Source A
Exterminate the wild beasts, ... these red-jawed tigers, whose fangs are dripping with the blood of the innocents! ... shoot them and be sure they are shot dead, dead, dead, dead. If they have any souls, the Lord can have mercy on them if he pleases, but that is His business. Ours is to kill the lazy vermin and make sure of killing them.
Jane Swisshelm, an abolitionist and an early feminist from
Minnesota, St Cloud Times (1862) An editorial written during
the Dakota War, when the Sioux Chief Little Crow attacked settlements
throughout Minnesota, killing perhaps 700 settlers.
When you read Source A, it is difficult for us to understand the
venom and hatred shown by a women who was an abolitionist and feminist. Behind the white American
hatred of the Indigenous
People undoubtedly lay the racism and supremacism of Manifest Destiny (see
here), but layered on top of that were cultural and
behavioural differences
which made accommodation, as it turned out, impossible:
- Way of Life
- The nomadic hunting life, with its simple homes, leisure crafts and sports seemed to
white Americans to 'belong to the very lowest ages of human existence.
Squalid and conceited, proud and worthless, lazy and lousy'.
- The teepees were 'too full of smoke... and inconceivably filthy'.
- Environment
- They could not accept the Indigenous preparedness to accept their environment and to adapt to it. Greely, seeing
Indigenous people 'sitting around the doors of their lodges at the height of the hunting season
... I could not help saying: "These people must die out - God has
given this earth to those who will subdue and cultivate it'.
- White Americans
felt that only THEY could make full use of the land.
- Attitude towards the land
- The wašíču
was a cultivator not a hunter; he actually wanted a fixed
settlement - and he didn't want Indigenous people travelling across it.
- He believed that God had given him the right to 'subdue
the earth' (Genesis 1 verse 28).
- He was profit-oriented: he wanted the land to make money. He believed he could sell the land.
To him, ownership, cultivation and fences were natural.
- He had given the Plains to the Indigenous Nations because he thought it
was 'a land wholly unfit for cultivation' - but when he wanted it he thought
he had a right to take it.
- Compare the Indigenous attitude to the land to ALL the above.
- Religion
- To Christian preachers it seemed that "the Indians have no religion,
only ignorant superstition".
- Indigenous rules on marriage, polygamy, divorce and exposure offended Christian morality.
- Government
- The loose government of the Indigenous Peoples, based on 'influence' was incomprehensible to
white Americans, whose government was based on laws and compulsion. He could not understand how
Indigenous government allowed bands to ignore it. He claimed that the
Indigenous Nations were 'without government', or that they had 'peculiar and
eccentric ideas on the subject of government'.
- He despised horse stealing, which was the aim of Indigenous warfare. 'Depriving a man of his hoss could mean life itself on the Plains'.
- Understanding
- Most white opposed the Indigenous Peoples because they were ignorant of their way of life - they had never met and
Indigenous person. In consequence they feared and distrusted them, or
despised them as an inferior race.
- White Americans could believe anything (e.g. torture, deceit, evil) of a people they knew nothing about.
- Enemies and War
- Ambush and stealth (the Indigenous way of war) seemed to white Americans
to be treachery and cowardice: 'there is ONE instance of a fair stand-up
fight'.
- Scalping seemed barbaric.
- The Indigenous warrior's desire to save his life seemed like 'a total lack of courage'
- Also, as the two sides fought against each other, attitudes hardened and hatred grew.
White Americans WOULD NOT accept that there was ANY good in any Indigenous
person.
|
Going Deeper
The following links will help you widen your knowledge:
BBC Bitesize on
White Americans' attitudes
towards the Indigenous Peoples
Dr. Chris Mato Nunpa on Christianity and the Native American Genocide
Source B
One White American View of the Indigenous Peoples
The Indians are children. Their
wars, homes, crafts, comforts, all belong to the very lowest time of human
existence.
Horace Greeley, An Overland Journey (1859)
Source C
Another White American View of the Indigenous Peoples
The Indians have very peculiar ideas about government
. . . .The result, however, is fairly good, and seems to
fit the nature, needs and difficulties of the life of the Plains Indians.
Colonel Dodge, Hunting Grounds of the Great West (1877).
Source D
An Indigenous View of the Land
I buried my father in this beautiful land. I love this land. A man who would not love his father's grave is worse than a wild animal.
Joseph, Chief of the Nez Perce.
Source E
A White American View of the Land
As I passed these magnificent fields of Kansas - the very best cornlands on earth - and saw their owners sitting at the doors of their lodges during the planting season, I could not help saying: 'These people must die out. God has given this earth to those who will conquer and cultivate it.'
Horace Greeley, An Overland Journey (1859).
Source F
A White American View of the Indigenous Religion
Believing all the wild and debasing superstitions which have come down to him, he has no practical views of a moral superintendence to protect or to punish him.
Lewis Cass, ...the Emigration, Preservation, and
Improvement of the Aborigines of America (1830). Cass was a former Army
Officer and Senator. He put into action the policy of Indian removal, resulting the 'Trail of Tears', justifying
it by arguing that "a barbarous people ... cannot live in contact with a
civilized community".
Source G
Another White American View
I say that the Indian is a very good and religious being.
I never saw any other people spend so much of their lives worshipping the
Great Spirit.
George Catlin, Letters and Notes (1832)
Consider:
1. Consider Sources B and C. How and why do they
differ? Which interpretation gives the more convincing opinion?
2. Repeat the exercise for Sources D and E; and then
for Sources F and G.
3. Rank reasons 1-7 in order of importance,
explaining your reasoning.
- AQA-style Questions
4.
Describe two problems faced by the Plains Indians in their dealings with white
Americans.
6. Which of the following was the more important reason why white settlers
hated the Plains Indians:
• the Plains Indians' nomadic way of life
• the Plains Indians' religion and values?
- Edexcel-style Questions
3.
Explain the importance of the Plains Indians’ beliefs about land and nature for relations between Plains Indians and settlers.
- OCR-style Questions
1a. Identify one aspect of the Plains Indians' way of life which
scandalised white Americans.
2. Write a clear and organised summary that analyses white
Americans' hostility to the Plains Indians' way of life.
3. Why did white Americans hate the Plains Indians? Explain your answer.
|