The Mingo were a highly developed culture and though displaced by Europeans, they have retained many of their customs and beliefs. This Native American tribe continues to show many aspects of its ancestry through daily practices and its religious and social structures even with European influence and displacement to reservations. A part of everyday life for Mingo Indians was the clothes that they wore. The men of the tribe wore breechcloths with leggings, and the women of the tribe usually wore kilts, wore wraparound skirts, short leggings, and overdresses. Another part of the rich Mingo culture was the housing. “The Seneca Indians lived in villages of longhouses, which were large wood-frame buildings covered with sheets of elm bark,“ (Native …show more content…
Some Iroquois Indians moved to Pennsylvania in search for new land, and in 1750, Seneca Indians left their Iroquois homeland, and joined the Cayuga tribe in Ohio, where they later became the Mingo Indians. In 1774, while Chief Logan was on a hunting trip with his family, white settlers killed him. This was very tragic, because Chief Logan pretty much built the Mingo tribe, and now it will be even harder to retain their land, because Chief Logan can’t get them out of this. By 1760, the Seneca tribe traveled to Eastern Ohio, and by 1770 they moved to Central Ohio. “Captain William Crawford led an attack against an Ohio Seneca village on the Scioto River near what is now downtown Columbus,” (Douglas, Hurt R. "Mingo Indians." Ohio History Central). The Mingo later relocated to Oklahoma in the 19th century. “The nation had initially been assigned lands within the Cherokee Reservation in Oklahoma, and were later reassigned a joint reservation with the Shawnee, who had been forced to migrate to the same area.” (Douglas, Hurt R. "Mingo Indians." Ohio History Central). The Seneca tribe had many villages along the Sandusky River by the 1800’s. After the Civil War, the Ohio Seneca joined Seneca and Cayuga from Kansas to expand the Mingo tribe. “The Seneca, Cayuga and Ohio Seneca gained federal recognition as the Seneca-Cayuga Tribe of
Thus, the Hudson River was also their roots of transportations and connection to each other tribes; their hands made Elm bark canoes helped them to travelled and fished more effectively along the Hudson River. The most common aspect of the five tribes under the Iroquois Confederacy was that they lived in villages
They were never a big tribe, and their numbers diminished rapidly. Today their numbers are rising back and higher than they ever were. The Poncas were a small tribe of indians that had along history, were forced to move to Oklahoma, today they have a totally different way of life. The Ponca tribe was part of another tribe called omaha when it was formed in the great lakes region. They separated from the omaha in the early 1800s while they migrated to Nebraska and South Dakota.
The cherokee (chair-uh-kee) tribe was a tribe located in the southeastern part of the United States in states like Georgia, North and South Carolina, Virginia, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Descendants now mostly live in Oklahoma. Many of the descendants now live in Oklahoma because of the Trail of tears which was the removal of Native americans by forcing them to Indian reservation, and if the tribes didn’t go by will the american army would force them.
The colonizers “thirst for expansion” lead to various “encounters” with the Iroquois people, resulting with dramatic changes in territory, population, social and economic development. By examining the relationship between the colonizers and the Native American Iroquois Tribes,
The Choctaws, Mississippi's largest Indian group, were the first southeastern Indians to accept removal with the Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek in September 1830. The treaty provided that the Choctaws would receive land west of the Mississippi River in exchange for the remaining Choctaw lands in Mississippi. In the winter of 1830, Choctaws began migrating to Indian Territory along the "Trail of tears. " The westward migrations continued over the following decades, and Indians remaining in Mississippi were forced to flee their communal land-holdings in return for small individually owned allotments.
The Creeks who lived in what is now West Tennessee and Kentucky occasionally traveled east for exploring and hunting. By the late 17th century, the Cherokee, mostly hunters and farmers, had villages spread out over hundreds of square miles. The upper Overhill towns in the more rugged northeast portion of Cherokee lands were less well-known but would bring the Cherokee into close proximity with settlements established in the years before the American Revolution (Schroedl ). North and west of the Overhill towns was the “dark and bloody ground” that became Kentucky - large sections of mostly uninhabited lands that were hunting ground and were traversed along warrior paths to battle rival tribes of Shawnee and
Men used to wear deerskin shirts, leggings with moccasins. The women’s clothing was almost the same but they wore short deerskin skirts with high boot top moccasins. They were never without loincloth. What is loincloth? Loincloth is a single piece of cloth that is wrapped around the hips.
The Cheyenne tribe split into two separate groups in 1832 as they dispersed near the Black Hills, and other living areas south of Colorado which neighbored the Arkansas River. The Indians that migrated to the Arkansas River soon clashed with the Kiowa tribe, who first claimed the territory with the Comanche’s. Many battles took place until an alliance was formed
Push/Pull Informational Paragraph: The Cherokee, Chickasaw, Choctaw, Creek, and Seminole Indians were forced to migrate from their native homelands because the new settlers coming to the U.S. wanted the Native’s land. Thomas Jefferson and Andrew Jackson were the main enforcers of removing the Indians and relocating them to the land that we now call Oklahoma. This plan was called the Indian Removal Act. A few Indians felt insecure and left immediately, but the other 100,000 or so from places like Michigan, Louisiana, and Florida stayed. Soon enough, gold was discovered to be amongst the Cherokee lands, giving the settlers even more of a reason why they want it as soon as possible.
In 1851, the First Treaty of Fort Laramie was signed, and most Great Plains tribes agreed. The government agreed to pay $50,000 to tribes; in return, they would promise not to interfere with the American settlement process. Additionally, this agreement constructed specific land borders for the tribes. The Second Treaty of Fort Laramie was also created, under which the remaining Sioux tribes would be relocated to the Black Hills in the Dakota Territory. The Treaty of Medicine Lodge Creek would move more groups, the Cheyenne, Arapaho, Kiowa, and Comanche, to “Indian Territory,” which is now present-day Oklahoma.
Dear Mr. Parker, During the 1838 Congress passed a law called the Indian Removal homes from Georgia to Indian Territory. It was a long walk 4,000 thousand of us died from the terrible weather,illness, weakness. After the devastating journey, the Cherokee Indians tried to settle in their new "desert" home. In the new territory, problems developed with the new arrivals, and Cherokees who had already come here.
Calloway includes little information in regard to interconnection or dependency between Pueblo tribes before colonization. He does, however provide a detailed overview and explanation of the Iroquois Great League of Peace. Before the Great League of Peace there was constant conflict between the tribes (Calloway, 52). Calloway writes that Hiawatha, an Onondaga chieftain “…chose to break the cycle of vengeance and violence and create a new world order for the Iroquois” (Calloway, 53). The Onondagas, Mohawks, Oneidas, Cayugas, and Senecas all agreed to be peaceful and come together to work to defend their land (Calloway, 53).
After imposing political and military action on urging the Native American Indians from the southern states of America, President Andrew Jackson decided it was time to enact the Indian Removal Act of 1830. The Indian Removal act of 1830 proclaimed that all Native Americans living east of the Mississippi River were to be forced to move west of the Mississippi River where the region of the Louisiana Purchase remained. This land set aside for these Native Americans was known as the “Indian colonization zone”. Because some of the Indian tribes refused to leave their homelands, “As a result, wars broke about between the U.S. Government and Indian Tribes”(xbox360). The Indian Removal Act was originally created to have the Native Americans vacate
The Iroquois were primarily hunters, farmers, gatherers, and traders. They hunted deer and other game. For farming, they actually had to move to new locations every so often because the soil would lose its nutrients and wouldn’t produce good crops any longer. Navajo people were gathered and hunters like the Iroquois, but something that they did unlike the Iroquois, was raiding. Aside from that, they hunted deer, antelope, and rabbits; grew watermelons, corn, beans, and squash; and gathered wild plants, seeds, roots, and berries.
Andrew Jackson, keep or throw away? In today’s time some people want Andrew Jackson off of the 20 dollar bill. Some people think that it would be wrong to do this. Well I believe Andrew Jackson should be taken off the twenty dollar bill. Andrew Jackson America’s 7th president/ 2nd worst president (right after John Adams).