Compare And Contrast Native American Indian War Vs Us Military

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Maddie Wilkie
Mr. Colin Mangold
US History
8 December 2917
Native Americans Versus US Military The United States Military and the Native American tribes were at a constant battle during the 1870’s to the 1890’s. Throughout the conflicts of the US Military and the Native American Indians there was a series of fights and battles. The main issue of conflict was the control of the land due to the United States settlers and miners trying to expand westward into the Great Plains. The Plains Wars still today leads to a dispute due to the amount of combatant deaths during the wars.
WHY THE NATIVE AMERICANS WERE PUSHED WEST The Native Americans tribes lived for many years in the American West, many white settlers propelled westward looking for gold, …show more content…

The Red River War was because the US Military launched a campaign to remove the Native American Tribes from the Southern Plains. The Red River Wars was a remarkable phase in the American History. The region on the Southern Plains was thrown extensive to white mining settlers which included white farmers and ranchers. The Battle of the Rosebud in Southern Montana was a battle for the Lakota and Cheyenne tribes, which they showed victory against the US military. The American History that was reflected off of the Battle of Rosebud in Montana was that it acknowledged the positiveness and defensiveness of the Lakota and Cheyenne tribes for their homeland and …show more content…

The ghost dance was a religious act that the government feared. The ghost dance created an uprising tension that created the war. The Lakota Tribe members got escorted to Wounded Knee Creek, where Colonel James Forsyth ordered his troops to disarm the Indians in fear. The Lakota Indians start performing the ghost dance and the Cavalry members get agitated and start a gunfight. The fighting between the US Military and the Lakota tribe results in the Lakota Indians losing three hundred members and the US Military losses seventy soldiers with some wounded. The Wounded Knee Massacre marked a toll in the American History book because for many white Americans, Wounded Knee was seen as an needless attack on the US Military. The survivors of the Wounded knee were doomed as trying to urge violege. The Wounded Knee Massacre ended the battling between the Native American Tribes and the US