Verified Document

Native American History Term Paper

¶ … Kevin Gover, Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior, made at the Ceremony Acknowledging the 175th Anniversary of the Establishment of the Bureau of Indian Affairs on September 8, 2000 were long since overdue. In his statements, Gover admitted to the BIA's harsh mistreatment of Native Americans over the past one hundred seventy-five years. This public apology was one that had been necessary long since it was made. However, the fact that it was made gives hope that reparations can be made to the injustices committed to the Native American people throughout the years. It may not erase all that has happened, but the BIA's acknowledgement of the problems is a starting point in making sure history doesn't repeat itself. In his speech, Gover made note of the Dawes Severalty Act, passed in 1887. This act was just one in a long line of examples of the early settlers' inability to understand the ways of the Native Americans. The act was created by whites who believed they were helping weak Native Americans by turning them into farmers and land owners. While this act uprooted the Native Americans from their homes and placed them in reservations, the American government alleged that they were helping, rather than hurting the Native Americans simply because of their belief in the superiority of America and of its culture.

This law would ultimately distort Indian thought, culture, and community by dismantling traditional Indian government, traditional Indian customs and family structure. The literal interpretation...

Other intentions of the Act were to break the communal pattern of Indian landholding by encouraging small, freehold farming. Since Indian people lacked the training and equipment for isolated farming, many sold their allotted lands to white settlers.
Indian people not only lost approximately 90 million acres of land from the allotment process, but also lost their ancient communal way of existing together. This modern way of living encouraged Indian people to forget about their social structure of the past and become individualistic like the lifestyle of the dominant society (Hurtado and Iverson, 2001).

Another topic that Gover touched on was the boarding schools that Native Americans were forced into. The Reservation Boarding School System was created by whites to educate the Native Americans in the ways of the new white Americans. This was mainly due to the fact that white European settlers believed themselves to possess a divine right to take over the land and force those who already occupied it into their own way of thinking (Child, 1998). What boarding schools did, in fact was destroy any type of cultural history the Native American people held and replaced it with white Europeans' history and beliefs.

The Reservation Boarding School System was rationalized by…

Sources used in this document:
Works Cited

Child, Brenda J. (1998). Boarding school seasons: American Indian families 1900-1940. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press.

Hurtado, Albert L. And Iverson, Peter (2001). Major problems in American Indian history. Boston: Houghton Mifflin College.
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Related Documents

Native American History in the Twentieth Century
Words: 2203 Length: 6 Document Type: Term Paper

Native American History In the Twentieth Century focuses on the famous novel written by Erdrich Louise called Tracks. This paper focuses on the theme of the novels and links them to the following novels namely, Talking Back to Civilization by Frederick Hoxie, Boarding School Seasons by Brenda Child and Major Problems in American Indian History by Hurtado and Iverson. This paper also highlights the problems, which the Native Indians

Native American Writers the Feminine
Words: 1000 Length: 3 Document Type: Term Paper

He uses her head for the sun and other body parts for the moon and other heavenly bodies (Cusick, n.p.). Tapahonso's poem connects the newborn female infant with an August sunset, steam, and hot rocks. That Tapahonso chooses to describe the birth of a female infant is significant. Through this choice, in addition to her references to both mother and daughter in terms of natural occurrences, Tapahonoso establishes that

Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act NAGPRA Insights...
Words: 643 Length: 2 Document Type: Essay

NEGPRAInsights on Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA)What it isOne of the crucial issues that Messenger and Bender (2019) highlight relate to the Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA). From the onset, it would be prudent to note that this happens to be an instrumental federal law in efforts to ensure that fairness, respect, and dignity is observed in the treatment of any ancestry’s human remains

American Revolution New American History Is Full
Words: 1195 Length: 4 Document Type: Research Paper

American Revolution New American History is full of many relevant events that have made a significant impact on the American History. Despite all the relevant things, it should be noted that America itself might not have been conceived if it had not been for the struggles that took place in the American Revolution. It was the starting point of the American history and the time when people were beginning to find

Early American History
Words: 324 Length: 1 Document Type: Term Paper

Divided Ground The book the Divided Ground: Indians, Settlers, and the Northern Borderland of the American Revolution by Alan Taylor is an engrossing and enlightening book of Native American history and perspective. It masterfully investigates the transition of the alliance of the Six Nations, (Iroquoia) from a cohesive nation with a central borderland, to the division into two, bordered lands, which transformed into New York State in America, and the

Native American Storytelling
Words: 1422 Length: 4 Document Type: Essay

American Indian Studies Native American Storytelling The group of people known as the Native Americans or American Indians are the native residents of the Northern and Southern American continents who are thought to have traveled across the Bering land bridge from Asia. When the new society and the already established, came together, years of imposed philosophy, domination and rebel warfare were begun. The great impediments of religion, ethics and world-views were the

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now