochaydelkline ● Ottawa ○ Wiigwaasabaak was record of their history ○ Saugeen Complex ○ “Third Stopping Place” was Detroit ○ Council of Three Fires ○ fought against Mascouten ○ Treaty of Detroit ○ fought in the French and Indian War under Pontiac ○ Seneca School, Oklahoma ○ Lived on Manitoulin and Cockburn Islands ○ Leaders: ■ Pontiac ● Cherokee ○ Were given farm tools for signing the Treaty of Holston ○ Their language has lasted do to a syllabary created by Sequoyah ○ Fought Georgia in the Supreme Court Case Cherokee Nation v. Georgia ○ Forced to walk the Trail of Tears to Oklahoma ○ Fought on the side of Great Britain during the French and Indian War ○ John Ross led them through the Civil War ○ Originally lived in modern day Georgia ● Iroquois Confederacy ○ Made up of six nations ■ Mohawk ■ Oneida ■ Onondaga ■ Cayuga ■ Seneca ■ Tuscarora ○ Broken up by the American Revolution ■ The Tuscarora and Oneida sided with the colonists ■ The Mohawk, Seneca, Onondaga, and Cayuga sided with the British ○ Sided with the British during the French and Indian War ○ Hiawatha was one of their greatest leaders ○ Lived in longhouses ○ Those tribes loyal to the British launched the Cherry Valley Massacre during the American Revolution ● Mayan Civilization ○ Made the long count calendar that was believed by many to predict the end of the world in December 2012 ○ Known for their astronomy ○ Suddenly collapsed between the 8th and 9th centuries for an

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    7 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us