When the
cowboys and homesteaders arrived on the Great Plains, Amerindian
peoples like the Sioux had been roaming across them for hundreds of years. The Sioux lived by hunting the buffalo. In the early part of the nineteenth century an estimated twelve million of these gentle, heavy animals wandered
the Great Plains. They moved
about in herds. Sometimes these herds were so big that they stretched as far as the eye could see. The buffalo provided the Sioux
with everything that they needed-food, clothing,
tools, homes. In the 1840s wagon trains heading for Oregon
and California began to cross the Great Plains. The Amerindians usually let them
pass without trouble. Then railroads began to push across the grasslands. The
railroads carried white people who stayed on the prairies and began to plough
them. At first the Amerindians tried to drive the newcomers away from their
hunting grounds. But soon they saw that
this was impossible. So they made treaties with the government in
Washington, giving up large pieces of their land for white farmers to settle
upon. In 1851 the Pawnee people signed away an area that today forms most of the
state of Nebraska. In 1858 the Sioux gave up an area almost as big in South
Dakota. In the 1860s the Comanche and the Kiowa gave up lands in Kansas,
Colorado and Texas. In return for such agreements the government promised to
leave the Amerindians in peace on the lands that remained theirs. The Fort
Laramie treaty of 1868 was typical of these agreements. So was what happened to
it. In this treaty the government declared that large areas between the Missouri
River and the Rocky Mountains belonged to the Sioux. It gave a solemn promise
that the lands would remain Sioux properly "as long as [he grass should
grow and the water flow."
Fine and moving words. Six years later, however. American
soldiers found gold in the Black Hills of South Dakota. The Black Hills were
sacred to the Sioux and when the government tried to buy them, the Sioux
refused to sell. "One docs not sell the Earth upon which the people walk,"
said a chief named Crazy Horse. But the Ameri can government ignored the
Sioux's refusal. It broke the Fort Laramie treaty and allowed prospectors and
miners to enter the Black Hills. In the winter of 1875 thousands of white men
poured into the area. By this time the Amerindian peoples of the Great Plains
were faring another serious problem. The buffalo was beginning to disappear.
More and more of the land that the big animals needed to graze upon was being
taken by ranchers and farmers. Worse still, white hunters were shooting down the
buffalo in thousands. They killed them for their hides or for sport and left their
flesh to rot. In just two years between
1872 and 1874 the hunters almost completely destroyed the great herds. A visitor to the Plains in 1873
described what he saw there. "Where there were myriads [vast numbers] of buffalo
the year before. Then' were now myriads of corpses.
The Amerindians could not understand this behavior,
"Has the white man become a child that he should recklessly kill and not
car?" asked a Kiowa chief. But the American army encouraged the slaughter.
General Sheridan, the officer who commanded the army in the West, saw the extermination
of the buffalo as a way to end Amerindian resistance to the occupation of their
land. "These men [the buffalo hunters] have done more in the last two
years to settle the Indian question than the entire regular army has done in the
last thirty years, " he wrote. " Send them powder and lead and for
the sake of lasting peace let them kill, skin, and sell until the buffaloes are
exterminated." As more settlers claimed homesteads in the West the American
government needed more land for them. To obtain this it decided to force the
Amerindians to give up their wandering way of life. The Amerindians fought
back. One of their best known leaders was Sitting Bull of the Sioux. "We lived
in om country in the way our fathers and our fathers' fathers lived before us
and we sought trouble with no men," he said later. " But the soldiers
came into our country and fired upon us and we fought back. Is it so bad to
fight in defense of one's country and loved ones?" The Amerindians were
outnumbered and outgunned. Bur they inflicted some surprising defeats on the
American soldiers. They won their best known victory at the Battle of the
Little Big Horn in June 1876, all a hill beside the Little Big Horn River 3,000
Sioux and Cheyenne warriors led by Crazy Horse surrounded and killed all 225
men of a company of United States cavalry. The Battle of the Little Big Horn
was also the last stand for the Amerindians. The American government and people
were angry at the defeat of their soldiers. They felt that they had been humiliated.
More soldiers were sent west to hunt down Custer 's killers. The Sioux were too
weak to fight back. With the buffalo gone, more of their people were dying every
day of starvation and disease. The Sioux surrendered and the soldiers marched
them away to the reservations. Other
Amerindians were no more fortunate than the Sioux. By 1890 most of the American
West, from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean, was occupied by cattle
ranchers, farmers, or millers. The Amerindians had nothing left except the reservations. The United Scares government said
that it would help and protect the reservation Amerindians. In 1890 a religious prophet told
the Sioux to dance a special dance called the Ghost Dance. He told them that if
they did so great miracle would take place. Their dead warriors would conic
bark to life, the buffalo would return and all white men would be swept away by the
great flood.
The Ghost Dancers ' Song
Father, have 'pity on us
We are crying for thirst
All is gone!
We have nothing to eat
Father, we are poor.
We are very poor.
The buffalo are gone.
They are all gone.
Take pity on us, Father,
We are dancing as you wished
Because you commanded us.
We dance hard, we dance long
Have pity,
Father, help us
You are close by in the dark
Hear us and help us.
Take away the white men
Send hack the buffalo
We are poor and weak
We call do nothing alone
Help us to be what we: once were.
Happy hunters of buffalo.
The Ghost Dance movement was peaceful. But the Dancers' beliefs worried the government. So did the fact that some of them waved
rifles above their heads as they danced. It ordered the army to arrest the movement's
leaders. On cold December day in 1890 a group of 350 Sioux, 120 men 230 women
and children, left their reservation. Led by a chief named Big Foot, they set off
to join another group nearby for safety. But a party of soldiers stopped them
on the way and marched them to an army post at Wounded Knee Creek. The soldiers began shooting down
the Sioux women and children as well as the men. Within minutes most of the
Sioux were dead or badly wounded. Many of the wounded who crawled away died
later in a blizzard that swept over the camp. But the Sioux, like other
Amerindians, survived. In 1924 Congress passed the Indian Citizenship Act. This
recognized Amerindians as full citizens of the United States gave them the
right to vote. In 1934 the Indian Reorganization Act encouraged them to set lip
their own councils to run the affairs of their reservations.
Bibliography:
1. The Norton
Anthology of American Literature.
2. A History
of American Literature, A. Grey
3. An Outline
of American History.
4. An
Illustrated History of the USA.



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