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American Indians Struggled Against the Oppression of Book Report

Pages:4 (1371 words)

Sources:2

Subject:History

Topic:Lewis And Clark Expedition

Document Type:Book Report

Document:#60329347


American Indians struggled against the oppression of the White Man for nearly another seventy years but Chief Black Hawk's 1832 surrender speech epitomizes the frustration felt by the various tribes that once dominated the American landscape. From text of this speech, Kent State history professor, Phillip Weeks, drew the title for his book, Farewell, My Nation (Weeks, 2000). To his fellow Sac and Fox tribesmen, Chief Black Hawk stated, in part, "The white men do not scalp the head; but they do worse - they poison the heart....Farewell, my nation!"

Black Hawk's speech occurs fairly early in the process but it characterizes how the White Man broke the spirit of the American Indians as they continuously displaced the Indians from the land that they had occupied for thousands of years. In his book, Weeks chronicles how the United States government progressively enforced its policy of expansion while completely disregarding the concerns and pleas of the American Indians. In the context of his book, Weeks relates how the various Native American tribes attempted to accommodate the intrusions of the White Man while still attempting to maintain their previous ways of life. Against this theme, Weeks explains how the U.S. Government's policies regarding the "Indian Question" developed over the course of time. These policies, which are described by Weeks as separation, concentration, and Americanization, resulted in the eventual near total oppression of the Native American culture and Weeks sympathetically details the process.

The displacement of the Indians occurred naturally and without Government involvement in the early days of America. The Indians, accustomed to the freedom of movement that they had enjoyed for centuries, moved on their own as the American Colonies and, later, the young American nation continued to expand. Border skirmishes occurred from time to time but organized warfare was extremely rare. This situation worsened, however, in the 1830's as the U.S. Government developed its first real policy regarding the "Indian Question." This first policy, described by Weeks as the separation policy, was formulated to displace Indians from the Appalachian and the area known as the Northwest Territory where the states of Ohio, Indiana, Illinois and Michigan are now located. The Government's separation policy was divided into two schools of thought. On the one side was the group known as the gradualists who adopted the position that the Indians living in these areas should be assimilated into the dominant white culture through the work of the missionaries, an organized program of re-education, and teaching the Indians how to farm. On the opposite side of the issue were the removalists who argued that the Indians were savage, beyond being civilized, and deserving of little or no consideration of any kind. This group felt that any effort to allow the Indians to continue living on land that was destined for the White Man was a waste of effort. The removalists viewed the effort of removing the Indians from the area east of the Mississippi as vital for the growth of cotton in the South, farming in the North, and for the establishment of roads, canals, and new cities in both locations. The removalist attitude was demonstrated through the statement of President Andrew Jackson who promised: "Your father has provided a country large enough for all of you. There your white brother will not trouble you; they will have no claim to the land, and you can live upon it, you and all of your children, as long as the grass grows or the water runs, in peace and plenty. It will be yours forever (Weeks: p. 53)." Unfortunately, the removalists prevailed in their arguments and the Indians in the aforementioned area were summarily removed, usually in a violent method, to the areas west of the Mississippi River where the White Man had not yet begun to settle. The only consideration afforded the Indians so removed was to be paid approximately thirty cents an acre for being forcefully removed from their homeland. Little or no consideration was afforded the cost in human life to those Indians removed. For the removalists it did not matter as long as…


Sample Source(s) Used

References

Weeks, P. (2000). Farewell, My Nation: The American Indian and the United States in the Nineteenth Century (2nd Edition). Wheeling, IL: Harlan Davidson.

Farewell, My Nation

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