Unseen Passage 1
Unseen Passage 1
Unseen Passage 1
History is often the story of the never-ending struggle for control over land. People have traveled great
distances for land. They have endured pain and suffering for the chance to get land. They have fought in
bloody battles and wars to claim their own little corner of Earth. Stories of explorers claiming new lands
for their countries have one stunning thing in common. In culture after culture, native peoples have
been overlooked and abused. Indigenous people have often lived in a country for thousands of years
before it was “discovered.” In Africa, it was the native African tribes who were abused.
In Australia it was the Aborigines and Torres Strait Islanders. In the Americas, it was the Native
Americans, who were called “Indians” by mistake. The U.S. government signed many peace treaties with
Native Americans when the nation was young. A peace treaty is a document in which both sides agree
on the terms for peace. Unfortunately, these treaties were often unfair to Native American as Many
natives did not understand English well. They did not understand the treaty. Some native leaders signed
away their rights to land in order to get personal wealth. They neglected the needs of their people.
The ultimate purpose of the treaties was to push Native Americans off their lands. These were the lands
where their people had lived long before the arrival of European explorers. During the 1830s, the U.S.
government forced the Choctaw, Cherokee, Creek, Seminole and other tribes off their land on the east
side of the Mississippi River. They were marched around 1,200 miles to eastern Oklahoma, and then
known as Indian Territory. Thousands died from disease and exposure on the way.
This was such a devastating event to the Native Americans that it became known as the Trail of Tears.
Once that had been accomplished, settlers decided they should be able to have any land on the west
side of the Mississippi River, too. Several hundred Cheyenne were killed in the Sand Creek Massacre of
1864. In 1890, Lakota people were killed by soldiers at Wounded Knee, South Dakota. Sadly, they were
killed even though they had already surrendered. Many Americans are shocked and ashamed of the way
native peoples were treated. We cannot change what has been. However, we can learn from our past
and never treat people this way again.
A Bird in hand is worth two in the bush.
2. Name one reason that the Native Americans agreed to treaties that were unfair to them.
Answer:
1. The forcing of native Americans off their land by the U.S. government and the march to Indian ter
ritory in the 1830s
3. Lakota
6. (a) Treaties
(b) exposure