The History of the Lakota in Wind Cave National Park For the Lakota tribe in South Dakota, Wind Cave National Park is much more than an awe-inspiring cave full of peculiar cave formations and bison that stand eight feet tall. For the Lakota, Wind Cave National Park is the site of their ancestors’ emergence from inside the Earth onto the land they used to call home. Upon the discovery of gold in the Great Sioux Reservation, the Lakota’s sacred land was claimed by the United States National Government. The Lakota’s history on the land, their creation story and their rituals associated with the Wind Cave has resulted in their ongoing dispute with the federal government with regard to who should have the right to the sacred lands.
Joseph Bruchac was born in October 16, 1942 in Saratoga Springs, NY. But lived in the Adirondack MT. foothills town of Greenfield Center in New York. He has a sister named Margaret and two grown sons named James, and Jesse. Joseph is an American Indian heritage one of his heritage background includes Slovak and English blood.
Anyone can read a history textbook assigned in class and understand the events in their minds, but understanding the emotion of the people who were there at the events are lost in blank monotone text. Being able to recite events dryly from your textbook is not knowing one’s history. In order to fully understand history, you have to be able to understand every aspect of the events. Every emotion, thought, and desire of the people who were there as the history was made. In order to tell history, you need to attach emotion to the words being expressed so that the reader can fully understand what happened.
Visiting museums is always fun for many people, especially when you are a little kid. You get to see all kinds of different historical works done by the people from the past and present. I recently haven’t been to any museums since I was little, until I got to visit one for this course. For this Action Research Project Paper, I visited Dallas Freedman’s Memorial located in Dallas, Texas. Dallas Freedman’s Memorial is one of the most beautiful museums and quite depressing at the same time.
The Post Reconstruction Era was the worst period ever for Native American history but it also became the upcoming rising of Native American leadership. Leaders like Red Cloud, Chief Seattle, Quanah Parker and Chief Joseph all had to settle with adapting to the American culture. For an example Red Cloud and his people the Sioux began series of fights because miners were crossing into their territory digging up their land looking for gold, they showed no respect to their environment, they even dug up to look for gold. Chief Seattle leader of the Suquamish, was upset with the way America cared for its land, he was so distraught by it he did a speech called “Nation of Nation’s”, where he talks about his land losing its beauty and how nothing there
In the late 1830’s, where the United States was growing rapidly, whites faced an obstacle while trying to settle in the South. This area of land was home of the Cherokee and other Indian tribes. The Cherokee Indians signed treaties hoping that white settlers would not come for their land. Prompted by the state of Georgia along with the president, Andrew Jackson, whom did not like Indians, expelled the Cherokee Indians from their homeland. Cherokee’s pleas to Georgia and the Supreme Court did little to stop their removal.
The Cherokee were a tribe of Indians who were affected by the Indian removal acts of the early 1800’s. The Cherokee showed multiple signs of being “civilized” towards the Americans. For example, the Cherokee expressed claimed the “Federal government they were obligated to honor the treaties guaranteeing the sovereignty to the Cherokee”(6). This is important because it demonstrates the fact the Cherokee can claim their sovereignty over a section of land. The sovereign rights of the Cherokee could also suggest that they are ready to participate in a civilized life showing their assimilation to the Americans.
The Cherokee Indians never lived in tipis, they lived in permanent houses. In the winter, they lived in houses of woven saplings, plastered with mud and the roof was made of bark. In the summer, they lived in open- air dwellings and the roof was made out of bark. Cherokee women wore tear dresses, styled from a calico print material with an applique diamond pattern around the skirt.
Knowing that I am an arts ' enthusiast, she searched for local events pertaining to art and stumbled across tickets to this event on the OMA websites list of attractions. The intended exhibit of the Antiques Vintage and Garden Show was a bit of a snooze and we ended up spending over two hours in the room designated for the Pre-Columbian art works instead, which happened to line up with the time period of the art works studied in this course of Art History. Through my experience at this exhibit it was revealed to me the importance of the natural world in every Mesoamerican cultures form of art. Specifically, this was proven by the fact that the materials utilized were part of each cultures stomping grounds, literally, in reference to clays and ceramics, also by the subjects and scenes depicted in such works revolved around the natural environment at hand, and lastly shown by the value of animal life depicted through their representation and symbolism. As we entered a small, yet brightly lit room we were overwhelmed by the sheer quantity of authentic Mesoamerican art works and
I would, however, say that they do hold true to these values, generic as they may be. I have personally visited this gallery thrice, and their collection includes a lot of works by non-white, non-male artists. It is not often that I have come across a gallery that gives the same amount of deference to Yinka Shonibare and Miriam Schapiro as it does to Andy Warhol and Ellsworth Kelly, but this gallery is full of spaces where artistic notoriety is not as essential as the message of the artwork. I know this is what museums are supposed to be, but anyone who has been to any major art museum knows that the majority of people hover around a canvas just because it was attributed to someone famous, not because the work itself is good or strong. In this regard, I think MCASD’s curatorial department and gallery planning are some of their greatest strengths.
Around the 1800s, the United Stated government was trying to figure out a way to remove the Indian tribes such as the Seminole, Cherokee, Chickasaw, and Choctaw from the southeast. Many American settlers wanted to remove the Indians there because they sawDuring President Jackson 's term of office, he signed the Indian Removal Act on May 28, 1830. This Indian Removal Act, President Jackson let to grant unsettled lands west of the Mississippi in exchange for Indian lands within existing state borders. There were tribes that left their lands peacefully; however, many other Indian people refused to relocate. In the fall and winter of 1838 and 1839, one of the tribes known as Cherokees were forcibly moved west by the government.
Khrystal A. Gutierrez Nov. 9, 2016 Per. 2 Apache Indians Who are the Apache Indians? The Apache Indian are a tribe that was one of that last tribes Americans had to deal with in the 1800-1900s. There name is a Zuni word meaning “enemy”, but to that Spaniards, Comanches, and especially the United States Government were enemies to the Apache.
Three personally notable celebrations occur at The Smithsonian Institute, National Museum of American Indian, and Chehaw Park. The Smithsonian Institute hosts performances, films, and discussions to inform and entertain the public. The National Museum of American Indian offers many
Gold was founded, Georgia, 1828. Two years later in 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act, if declared, the Cherokee Indians can either become a citizen and learn the American language and become Christians if the Indians didn’t agree they’d be removed from Georgia and head west to Oklahoma to build a new colonization. The Cherokee Tribe weren’t the only Indian tribe that were being declared this by the government, but four other tribes as well, Choctaw, Chickasaw, Seminole and Creek. They were known as the “Five Civilized Tribes”. The journey to Oklahoma was rough.
Throughout the history of the United States, there generally have been dozens of particularly social movements, which is fairly significant. From the African American Civil Rights Movement in 1954 to the feminism movement in 1920, protests for all intents and purposes have helped these groups basically earn rights and fight injustice in a really major way. Some injustices that these groups face range from lack of voting rights to police brutality, or so they essentially thought. The indigenous people of North America aren’t actually immune to these injustices, basically contrary to popular belief. Back in the 1968, the American Indian Movement generally was formed to for all intents and purposes give natives security and peace of mind in a