American Indian Heritage Month

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "American Indian Heritage Month"

Transcription

1 American Indian Heritage Month Both Governor Gary Herbert and President Barack Obama have issued declarations announcing November to be observed as American Indian Heritage Month.

2 American Indian Heritage Month To honor this month, the following slides and information was provided to us from the Library of Congress

3 Native American Life on the Great Plains For centuries beginning around 1600, Native Americans settled along the wooded and rich-soil banks of Northern Plains rivers. In the United States the Plains include parts of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Texas. For the most part, the tribes of the Northern Great Plains were agricultural and trade-based societies. Upon European contact in the 18th and 19th centuries, many villages became major trading posts, bringing prosperity but transforming their culture forever. Nomadic Dwellings Teepees as seen above were a typical dwelling of many Native Americans living on the Great Plains. They were usually made by arranging poles into a coneshape frame, with an opening at the top to release smoke from fires that burned within the teepee, and then wrapping animal skins over the frame for insulation. Teepees were especially good for nomadic tribes or hunting parties because they were easily transported from one location to another, and provided protection from the weather. Fun Fact: Because of the adaptability of the teepee to prairie life, Gen. Henry Sibley used it as a model for the tent that bears his name.

4 Earth Lodge As shown in the image above, the earth lodge of the Northern Plain Indians was a circular, dome-shaped house, usually made of posts and beams that were covered with branches, grass, and earth. Like a teepee, an earth lodge usually had an opening in the center of the roof for smoke and an earth floor. Each earth lodge was home to an extended family of 10 to 30 people. Fun Fact: Each earth lodge stored surplus food, such as corn and sunflower seeds, in a bellshaped hole called a cache pit.

5 Male Duties In many tribes of Northern Plains Indians, the primary occupations of men included raiding and hunting---both difficult and dangerous tasks. In times of conflict, men went to war and a war chief, like the Hidatsa chief Lean Wolf pictured above, assumed leadership of the village. Fun Fact: In addition to hunting, raiding, and fighting, men also spent time seeking spiritual knowledge.

6 Women's Duties Women who lived in Native American tribes on the Great Plains were responsible for performing domestic tasks, such as growing and preparing food, maintaining the home, and looking after children. Family earth lodges and teepees were usually owned by women of the tribe or a woman's family. Upon marriage, men moved in with the woman's family. In addition, all game hunted and killed by men became the property of women. Fun Fact:Young girls often played house with miniature teepees that they made of decorated hide given to them as presents.

7 Battle Some tribes of the Great Plains, such as the Sioux and Blackfoot, were more warlike than others, and often engaged in battle often. The primary weapon used by Plains Indians was the bow and arrow as pictured above, held by a Sioux male. Men also used guns, clubs, tomahawks, lances, shields, and knives in battle. Fun Fact:When peace was reached with an enemy, some Native Americans ceremonially buried a tomahawk. The expression, "burying the hatchet," was derived from this custom.

8 Horses The introduction of horses to Native American people on the Great Plains had a huge impact on their culture, improving their ability to hunt, fight, and travel. Horses were introduced to the Plains people by the Spanish in the 18th century. Acquiring horses allowed Native Americans greater mobility---former agriculture-based tribes of the river valleys became nomadic hunters, creating a new life on the Plains. Fun Fact: Plains people bred and traded horses with other Indian Nations.

9 Hunting Buffalo The buffalo, as pictured above, was the main source of livelihood for Native Americans living on the Great Plains, supplying almost everything they needed to survive, including food, clothing, housing, and tools. Hunting parties were chosen and planned by a respected hunter. For an individual male and his clan, prowess in both battle and hunt led to status in the village. Native Americans respected and honored the buffalo, praising its spirit before every hunt with a ritual dance. Fun Fact: Native Americans considered the buffalo's tongue to be the best part of the meat.

10 Ceremonial Dance Northern Plains Indians held ceremonial dances as a celebration, most often for the cure of disease, success in a hunt or battle, and good fortune in a family or tribe. An example of a Cheyenne powwow dance in Montana is pictured above. Fun Fact: Probably the most well-known ceremonial dance, the powwow, is an Anglicized word of the Algonquian term "pau-wau," meaning a gathering of medicine men or spiritual leaders.

11 Agriculture Agriculture was the economic foundation for some Native American Plains people, such as the Hidatsa and Mandan tribes. Usually controlled by women and passed down through the women's family, the size of the family plot was determined by the number of women able to work the land. Traditional crops included corn, squash, pumpkin, beans, and sunflowers. Fun Fact: Some sunflower plants can grow as tall as eight feet.

12 Trade For centuries, trade was a major part of the livelihood for Native Americans living on the Great Plains. The Missouri River provided a trade transportation route for Native Americans, European, and American trappers and traders. Agriculture-based tribes traded surplus food to nomadic tribes in exchange for goods, such as animal hides, feathers, and meat. The map above shows the prehistoric trade route between tribes of the Northern Plains. Fun Fact:The first contact between Northern Plains Indians and Europeans was European commodities, not the Europeans themselves, through a network of trade.

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains Native American Cultures: The Great Plains By Encyclopedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.15.17 Word Count 874 Level 700L Bobby Morris, 4, of Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, joins hundreds of other

More information

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains Native American Cultures: The Great Plains By Encyclopedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.15.17 Word Count 1,163 Level 890L Bobby Morris, 4, of Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, joins hundreds of

More information

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains Native American Cultures: The Great Plains By Encyclopedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.15.17 Word Count 738 Level 640L Bobby Morris, 4, of Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, joins hundreds of other

More information

THE NATIVE AMERICANS

THE NATIVE AMERICANS THE NATIVE AMERICANS Native American Diversity By the year 1500, Native Americans had divided into hundreds of cultural groups who perhaps spoke up to 2,000 different languages. Each group adapted to its

More information

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains

Native American Cultures: The Great Plains Native American Cultures: The Great Plains By Encyclopedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.15.17 Word Count 1,498 Level 990L Bobby Morris, 4, of Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, joins hundreds of

More information

Texas Indians. Comanche Tepee Village

Texas Indians. Comanche Tepee Village Texas Indians Comanche Tepee Village The Gulf Culture Karankawa hunters and gatherers who lived in the area of Galveston to Corpus Christi. They were nomads. They used dug-out canoes to fish, hunt turtles

More information

Student Reading 6.1: Ohio s Historic American Indians. were known as the Historic Indians because they lived in the period following

Student Reading 6.1: Ohio s Historic American Indians. were known as the Historic Indians because they lived in the period following Student Reading 6.1: Ohio s Historic American Indians The American Indian groups living in Ohio, during the 1600s and 1700s were known as the Historic Indians because they lived in the period following

More information

Jumano/Tigua. Native American Web Notes. Name Date Period. Tools/Weapons. Culture Group Religion. Government. Shelter. Pottery and Farming tools

Jumano/Tigua. Native American Web Notes. Name Date Period. Tools/Weapons. Culture Group Religion. Government. Shelter. Pottery and Farming tools Native American Web Notes Name Date Period Tools/Weapons Pottery and Farming tools Very little known as it relates to Texas Very little known as it relates to Texas Jumano/Tigua Mountains and Basins Corn,

More information

Native Americans Are Essential to the History of the United States

Native Americans Are Essential to the History of the United States Native Americans Are Essential to the History of the United States Welcome to the Making of a Nation American history in VOA Special English. I m Steve Ember. This week in our series, we look at the history

More information

Native Americans? Who are the. The Bering Strait. Activities Pack 8/7/2015

Native Americans? Who are the. The Bering Strait. Activities Pack 8/7/2015 Native Americans Activities Pack Who are the Native Americans? They likely came to North America across the Bering Strait when hunting animals. Can you tell where you live on the map? The Bering Strait

More information

U.S. History. Chapter 5 Changes on the Western Front 5-1 Cultures Clash on the Prairie

U.S. History. Chapter 5 Changes on the Western Front 5-1 Cultures Clash on the Prairie U.S. History Chapter 5 Changes on the Western Front 5-1 Cultures Clash on the Prairie CA Standards: Cultural Clashes on the Prairie 11.1.4 Examine the effects of the Civil War and Reconstruction and of

More information

Name: Date: Museum Director PBL

Name: Date: Museum Director PBL Name: Date: Museum Director PBL You are a museum director in a large city. You are creating a special exhibit on Native American art and artifacts. There is room in the exhibit for one more piece of art.

More information

The Sioux Tribe. Scarlet Ryder B. Kamyla Saleem Rm 9 Lynnwood Elementary

The Sioux Tribe. Scarlet Ryder B. Kamyla Saleem Rm 9 Lynnwood Elementary The Sioux Tribe Scarlet Ryder B. Kamyla Saleem Rm 9 Lynnwood Elementary Location Sioux United Sioux Tribes The Sioux nation consists of three divisions: Lakota, Dakota, and Nakota. Lakota refer to themselves

More information

LESSON 1 EARLY PEOPLE

LESSON 1 EARLY PEOPLE S.S CHAPTER 2 LESSON 1 EARLY PEOPLE What is an ancestor? And early family member What is a theory? An idea based on study and research What is migration? Movement of people Why might origin stories change

More information

Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West

Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West Modern US History Ch. 18, Section 2 Wars for the West Settlers Encounter the Plains Indians As settlers moved into the Great Plains the US government sent agents to negotiate treaties with the Plains Indians

More information

AMERICAN HISTORY. click UNIT #1 SETTLING THE WEST LESSON #3 NATIVE AMERICANS (83-87)

AMERICAN HISTORY. click UNIT #1 SETTLING THE WEST LESSON #3 NATIVE AMERICANS (83-87) AMERICAN HISTORY click UNIT #1 SETTLING THE WEST LESSON #3 NATIVE AMERICANS (83-87) Essential Questions 1. Why did settlers conflict with Native Americans (Indians)? 2. What was a reservation for the Indians?

More information

Native Americans of the Great Plains

Native Americans of the Great Plains Native Americans of the Great Plains LEVELED READER Z Native Americans of the Great Plains Correlation LEVEL Z Fountas & Pinnell V Reading Recovery 29 DRA N/A Table of Contents The Great Plains...........................4

More information

Early Cultures. Most people believe that the first people who lived in North America came from Asia.

Early Cultures. Most people believe that the first people who lived in North America came from Asia. Name Date Early Cultures Most people believe that the first people who lived in North America came from Asia. These people possibly used a land bridge. The bridge linked Siberia in eastern Russia with

More information

APUSH: Key Concept 1.1. Everything You Need To Know About Key Concept 1.1 To Succeed In APUSH

APUSH: Key Concept 1.1. Everything You Need To Know About Key Concept 1.1 To Succeed In APUSH APUSH: Key Concept 1.1 Everything You Need To Know About Key Concept 1.1 To Succeed In APUSH 1491-1607 The New Curriculum Key Concept 1.1 As native populations migrated and settled across the vast expanse

More information

Comprehension Questions: Native Americans Domain 6. To comprehend means to understand.

Comprehension Questions: Native Americans Domain 6. To comprehend means to understand. Comprehension Questions: Native Americans Domain 6 To comprehend means to understand. Introduction to Native Americans 1. Who did you hear about in this read-aloud? 2. What three things do all people,

More information

Student Reading 6.4: Exploring the Relationship between European Settlers and. Historic American Indians

Student Reading 6.4: Exploring the Relationship between European Settlers and. Historic American Indians Student Reading 6.4: Exploring the Relationship between European Settlers and Historic American Indians In the 1600s the first white men came to Ohio. These men were explorers and fur traders. Some came

More information

Presentation Made By: Madeline, Alexis, Cameron, Justin, Emily, and Conner.

Presentation Made By: Madeline, Alexis, Cameron, Justin, Emily, and Conner. Presentation Made By: Madeline, Alexis, Cameron, Justin, Emily, and Conner. Historical Figures by Justin Pocahontas (born in Matoaka, and later known as Rebecca Rolfe, 1595 March 1617) Helped with the

More information

COLORADO INDIANS COMMUNITY LIFE. Village Life. An Indian Village

COLORADO INDIANS COMMUNITY LIFE. Village Life. An Indian Village COLORADO INDIANS COMMUNITY LIFE Village Life What do these photos tell you about how living in an Indian village was like? An Indian Village This is what an Indian village looked like. The men on horseback

More information

Recent Research on the Roberts Buffalo Jump (5LR100),

Recent Research on the Roberts Buffalo Jump (5LR100), Recent Research on the Roberts Buffalo Jump (5LR100), Northern Colorado Christopher M. Johnston In the late 1600s, American Indian hunters and their families coordinated their efforts to drive a herd of

More information

America s First People

America s First People Name Block America s First People As you read about each of the American Indian groups, answer the questions and color the map according to the directions for each group. Alaska s Inuits Map Directions:

More information

Traveling Hands-On Museum Programs Taught by Ann Turbin, naturalist and K-12 teacher; over 30 years of teaching experience.

Traveling Hands-On Museum Programs Taught by Ann Turbin, naturalist and K-12 teacher; over 30 years of teaching experience. TOUCH THE PAST 2009 Traveling Hands-On Museum Programs Taught by Ann Turbin, naturalist and K-12 teacher; over 30 years of teaching experience. Family Life in a Covered Wagon What did you take in your

More information

Section 2- Migration

Section 2- Migration Section 2- Migration Today, most scientists agree that the first people in North America came from Asia. This migration is estimated to have taken place during the last ice age, at least 12,500 years ago.

More information

Growth in the West

Growth in the West Growth in the West 1860-1900 The Great Plains The Great Plains had few trees, but its grasslands were home to more than 300,000 Native Americans in the mid-1800 s. Most followed the buffalo herds that

More information

EQ #4 -Who were the Kalapuya Native Americans? Native Americans of the Willamette Valley

EQ #4 -Who were the Kalapuya Native Americans? Native Americans of the Willamette Valley EQ #4 -Who were the Kalapuya Native Americans? Native Americans of the Willamette Valley Who were the Kalapuya? History The Kalapuya Were a Native American people who lived in the Willamette Valley. Their

More information

GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT

GOVERNMENT INVOLVEMENT I M P A C T O F W E S T W A R D E X P A N S I O N O N A M E R I C A N I N D I A N S Plains Indians were nomads who relied almost entirely on the buffalo for food, clothing, fuel, and shelter. What inference

More information

VIDEO SCRIPT. TITLE: The First Hunters and Farmers. PREPARED FOR: South Dakota Pathways Series. PRODUCER: Jim Sprecher SCRIPT: 5 TRT: 13:47

VIDEO SCRIPT. TITLE: The First Hunters and Farmers. PREPARED FOR: South Dakota Pathways Series. PRODUCER: Jim Sprecher SCRIPT: 5 TRT: 13:47 VIDEO SCRIPT TITLE: The First Hunters and Farmers PREPARED FOR: South Dakota Pathways Series WRITER: Paul Higbee and Julia Monczunski PRODUCER: Jim Sprecher SCRIPT: 5 TRT: 13:47 DRAFT: FINAL Edited Version

More information

Wisconsin s Fur Trade Impact Definition: Impact on Native people Impact on Environment Impact on Economy

Wisconsin s Fur Trade Impact Definition: Impact on Native people Impact on Environment Impact on Economy Wisconsin s Fur Trade Impact Definition: Important early business involving Native people trading beaver, mink, and otter pelts to European traders for blankets, brass cooking pots, metal axes, woolen

More information

The history of the bison: A symbol of the American story

The history of the bison: A symbol of the American story The history of the bison: A symbol of the American story By Oliver Milman, The Guardian, adapted by Newsela staff on 05.08.16 Word Count 811 A wild bison and her 8-day-old calf roam the Rocky Mountain

More information

Native Americans. of the Great Plains. Native Americans of the Great Plains A Reading A Z Level Z Leveled Book Word Count: 2,145 LEVELED BOOK Z

Native Americans. of the Great Plains. Native Americans of the Great Plains A Reading A Z Level Z Leveled Book Word Count: 2,145 LEVELED BOOK Z Native Americans of the Great Plains A Reading A Z Level Z Leveled Book Word Count: 2,145 LEVELED BOOK Z Native Americans of the Great Plains Written by Linda Johns Visit www.readinga-z.com for thousands

More information

Utah Studies. Utah s Native Americans

Utah Studies. Utah s Native Americans Bellringer: D10 Describe what a wiki-up is: P.S. Don t forget about your research project, on an aspect of the Desert Gatherers! This is due T1D11, along with a short presentation. Utah Studies Utah s

More information

Native American Cultures: The Great Basin

Native American Cultures: The Great Basin Native American Cultures: The Great Basin By Encyclopaedia Britannica, adapted by Newsela staff on 06.20.17 Word Count 645 Level 560L Ute tribal rock art at Arches National Park, Utah. The picture shows

More information

Chapter 5 Louisiana s Native People

Chapter 5 Louisiana s Native People Chapter 5 Louisiana s Native People Standard 2 Key Events, Ideas and People: Students analyze how the contributions of key events, ideas, and people influenced the development of modern Louisiana. GLE

More information

Plains, Great Basin, and Plateau Cultural Area Discover - Experience Connect Page 1 of 15

Plains, Great Basin, and Plateau Cultural Area Discover - Experience Connect  Page 1 of 15 Plains Culture Area Map The Plains Culture Area spanned west from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains. It stretched north into Canada and south into what is now Texas. The population of the Plains

More information

Creating America (Survey)

Creating America (Survey) Creating America (Survey) Chapter 19: Growth in the West, 1860-1900 Section 1: Miners, Ranchers, and Cowhands Main Idea: Miners, ranchers, and cowhands settled in the West seeking economic opportunities.

More information

I. Settlers Encounter the Plains Indians

I. Settlers Encounter the Plains Indians I. Settlers Encounter the Plains Indians The government sent agents to negotiate treaties with Plains Indians 4 tribes who lived on the Plains are the. Apache, Comanche, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Pawnee, Sioux

More information

Made by Mrs. Leathers and Mrs. Shellenberger s Second Graders

Made by Mrs. Leathers and Mrs. Shellenberger s Second Graders Made by Mrs. Leathers and Mrs. Shellenberger s Second Graders Stony Point Elementary School January 2012 WE DEDICATE THIS BOOK TO THE NATIVE AMERICANS, AMERICANS PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE AND TO CATHY BOLLINGER

More information

GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS

GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS Landform- different features on the surface of the earth Desert-A dry, often sandy region with little rainfall,

More information

GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS

GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS GREAT PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS NORTH CENTRAL PLAINS COASTAL PLAINS MOUNTAINS AND BASINS Landform- different features on the surface of the earth Desert-A dry, often sandy region with little rainfall,

More information

Dear Teacher, Thanks again for your interest in our program. If you have any questions, feel free to call.

Dear Teacher, Thanks again for your interest in our program. If you have any questions, feel free to call. Dear Teacher, Thank you for choosing the McHenry County Conservation District s Native Americans and Natural Resources outreach program for your class. The program focuses on how local Native American

More information

The Menominee Nation of Wisconsin. Prepared by Ava L. McCall

The Menominee Nation of Wisconsin. Prepared by Ava L. McCall The Menominee Nation of Wisconsin Prepared by Ava L. McCall 1 Menominee Tribal Tradition The Menominee believe they always lived in Wisconsin. They believe they were created at the mouth or the end of

More information

Who was La Verendrye?

Who was La Verendrye? Chapter 1 La Verendrye, a French explorer, is credited with being the first European to explore North Dakota. He visited the area in the 1730s, more than 60 years before Lewis and Clark, in his quest to

More information

Post- Civil War Western Migrations and the Western Frontier

Post- Civil War Western Migrations and the Western Frontier Post- Civil War Western Migrations and the Western Frontier America After the Civil War: 1870-1900 Ranching, Mining, & Farming Industrialization & Urbanization Reconstruction & Rise of Jim Crow Segregation

More information

Indian Lore Merit Badge.

Indian Lore Merit Badge. Indian Lore Merit Badge Vince_Cronin@baylor.edu The Indian Lore merit badge pamplet is HIGHLY recommended. It contains a lot of very good, interesting material that we will not cover in this course. At

More information

AIM: Why did settlers move West in the late 19 th century?

AIM: Why did settlers move West in the late 19 th century? AIM: Why did settlers move West in the late 19 th century? Do Now: Inventions Project Introduction US History & Government 12/9/13 The West (1860-1910) United States History & Government The Economy of

More information

POWWOW AN OVERVIEW OF THE PROTOCOLS, TERMINOLOGY AND DANCE STYLES

POWWOW AN OVERVIEW OF THE PROTOCOLS, TERMINOLOGY AND DANCE STYLES POWWOW AN OVERVIEW OF THE PROTOCOLS, TERMINOLOGY AND DANCE STYLES WELCOME A powwow is for all to enjoy and spectators are encouraged to come share in the good feelings that are generated through song and

More information

Relationship with the Land Seasonal Round

Relationship with the Land Seasonal Round This instructional resource was developed by Rosalyn LaPier, Piegan Institute. Note that the How We Lived with the Land activity in the Virtual Exhibit is generalized for all of Niitsitapi, and physical

More information

The Ahamacave or Mohave The Mohave continue to live in their river valley homelands The Mohave eat many different types of food dammed

The Ahamacave or Mohave The Mohave continue to live in their river valley homelands The Mohave eat many different types of food dammed The Ahamacave or Mohave The information below is taken from The Ahamacave (commonly pronounced as Mohave) Traveling Suitcase exhibit for Museum Education Outreach, Grade Levels 3-4, 5-6 Teacher Manual,

More information

CHAPTER 2. Native Americans and Their Land

CHAPTER 2. Native Americans and Their Land CHAPTER 2 Native Americans and Their Land 2.1 INTRODUCTION Native Americans are believed to be the first people to live in North America They first migrated into the Americas from the continent of Asia

More information

Jerry Stemach, MS, CCC-SLP Karen Erickson, PhD Center for Literacy and Disability Studies University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Jerry Stemach, MS, CCC-SLP Karen Erickson, PhD Center for Literacy and Disability Studies University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Editors Jerry Stemach, MS, CCC-SLP Karen Erickson, PhD Center for Literacy and Disability Studies University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Exclusively Sold by Don Johnston Incorporated 26799 W. Commerce

More information

Double Bonus Thinksheet!

Double Bonus Thinksheet! Compare the point of view of two or more authors for how they treat the same or similar topics, including which details they include and emphasize in their respective accounts. Double Bonus Thinksheet!

More information

ì<(sk$m)=becdcd< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U

ì<(sk$m)=becdcd< +^-Ä-U-Ä-U Reader Genre Build Background Access Content Extend Language Expository Nonfiction Society Adapting Culture Geography Captions Definitions Map Fact Box Building and Road Words Scott Foresman Reading Street

More information

Important Flashcard. just click to get the definitions! Chief Joseph

Important Flashcard. just click to get the definitions! Chief Joseph Important Flashcard just click to get the definitions! Chief Joseph Leader of the Nez Perce tribe who resisted the government in relocating his tribe on a reservation Dawes Act 1887 act which divided Indian

More information

Americans Move West. Chapter 18 page 582

Americans Move West. Chapter 18 page 582 Americans Move West Chapter 18 page 582 Miners, Ranchers, and Railroads Chapter 18 Section 1 Page 586 Mining Boom Miners, ranchers, and farmers remade the landscape of the West as they adapted to their

More information

AMERICAN HISTORY CHAPTER 8 SETTLING OF THE WEST

AMERICAN HISTORY CHAPTER 8 SETTLING OF THE WEST AMERICAN HISTORY CHAPTER 8 SETTLING OF THE WEST BOARD QUESTIONS 1) WHAT IS PLACER MINING? 2) WHAT IS QUARTZ MINING? 3) WHAT WAS THE COMSTOCK LODE? 4) WHAT COLORADO TOWN BECAME A LEGENDARY BOOMTOWN? 5)

More information

D14 BR: Were the Spaniards right? Were the Native Americans savages that needed the Spaniards help? What do you think?

D14 BR: Were the Spaniards right? Were the Native Americans savages that needed the Spaniards help? What do you think? D14 BR: Were the Spaniards right? Were the Native Americans savages that needed the Spaniards help? What do you think? Utah Studies Mountain Men in Utah The Old Spanish Trail As has been mentioned, the

More information

Bison: National Treasure or Pernicious Vector?

Bison: National Treasure or Pernicious Vector? Bison: National Treasure or Pernicious Vector? A brief history of Bison in the GYE Yellowstone herd - genetically and behaviorally unique - the only herd with continuously wild ancestry from the days when

More information

Louisiana Our History Our Home Chapter 5

Louisiana Our History Our Home Chapter 5 Name: Class: _ Date: _ Louisiana Our History Our Home Chapter 5 True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. 1. European explorers called the Native Americans indians because they thought

More information

Please write all of the necessary information and provide page references. Beothuk Habitation Information:

Please write all of the necessary information and provide page references. Beothuk Habitation Information: Please write all of the necessary information and provide page references. Beothuk Bands of 30-55 people Seasonal lifestyle: coastline in the summer and winter they moved inland Lived in mamateeks (winter

More information

The Dun Horse. from Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk-Tales by George Bird Grinnell. him along, but he limped and could only go very slowly.

The Dun Horse. from Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk-Tales by George Bird Grinnell. him along, but he limped and could only go very slowly. from Pawnee Hero Stories and Folk-Tales Many years ago there lived in the Pawnee tribe an old woman and her grandson a boy about sixteen years old. These people had no relations and were very poor. They

More information

Talk at Ten Marfa Public Radio January 11, 2010 Richard Walter cbbs.sulross.edu

Talk at Ten Marfa Public Radio January 11, 2010 Richard Walter cbbs.sulross.edu Talk at Ten Marfa Public Radio January 11, 2010 Richard Walter cbbs.sulross.edu MARK: This is Marfa Public Radio s Talk at Ten program. I m Mark Glover. Today s guest is Richard Walter, an archaeologist

More information

The Seminole Wars. By:Ryan Jamison

The Seminole Wars. By:Ryan Jamison The Seminole Wars By:Ryan Jamison The story of how the Seminoles inspired many more tribes to stand up to the United States, who were deporting them to land west of the Mississippi. Paper length 1,657

More information

Maggie s. Activity Pack! The Nomad s Home. Daybreak on the Steppe. The Land of Nomads

Maggie s. Activity Pack! The Nomad s Home. Daybreak on the Steppe. The Land of Nomads Maggie s Activity Pack! Name Date The Nomad s Home Daybreak on the Steppe The hot sun rises on the vast, dry grasslands of Central Asia. It lights up the bright orange-colored door of a Mongolian herder

More information

Big Game Hunters 10,000 to 8,000 B.C.

Big Game Hunters 10,000 to 8,000 B.C. Paleo Tradition Page 2 Big Game Hunters 10,000 to 8,000 B.C. Introduction To tell the story about the first people who lived in what we now call Wisconsin, we first need to look outside Wisconsin to understand

More information

T3XT. for reading analysis and written response. Monday, July 25, 16

T3XT. for reading analysis and written response. Monday, July 25, 16 T3XT for reading analysis and written response Rigor What Is T3XT? A 3-step process for writing a collegeready analysis of any textual sample. The Concept The key to comprehension and then synthesizing

More information

CRAZY HORSE BSB CH3-1

CRAZY HORSE BSB CH3-1 CRAZY HORSE was the legendary Lakota war chief who led Sitting Bull s warriors in the Valley of the Greasy Grass, known evermore as the Battle of Little Big Horn. The Lakota were accustomed to war. They

More information

** Some things have been changed on the Smart Board lesson for formatting reasons. Inuit

** Some things have been changed on the Smart Board lesson for formatting reasons. Inuit ** Some things have been changed on the Smart Board lesson for formatting reasons. Inuit Video - http://tfx.grolier.com/video/node-33086/10009846 So what did we learn from this video? Homes: Iglu means

More information

Yes, Ma am! By Cheryl Graham

Yes, Ma am! By Cheryl Graham Yes Ma am By Cheryl Graham Are these Coastal Natives? Are these Coastal Natives? How did their environment support them? Provided salmon and shellfish. How did their environment constrain them? Limited

More information

A Visual Dictionary of the

A Visual Dictionary of the A Visual Dictionary of the OLD WEST Bobbie Kalman Company www.crabtreebooks.com Crabtree Visual Dictionaries Created by Bobbie Kalman For Elfi, my cowgirl sister in Vienna. Finding you has brought great

More information

Western Expansion. Native Americans & Indian Wars

Western Expansion. Native Americans & Indian Wars Western Expansion Native Americans & Indian Wars Cynthia Parker Moved with her parents to Fort Parker in Central Texas when she was a little kid. May 1836 a group of Comanche attacked the fort & kidnapped

More information

Preview. How do we know about people from the past?

Preview. How do we know about people from the past? Preview How do we know about people from the past? Sources Primary sources are original materials. They are from the time period involved i and have not been filtered through interpretation. Diaries Interviews

More information

Chapter 13. Changes on the Western Frontier

Chapter 13. Changes on the Western Frontier Chapter 13 Changes on the Western Frontier Section 1: Cultures Clash on the Prairie Great Plains Grassland covering: Plains Indians Occupied by different Indian tribes Eastern tribes farm/hunt/settle in

More information

Plains Indian Wars. Cheyenne & Sioux Notebook Pages

Plains Indian Wars. Cheyenne & Sioux Notebook Pages Plains Indian Wars Cheyenne & Sioux Notebook Pages "They made us many promises, more than I can remember. But they kept but one--they promised to take our land...and they took it." ~Red Cloud (pictured

More information

Maggie s. Activity Pack! The Nomad s Home. Daybreak on the Steppe. The Land of Nomads

Maggie s. Activity Pack! The Nomad s Home. Daybreak on the Steppe. The Land of Nomads Maggie s Activity Pack! Name Date The Nomad s Home Daybreak on the Steppe The hot sun rises on the grasslands of Central Asia. It lights up the bright orange door of a herder s home. This home is called

More information

Chapter 4 Competition For The Fur Trade

Chapter 4 Competition For The Fur Trade Chapter 4 Competition For The Fur Trade BIG IDEA How did the various people in North America work together in the fur trade and compete to control it? Vocabulary 1.Barter The exchange of goods for other

More information

What do these photos tell you about how Indians hunted before they were introduced to horses?

What do these photos tell you about how Indians hunted before they were introduced to horses? COLORADO INDIANS WORK & TOOLS Early Hunting What do these photos tell you about how Indians hunted before they were introduced to horses? Stalking Buffalo In Wolf Skins This painting shows two Indians

More information

Welcome to today s field trip to Inwood Hill Park!

Welcome to today s field trip to Inwood Hill Park! 1 Welcome to today s field trip to Inwood Hill Park! We re here, everybody! Let s go out and see what we can learn to help move our class, school and city toward zero waste!? 2 Welcome! Did you know Inwood

More information

It s Our Valley Grade 2 curriculum about the Peace River Valley For more information, visit:

It s Our Valley Grade 2 curriculum about the Peace River Valley For more information, visit: It s Our Valley Grade 2 curriculum about the Peace River Valley Beavers are very important to aboriginal people. They hunt beaver at certain times of year, mostly in spring. Beaver pelts are used for trade

More information

Vertebrates (animals with backbones) Gay Miller

Vertebrates (animals with backbones) Gay Miller Vertebrates (animals with backbones) Gay Miller Vertebrates (animals with backbones) Mammals Birds Fish Reptiles Amphibians young drink milk, fur, warm blooded born from hard-shelled eggs, feathers, warm

More information

Lesson Plan: Unit Plan Day 2

Lesson Plan: Unit Plan Day 2 Lesson Plan: Unit Plan Day 2 1. Identifying Information Candidate: Nicole Mickanen Class/Topic: Native Americans in Oregon Location: TBD Time: 9:30AM Grade Level: Fourth Date: Monday, November 2, 2015

More information

OTHER MATERIALS NEEDED

OTHER MATERIALS NEEDED American Buffalo Read about the buffalo and do a felt board activity. The true buffalo is found only in Asia. In this trunk the word buffalo, rather than American Bison, will be used when referring to

More information

ARkAnsAs tennessee Primary Partner: Primary Partner: Habitat Work: Habitat Work:

ARkAnsAs tennessee Primary Partner: Primary Partner: Habitat Work: Habitat Work: Eastern Elk initiative david STEPhENSON Elk in the East On foggy mornings when the chill of fall is in the air, distant elk bugles ring sparsely through the hills and valleys of the East. Each one tells

More information

SCOTUS and the Future : Herrera v. Wyoming and the Scope of Tribal Treaty Rights

SCOTUS and the Future : Herrera v. Wyoming and the Scope of Tribal Treaty Rights SCOTUS and the Future : Herrera v. Wyoming and the Scope of Tribal Treaty Rights Monte Mills Associate Professor and Co-Director, Margery Hunter Brown Indian Law Clinic Alexander Blewett III School of

More information

Identifying Context Clues DIRECTIONS: Highlight the context clues for the meaning of the bolded word.

Identifying Context Clues DIRECTIONS: Highlight the context clues for the meaning of the bolded word. Identifying Context Clues DIRECTIONS: Highlight the context clues for the meaning of the bolded word. When a Spanish explorer came to America, his most important accessory was his riding gear. The equipment

More information

Black Cowboys After the Civil war, slaves were free but many had no place to go and no way to. Nebraska and northern territories.

Black Cowboys After the Civil war, slaves were free but many had no place to go and no way to. Nebraska and northern territories. More Beef After the Civil War, Texas ranchers returned home to cattle herds that had grown tremendously while they were away at war. Because there were so many cows, the price of beef plunged in Texas.

More information

INDIAN CAVES TRAIL Whispers from the Past

INDIAN CAVES TRAIL Whispers from the Past INDIAN CAVES TRAIL Whispers from the Past This quest will take you on a journey to one of our most precious and historic natural amenities at Lake Linganore at Eaglehead, the Indian Caves. This natural

More information

GRADE 1-3: SOCIAL STUDIES EARLY FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT REGIONS FLIPBOOK

GRADE 1-3: SOCIAL STUDIES EARLY FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT REGIONS FLIPBOOK GRADE 1-3: SOCIAL STUDIES EARLY FIRST NATIONS AND INUIT REGIONS FLIPBOOK Purpose: Students will learn about what life was like for different First Nations and Inuit people prior to European contact: where

More information

Foraging: Life as a Hunter-Gatherer

Foraging: Life as a Hunter-Gatherer Foraging: Life as a Hunter-Gatherer By Cynthia Stokes Brown, Big History Project, adapted by Newsela staff on 07.30.16 Word Count 1,077 Level 960L Two Bushmen hunters rest. Photo by: Anthony Bannister/Gallo

More information

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives

Lesson Objectives. Core Content Objectives. Language Arts Objectives Little Bear Goes Hunting 4 Lesson Objectives Core Content Objectives Students will: Describe the nomadic lifestyle of the Lakota Sioux Describe the food and shelter of the Lakota Sioux Describe the environment

More information

Mr. Lakhaney 12/22/14 Humanities 7. Jamestown Body Paragraphs. The settlement which was located in Virginia was named Jamestown. The English settlers

Mr. Lakhaney 12/22/14 Humanities 7. Jamestown Body Paragraphs. The settlement which was located in Virginia was named Jamestown. The English settlers Mr. Lakhaney 12/22/14 Humanities 7 Jamestown Body Paragraphs Following the discovery of America, many European countries took the opportunity to establish colonies, including England. England formed its

More information

Lily Real Bird Becomes The Buffalo

Lily Real Bird Becomes The Buffalo Lily Real Bird Becomes The Buffalo Based on the stories of The Great Flood from the Yellowstone and The White Faced Bear from the Aleuts Retold by American Indian Business Leaders-Montana State University

More information

A Thematic Approach to Understanding the Exhibition. Theme: River

A Thematic Approach to Understanding the Exhibition. Theme: River Sub-Themes: A Thematic Approach to Understanding the Exhibition Theme: River Trade, Travel, and Exploration: The voyage from St. Louis to the upper Missouri River in 1833-1834 was one of the most notable

More information

Paleo-Indians Indians. Pioneers

Paleo-Indians Indians. Pioneers Paleo-Indians Indians Archaeological evidence shows that people called Paleo-Indians were in the area of Utah Lake from about 12,000 to 8,500 B.C. They inhabited caves or brush and wood shelters. They

More information

Sample file. Table of Contents

Sample file. Table of Contents Table of Contents The Pequot War Currency of the Pequot Pequot Indian Clothing Make Your Own Pequot Money and Clothing Dress Like A Pequot Indian Weapons of the Pequot War King Philip s War Weapons Used

More information

SSUSH11 B & SSUSH12C Settling the West

SSUSH11 B & SSUSH12C Settling the West SSUSH11 B & SSUSH12C Settling the West New Discoveries in the West By 1845: More than 200 Americans had settled in California around the area known as Sutter s Fort. 1848: Discovery of Gold at Sutter s

More information

The First Humans. Hominids are the family of mankind and his or her relatives. Written by Lin Donn Illustrated by Phillip Martin

The First Humans. Hominids are the family of mankind and his or her relatives. Written by Lin Donn Illustrated by Phillip Martin The First Humans Hominids are the family of mankind and his or her relatives. Written by Lin Donn Illustrated by Phillip Martin 65 Million Years Ago Dinosaurs died out about 65 million years ago. The first

More information