The Great Plains and Indians Flashcards

1
Q

Why did nations like the Sioux move to the Great Plains?

A
  • for horses - able to hunt buffalo, traded them, counted wealth in horses.
  • to escape from diseases
  • to trade goods
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2
Q

Describe the major obstacles the white settlers who wanted to cross over or live on the plains had.

A
  • land not fit for farming
  • lack of water
  • scarcity of wood
  • harsh weather
  • native Americans - maybe not welcoming
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3
Q

Why was the missisipi chosen as the ‘first frontier’?

A

Acted as a natural border as ran the entire length of the country.

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4
Q

What were the black hills?

A
  • area in the north that was sacred to the Indians

- belief in being close to their ancestors (high up)

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5
Q

Why were the plains Indians so well suited to living on the Great Plains?

A
  • family life (everyone had roles)
  • developed social organisation
  • used horses
  • lots of uses for buffalo
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6
Q

Describe the Indians’ family life.

A
  • lived in tipis
  • 10 - 50 families in one band
  • children and elderly seen as important as future of the band
  • spent most of year travelling / hunting / camping, were nomadic
  • elderly left behind when too weak to continue
  • wealthy men had several wives, ‘polygamy’
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7
Q

Describe the Indians’ social organisation.

A
  • Sioux nation split into tribes
  • tribes split into bands
  • each band had chief, warrior society and a council
  • chief position earned through wisdom, war and medicine, not elected
  • warrior society protected village and overlooked hunting
  • council (elders) made decisions and connected to spiritual world
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8
Q

Describe the Indians’ horses.

A
  • used for transport
  • enabled fighting for longer
  • more horses owned = more wealthy you were
  • stolen horses became a problem
  • thought horses had spiritual value, white did not
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9
Q

Describe the Indians’ use of the buffalo.

A
  • fur for coats
  • bones for arrowheads
  • tongues for hairbrushes
  • horns for spoons
  • intestines for buckets
  • bladders for food bags
  • hearts eaten for strength
  • skull used in religious ceremonies
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10
Q

How did Indians view the land?

A
  • sacred
  • believed they returned to land when dead
  • believed land could not be owned
  • called land their mother
  • believed ploughing land was like ripping mothers breast
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11
Q

Describe the Indians’ religion.

A
  • believed in wakan tanka, great spirit, created everything
  • contacted spirits through visions who influenced their lives
  • sacred circles, high places sacred, closest to spiritual world
  • circle of nature
  • surrounded by circle of horizon, village, council, tipi
  • lived through circles of birth, childhood, adulthood, old age, second childhood, death.
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12
Q

What was the role of Indian men?

A
  • hunting
  • looking after horses
  • protecting band
  • judged by skills as hunters, worriers and horsemen
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13
Q

What was the role of Indian women?

A
  • responsible for tipi, food, water and clothing
  • judged by skills at crafts and as homemakers
  • highly valued as bearers of children
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14
Q

What was the role of Indian children?

A
  • highly valued as future of the band
  • no school but learnt skills from family
  • taught to ride horses
  • boys taught how to hunt
  • girls taught how to maintain at home
  • learnt how to survive on Great Plains
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15
Q

What was the role of Indian elderly?

A
  • gave advice to council
  • passed on history of people
  • helped bring up children
  • left behind when too weak
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16
Q

How did the tipi suit the plains well?

A
  • could be taken down / packed up in ten minutes
  • conical shape to avoid strong winds
  • flaps at top for smoke from fire to escape
  • tipi bottom could be rolled up to let air in in summer or down and banked with earth for warmth in winter
  • decorated by men with patterns and scenes recording bravery in hunting and battle
  • fire inside for heat and cooking
  • floor covered with buffalo skins and fur
17
Q

Who treated the sick in plains Indian nations?

A

Medicine man:

  • connection between religion and health
  • believed cured using power of spirits
  • tried to drive out spirit
  • people believed when told they were ‘cured’ so might have gotten better
  • also used practical remedies e.g. ointments, potions and herbs
  • charged high fees in ponies
  • returned fees if treatment unsuccessful
18
Q

How did the plains Indian hunt the buffalo?

A
  • before: had a ceremonial buffalo dance, called upon spirit for help in hunting
  • hunting: without horses, had to stampede buffalo herd into corners or over cliffs or crept up on them, now with horses, killed greater numbers of buffalo
  • after: buffalo prepared, some parts eaten and some dried and cut for use
19
Q

What was the sun dance?

A
  • their most famous ceremony

- used to get help or guidance from spirit world

20
Q

Why did the plains Indians go to war?

A
  • caused by small group raids
  • went on raids to steel horses or seek revenge and destroy enemies
  • rivalry for hunting and living space, but did not want to own land
  • no wars in winter
  • later wars fought to defend Indians way of life against white settlers
21
Q

What attitude did the Indians have towards warfare?

A
  • opportunity to prove bravery and gain personal glory
  • could maybe enter a warrior society or gain a wife
  • gain horses for wealth
  • increased standing in tribe
22
Q

What weapons did Indians use and how dangerous was warfare?

A
  • shield, rifle, coup stick, bow and arrow, lance
  • arrival of guns did not make war more destructive
  • casualties relatively low
  • more men lost through hunting than war
23
Q

Why did plains Indians scalp their enemies?

A
  • evidence of success in battle
  • to hang as trophies outside tipis
  • used to decorate war gear
  • scalped would leave you ‘disabled in afterlife’, so couldn’t fight
24
Q

Describe the weather on the Plains.

A

Very hot in summer.

Extremely cold in winter.

25
Q

We’re white observers sympathetic to the plains Indians?

A

George Catlin - sympathetic, wanted to be their historian to record their society that would soon disappear
Francis Parkman - wasn’t sympathetic
Richard Dodge - didn’t fully understand them, more experience than Parkman, wrote book influencing attitudes of Americans to Indians, lead campaign to establish friendly contacts with them

26
Q

How did the white men understand the plains Indians culture?

A

Didn’t

  • thought Indians lazy
  • thought Indians savages
  • thought was wrong children did not go to school or get punished
  • thought Indians uncivilised
  • thought didn’t treat women with proper respect
  • thought polygamy sinful
  • thought Indians primitive
27
Q

What is manifest destiny?

A

A societies duty towards God.

Indians was to protect their land God has given them for survival against US wanting to dominate entire continent.