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INTRODUCTION
Traditionally, the very beginning of the United States’ history is
considered from the time of European exploration and settlement, starting
in the 16th century, to the present. But people had been living in America
for over 30,000 years before the first European colonists arrived.
When Columbus landed on the island of San Salvador in 1492 he was
welcomed by a brown-skinned people whose physical appearance confirmed him
in his opinion that he had at last reached India, and whom, therefore, he
called Indios, Indians, a name which, however mistaken in its first
application continued to hold its own, and has long since won general
acceptance, except in strictly scientific writing, where the more exact
term American is commonly used. As exploration was extended north and south
it was found that the same race was spread over the whole continent, from
the Arctic shores to Cape Horn, everywhere alike in the main physical
characteristics, with the exception of the Eskimo in the extreme North
(whose features suggest the Mongolian).
GENERAL BACKGROUND
Origin and Antiquity
Various origins have been assigned to the Indian race. The more or
less beleivable explanation is following. At the height of the Ice Age,
between 34,000 and 30,000 B.C., much of the world's water was contained in
vast continental ice sheets. As a result, the Bering Sea was hundreds of
meters below its current level, and a land bridge, known as Beringia,
emerged between Asia and North America. At its peak, Beringia is thought to
have been some 1,500 kilometers wide. A moist and treeless tundra, it was
covered with grasses and plant life, attracting the large animals that
early humans hunted for their survival. The first people to reach North
America almost certainly did so without knowing they had crossed into a new
continent. They would have been following game, as their ancestors had for
thousands of years, along the Siberian coast and then across the land
bridge.
Race Type
The most marked physical characteristics of the Indian race type are
brown skin, dark brown eyes, prominent cheek bones, straight black hair,
and scantiness of beard. The color is not red, as is popularly supposed,
but varies from very light in some tribes, as the Cheyenne, to almost black
in others, as the Caddo and Tarimari. In a few tribes, as the Flatheads,
the skin has a distinct yellowish cast. The hair is brown in childhood, but
always black in the adult until it turns grey with age. Baldness is almost
unknown. The eye is not held so open as in the Caucasian and seems better
adapted to distance than to close work. The nose is usually straight and
well shaped, and in some tribes strongly aquiline. Their hands and feet are
comparatively small. Height and weight vary as among Europeans, the Pueblos
averaging but little more than five feet, while the Cheyenne and Arapaho
are exceptionally tall, and the Tehuelche of Patagonia almost massive in
build. As a rule, the desert Indians, as the Apache, are spare and muscular
in build, while those of the timbered regions are heavier, although not
proportionately stronger. The beard is always scanty, but increases with
the admixture of white blood. The mistaken idea that the Indian has
naturally no beard is due to the fact that in most tribes it is plucked out
as fast as it grows, the eyebrows being treated in the same way. There is
no tribe of "white Indians", but albinos with blond skin, weak pink eyes
and almost white hair are occasionally found, especially among the Pueblos.
Major Cultural Areas
From prehistoric times until recent historic times there were roughly
six major cultural areas, excluding that of the Arctic (see Eskimo), i.e.,
Northwest Coast, Plains, Plateau, Eastern Woodlands, Northern, and
Southwest.
The Northwest Coast Area
The Northwest Coast area extended along the Pacific coast from South
Alaska to North California. The main language families in this area were
the Nadene in the north and the Wakashan (a subdivision of the Algonquian-
Wakashan linguistic stock) and the Tsimshian (a subdivision of the Penutian
linguistic stock) in the central area. Typical tribes were the Kwakiutl,
the Haida, the Tsimshian, and the Nootka. Thickly wooded, with a temperate
climate and heavy rainfall, the area had long supported a large Native
American population. Salmon was the staple food, supplemented by sea
mammals (seals and sea lions) and land mammals (deer, elk, and bears) as
well as berries and other wild fruit. The Native Americans of this area
used wood to build their houses and had cedar-planked canoes and carved
dugouts. In their permanent winter villages some of the groups had totem
poles, which were elaborately carved and covered with symbolic animal
decoration. Their art work, for which they are famed, also included the
making of ceremonial items, such as rattles and masks; weaving; and
basketry. They had a highly stratified society with chiefs, nobles,
commoners, and slaves. Public display and disposal of wealth were basic
features of the society. They had woven robes, furs, and basket hats as
well as wooden armor and helmets for battle. This distinctive culture,
which included cannibalistic rituals, was not greatly affected by European
influences until after the late 18th cent., when the white fur traders and
hunters came to the area.
TRIBES: Abenaki, Algonkin, Beothuk, Delaware, Erie, Fox, Huron,
Illinois, Iroquois, Kickapoo, Mahican, Mascouten, Massachuset,
Mattabesic, Menominee, Metoac, Miami, Micmac, Mohegan, Montagnais,
Narragansett, Nauset, Neutrals, Niantic, Nipissing, Nipmuc, Ojibwe,
Ottawa, Pennacook, Pequot, Pocumtuck, Potawatomi, Sauk, Shawnee,
Susquehannock, Tionontati, Wampanoag, Wappinger, Wenro, Winnebago.
The Plains Area
The Plains area extended from just North of the Canadian border, South
to Texas and included the grasslands area between the Mississippi River and
the foothills of the Rocky Mts. The main language families in this area
were the Algonquian-Wakashan, the Aztec-Tanoan, and the Hokan-Siouan. In
pre-Columbian times there were two distinct types of Native Americans
there: sedentary and nomadic. The sedentary tribes, who had migrated from
neighbor ing regions and had initally settled along the great river
valleys, were farmers and lived in permanent villages of dome-shaped earth
lodges surrounded by earthen walls. They raised corn, squash, and beans.
The foot nomads, on the other hand, moved about with their goods on dog-
drawn travois and eked out a precarious existence by hunting the vast herds
of buffalo (bison) - usually by driving them into enclosures or rounding
them up by setting grass fires. They supplemented their diet by exchanging
meat and hides for the corn of the agricultural Native Americans.
The horse, first introduced by the Spanish of the Southwest, appeared
in the Plains about the beginning of the 18th cent. and revolutionized the
life of the Plains Indians. Many Native Americans left their villages and
joined the nomads. Mounted and armed with bow and arrow, they ranged the
grasslands hunting buffalo. The other Native Americans remained farmers
(e.g., the Arikara, the Hidatsa, and the Mandan). Native Americans from
surrounding areas came into the Plains (e.g., the Sioux from the Great
Lakes, the Comanche and the Kiowa from the west and northwest, and the
Navajo and the Apache from the southwest). A universal sign language
developed among the perpetually wandering and often warring Native
Americans. Living on horseback and in the portable tepee, they preserved
food by pounding and drying lean meat and made their clothes from buffalo
hides and deerskins. The system of coup was a characteristic feature of
their society. Other features were rites of fasting in quest of a vision,
warrior clans, bead and feather art work, and decorated hides. These Plains
Indians were among the last to engage in a serious struggle with the white
settlers in the United States.
TRIBES: Arapaho, Arikara, Assiniboine, Bidai, Blackfoot, Caddo,
Cheyenne, Comanche, Cree, Crow, Dakota (Sioux), Gros Ventre, Hidatsa,
Iowa, Kansa, Kiowa, Kiowa-Apache, Kitsai, Lakota (Sioux), Mandan,
Metis, Missouri, Nakota (Sioux), Omaha, Osage, Otoe, Pawnee, Ponca,
Sarsi, Sutai, Tonkawa, Wichita.
The Plateau Area
The Plateau area extended from above the Canadian border through the
plateau and mountain area of the Rocky Mts. to the Southwest and included
much of California. Typical tribes were the Spokan, the Paiute, the Nez
Perce, and the Shoshone. This was an area of great linguistic diversity.
Because of the inhospitable environment the cultural development was
generally low. The Native Americans in the Central Valley of California and
on the California coast, notably the Pomo, were sedentary peoples who
gathered edible plants, roots, and fruit and also hunted small game. Their
acorn bread, made by pounding acorns into meal and then leaching it with
hot water, was distinctive, and they cooked in baskets filled with water
and heated by hot stones. Living in brush shelters or more substantial lean-
tos, they had partly buried earth lodges for ceremonies and ritual sweat
baths. Basketry, coiled and twined, was highly developed. To the north,
between the Cascade Range and the Rocky Mts., the social, political, and
religious systems were simple, and art was nonexistent. The Native
Americans there underwent (since 1730) a great cultural change when they
obtained from the Plains Indians the horse, the tepee, a form of the sun
dance, and deerskin clothes. They continued, however, to fish for salmon
with nets and spears and to gather camas bulbs. They also gathered ants and
other insects and hunted small game and, in later times, buffalo. Their
permanent winter villages on waterways had semisubterranean lodges with
conical roofs; a few Native Americans lived in bark-covered long houses.
TRIBES: Carrier, Cayuse, Coeur D'Alene, Colville, Dock-Spus,
Eneeshur, Flathead, Kalispel, Kawachkin, Kittitas, Klamath, Klickitat,
Kosith, Kutenai, Lakes, Lillooet, Methow, Modac, Nez Perce, Okanogan,
Palouse, Sanpoil, Shushwap, Sinkiuse, Spokane, Tenino, Thompson,
Tyigh, Umatilla, Wallawalla, Wasco, Wauyukma, Wenatchee, Wishram,
Wyampum, Yakima. Californian: Achomawi, Atsugewi, Cahuilla, Chimariko,
Chumash, Costanoan, Esselen, Hupa, Karuk, Kawaiisu, Maidu, Mission
Indians, Miwok, Mono, Patwin, Pomo, Serrano, Shasta, Tolowa,
Tubatulabal, Wailaki, Wintu, Wiyot, Yaha, Yokuts, Yuki, Yuman
(California).
The Eastern Woodlands Area
The Eastern Woodlands area covered the eastern part of the United
States, roughly from the Atlantic Ocean to the Mississippi River, and
included the Great Lakes. The Natchez, the Choctaw, the Cherokee, and the
Creek were typical inhabitants. The northeastern part of this area extended
from Canada to Kentucky and Virginia. The people of the area (speaking
languages of the Algonquian-Wakashan stock) were largely deer hunters and
farmers; the women tended small plots of corn, squash, and beans. The
birchbark canoe gained wide usage in this area. The general pattern of
existence of these Algonquian peoples and their neighbors, who spoke
languages belonging to the Iroquoian branch of the Hokan-Siouan stock
(enemies who had probably invaded from the south), was quite complex. Their
diet of deer meat was supplemented by other game (e.g., bear), fish (caught
with hook, spear, and net), and shellfish. Cooking was done in vessels of
wood and bark or simple black pottery. The dome-shaped wigwam and the
longhouse of the Iroquois characterized their housing. The deerskin
clothing, the painting of the face and (in the case of the men) body, and
the scalp lock of the men (left when hair was shaved on both sides of the
head), were typical. The myths of Manitou (often called Manibozho or
Manabaus), the hero who remade the world from mud after a deluge, are also
widely known.
The region from the Ohio River South to the Gulf of Mexico, with its
forests and fertile soil, was the heart of the southeastern part of the
Eastern Woodlands cultural area. There before c.500 the inhabitants were
seminomads who hunted, fished, and gathered roots and seeds. Between 500
and 900 they adopted agriculture, tobacco smoking, pottery making, and
burial mounds. By c.1300 the agricultural economy was well established, and
artifacts found in the mounds show that trade was widespread. Long before
the Europeans arrived, the peoples of the Natchez and Muskogean branches of
the Hokan-Siouan linguistic family were farmers who used hoes with stone,
bone, or shell blades. They hunted with bow and arrow and blowgun, caught
fish by poisoning streams, and gathered berries, fruit, and shellfish. They
had excellent pottery, sometimes decorated with abstract figures of animals
or humans. Since warfare was frequent and intense, the villages were
enclosed by wooden palisades reinforced with earth. Some of the large
villages, usually ceremonial centers, dominated the smaller settlements of
the surrounding countryside. There were temples for sun worship; rites were
elaborate and featured an altar with perpetual fire, extinguished and
rekindled each year in a “new fire” ceremony. The society was commonly
divided into classes, with a chief, his children, nobles, and commoners
making up the hierarchy. For a discussion of the earliest Woodland groups,
see the separate article Eastern Woodlands culture.
TRIBES: Acolapissa, Asis, Alibamu, Apalachee, Atakapa, Bayougoula,
Biloxi, Calusa, Catawba, Chakchiuma, Cherokee, Chesapeake Algonquin,
Chickasaw, Chitamacha, Choctaw, Coushatta, Creek, Cusabo, Gaucata,
Guale, Hitchiti, Houma, Jeags, Karankawa, Lumbee, Miccosukee, Mobile,
Napochi, Nappissa, Natchez, Ofo, Powhatan, Quapaw, Seminole,
Southeastern Siouan, Tekesta, Tidewater Algonquin, Timucua, Tunica,
Tuscarora, Yamasee, Yuchi. Bannock, Paiute (Northern), Paiute
(Southern), Sheepeater, Shoshone (Northern), Shoshone (Western), Ute,
Washo.
The Northern Area
The Northern area covered most of Canada, also known as the Subarctic,
in the belt of semiarctic land from the Rocky Mts. to Hudson Bay. The main
languages in this area were those of the Algonquian-Wakashan and the Nadene
stocks. Typical of the people there were the Chipewyan. Limiting
environmental conditions prevented farming, but hunting, gathering, and
activities such as trapping and fishing were carried on. Nomadic hunters
moved with the season from forest to tundra, killing the caribou in
semiannual drives. Other food was provided by small game, berries, and
edible roots. Not only food but clothing and even some shelter (caribou-
skin tents) came from the caribou, and with caribou leather thongs the
Indians laced their snowshoes and made nets and bags. The snowshoe was one
of the most important items of material culture. The shaman featured in the
religion of many of these people.
TRIBES: Calapuya, Cathlamet, Chehalis, Chemakum, Chetco,
Chilluckkittequaw, Chinook, Clackamas, Clatskani, Clatsop, Cowich,
Cowlitz, Haida, Hoh, Klallam, Kwalhioqua, Lushootseed, Makah, Molala,
Multomah, Oynut, Ozette, Queets, Quileute, Quinault, Rogue River,
Siletz, Taidhapam, Tillamook, Tutuni, Yakonan.
The Southwest Area
The Southwest area generally extended over Arizona, New Mexico, and
parts of Colorado and Utah. The Uto-Aztecan branch of the Aztec-Tanoan
linguistic stock was the main language group of the area. Here a
seminomadic people called the Basket Makers, who hunted with a spear
thrower, or atlatl, acquired (c.1000 B.C.) the art of cultivating beans and
squash, probably from their southern neighbors. They also learned to make
unfired pottery. They wove baskets, sandals, and bags. By c.700 B.C. they
had initiated intensive agriculture, made true pottery, and hunted with bow
and arrow. They lived in pit dwellings, which were partly underground and
were lined with slabs of stone - the so-called slab houses. A new people
came into the area some two centuries later; these were the ancestors of
the Pueblo Indians. They lived in large, terraced community houses set on
ledges of cliffs or canyons for protection and developed a ceremonial
chamber (the kiva) out of what had been the living room of the pit
dwellings. This period of development ended c.1300, after a severe drought
and the beginnings of the invasions from the north by the Athabascan-
speaking Navajo and Apache. The known historic Pueblo cultures of such
sedentary farming peoples as the Hopi and the Zuni then came into being.
They cultivated corn, beans, squash, cotton, and tobacco, killed rabbits
with a wooden throwing stick, and traded cotton textiles and corn for
buffalo meat from nomadic tribes. The men wove cotton textiles and
cultivated the fields, while women made fine polychrome pottery. The
mythology and religious ceremonies were complex.
TRIBES: Apache (Eastern), Apache (Western), Chemehuevi, Coahuiltec,
Hopi, Jano, Manso, Maricopa, Mohave, Navaho, Pai, Papago, Pima, Pueblo
(breaking into: Acoma, Cochiti, Isleta, Jemez, Laguna, Nambe, Picuris,
Pojoaque, Sandia, San Felipe, San Ildefonso, San Juan, Santa Ana,
Santa Clara, Santo Domingo, Taos, Tesuque, Zia), Yaqui, Yavapai,
Yuman, Zuni. Am strongly thinking about
LIFESTYLE and TRADITIONS
Social Organization
Among most of the tribes east of the Mississippi, among the Pueblos,
Navahos, and others of the South-West, and among the Tlingit and Haida of
the north-west coast, society was based upon the clan system, under which
the tribe was divided into a number of large family groups, the members of
which were considered as closely related and prohibited from intermarrying.
The children usually followed the clan of the mother. The clans themselves
were sometimes grouped into larger bodies of related kindred, to which the
name of phratries has been applied. The clans were usually, but not always,
named from animals, and each clan paid special reverence to its tutelary
animal. Thus the Cherokee had seven clans, Wolf, Deer, Bird, Paint, and
three others with names not readily translated. A Wolf man could not marry
a Wolf woman, but might marry a Deer woman, or one of any of the other
clans, and his children were of the Deer clan or other clan accordingly. In
some tribes the name of the individual indicated the clan, as "Round Foot"
in the wolf clan and "Crawler" in the Turtle clan. Certain functions of
war, peace, or ceremonial were usually hereditary in special clans, and
revenge for injuries with the tribe devolved upon the clan relatives of the
person injured. The tribal council was made up of the hereditary or elected
chiefs, and any alien taken into the tribe had to be specifically adopted
into a family and clan. The clan system was by no means universal but is
now known to have been limited to particular regions and seems to have been
originally an artificial contrivance to protect land and other tribal
descent. It was absent almost everywhere west of the Missouri, excepting in
the South-West, and appears to have been unknown throughout the geater
portion of British America, the interior of Alaska, and probably among the
Eskimos. Among the plains tribes, the unit was the band, whose members
camped together under their own chief, in an appointed place in the tribal
camp circle, and were subject to no marriage prohibition, but usually
married among themselves.
With a few notable exceptions, there was very little idea of tribal
solidarity or supreme authority, and where a chief appears in history as
tribal dictator, as in the case of Powhatan in Virginia, it was usually due
to his own strong personality. The real authority was with the council as
interpreters of ancient tribal customs. Even such well-known tribes as the
Creeks and Cherokee were really only aggregations of closely cognate
villages, each acting independently or in cooperation with the others as
suited its immediate convenience. Even in the smaller and more compact
tribes there was seldom any provision for coercing the individual to secure
common action, but those of the same clan or band usually acted together.
In this lack of solidarity is the secret of Indian military weakness. In no
Indian war in the history of the United States has a single large tribe
ever united in solid resistance, while on the other hand other tribes have
always been found to join against the hostiles. Among the Natchez, Tinucua,
and some other southern tribes, there is more indication of a central
authority, resting probably with a dominant clan.
The Iroquois of New York had progressed beyond any other native people
north of Mexico in the elaboration of a state and empire. Through a
carefully planned system of confederations, originating about 1570, the
five allied tribes had secured internal peace and unity, by which they had
been able to acquire dominant control over most of the tribes from Hudson
Bay to Carolina, and if not prematurely checked by the advent of the
whites, might in time have founded a northern empire to rival that of the
Aztec.
Land was usually held in common, except among the Pueblos, where it
was apportioned among the clans, and in some tribes in northern California,
where individual right is said to have existed. Timber and other natural
products were free, and hospitality was carried to such a degree that no
man kept what his neighbour wanted. While this prevented extremes of
poverty, on the other hand it paralyzed individual industry and economy,
and was an effectual barrier to progress. The accumulation of property was
further discouraged by the fact that in most tribes it was customary to
destroy all the belongings of the owner at his death. The word for "brave"
and "generous" was frequently the same, and along the north-west coast
there existed the curious custom known as potlatch, under which a man saved
for half a lifetime in order to acquire the rank of chief by finally giving
away his entire hoard at a grand public feast.
Enslavement of captives was more or less common throughout the
country, especially in the southern states, where the captives were
sometimes crippled to prevent their escape. Along the north-west coast and
as far south as California, not only the captives but their children and
later descendants were slaves and might be abused or slaughtered at the
will of the master, being frequently burned alive with their deceased
owner, or butchered to provide a ceremonial cannibal feast. In the Southern
slave states, before the Civil War, the Indians were frequent owners of
negro slaves.
Men and women, and sometimes even the older children, were organized
into societies for military, religious, working, and social purposes, many
of these being secret, especially those concerned with medicine and women's
work. In some tribes there was also a custom by which two young men became
"brothers" through a public exchange of names.
The erroneous opinion that the Indian man was an idler, and that the
Indian woman was a drudge and slave, is founded upon a misconception of the
native system of division of labour, under which it was the man's business
to defend the home and to provide food by hunting and fishing, assuming all
the risks and hardships of battle and the wilderness, while the woman
attended to the domestic duties including the bringing of wood and water,
and, with the nomad tribes, the setting up of the tipis. The children,
however, required little care after they were able to run about, and the
housekeeping was of the simplest, and, as the women usually worked in
groups, with songs and gossip, while the children played about, the work
had much of pleasure mixed with it. In all that chiefly concerned the home,
the woman was the mistress, and in many tribes the women's council gave the
final decision upon important matters of public policy. Among the more
agricultural tribes, as the Pueblos, men and women worked the fields
together. In the far north, on the other hand, the harsh environment seems
to have brought all the savagery of the man's nature, and the woman was in
fact a slave, subject to every whim of cruelty, excepting among the Kutchin
of the Upper Yukon, noted for their kind treatment of their women. Polygamy
existed in nearly all tribes excepting the Pueblos.
Houses
In and north of the United States there were some twenty well-defined
types of native dwellings, varying from the mere brush shelter to the five-
storied pueblo.
In the Northwest, Native American cultures lived in a shelter known as
the plank house. The plank house varied in shape and design according to
the tribe who was building it. It varied from a simple shed-like building
to a partly underground shelter like the Mogollon shelter. The plank house
was made primarily from wood pieces found along the wooded areas near the
sea or water body. Each house was built by placing the wood on poles
imbedded in the ground. Eventually the roof was placed on top in a upside-
down V shape. These houses were considered very durable to the environment,
especially dampness and rain. The villages of the Northwest revolved around
the environment which enveloped them. Large structures of enormous logs
notched and fitted together became the primary housing for most of the
peoples of this region. Each of these houses had a central living area and
distinct, private sections for sleeping areas for the many families which
lived there. Other wo oden structures were used for ceremonial purposes as
well as for birthing mothers and burial sites.
In the eastern United States and adjacent parts of Canada the prevailing
type was that commonly known under the Algonkian name of wigwam. The wigwam
was a round shelter used by many different Native American cultures in the
east and the southeast. It is considered one of the best shelters made. It
was as safe and warm as the best houses of early colonists. The wigwam has
a curved surface which can hold up against the worst weather in any region.
The Native Americans of the Plains lived in one of the most well known
shelters, the tepee ( also Tipi or Teepee). The tipi (the Sioux name for
house) or conical tent-dwelling of the upper lake and plains region was of
poles set lightly in the ground, bound together near the top, and covered
with bark or mats in the lake country, and with dressed buffalo skins on
the plains. These skins were often painted in bright colors to show the
personalities of the people dwelling there. It was easily portable, and two
women could set it up or take in down within an hour. On ceremonial
occasions the tipi camp was arranged in a great circle, with the ceremonial
"medicine lodge" in the centre.
The Native Americans of the Southwest such as the Anasazi and the Pueblo,
lived in pueblos constructed by stacking large adobe blocks, sun-dried and
made from clay and water, usually measuring 8 by 16 inches (20 by 40
centimetres) and 4 to 6 in. (10 to 15 cm) thick. These blocks form the
walls of the building, up to five stories tall, and were built around a
central courtyard. Usually each floor is set back from the floor below, so
that the whole building resembles a zigzag pyramid. The method also
provides terraces on those levels made from the roof tops of the level
below. These unique and amazing apartment-like structures were often built
along cliff faces; the most famous, the "cliff palace" of Mesa Verde,
Colorado, had over 200 rooms. Another site, the Pueblo Bonito ruins along
New Mexico's Chaco River, once contained more than 800 rooms. Each pueblo
had at least two, and often more kivas, or ceremonial rooms.
The semi-sedentary Pawnee Mandan, and other tribes along the Missouri
built solid circular structures of logs, covered with earth, capable
sometimes of housing a dozen families.
The Wichita and other tribes of the Texas border built large circular
houses of grass thatch laid over a framework of poles.
The living shelters of the Northeast Native Americans are called Long
Houses. The long house was favored more in the winter months than in the
summer ones. The long house was a one story apartment house, with many
people of the tribe sharing the warmth and space. In an average long house,
there would be three or four fireplaces, usually lined with small
fieldstones. With this many fireplaces, smoke would fill up the house, so
the house would be built with smoke holes in the roof. The typical long
house was estimated to be about 50 feet long.
The Navaho hogan, was a smaller counterpart of the Pawnee "earth lodge".
The communal pueblo structure of the Rio Grande region consisted of a
number—sometimes hundreds - of square-built rooms of various sizes, of
stone or adobe laid in clay mortar, with flat roof, court-yards, and
intricate passage ways, suggestive of oriental things.
The Piute wikiup of Nevada was only one degree above the brush shelter of
the Apache. California, with its long stretch from north to south, and its
extremes from warm plain to snowclad sierra, had a variety of types,
including the semi-subterranean.
Along the whole north-west coast, from the Columbia to the Eskimo border,
the prevailing type was the rectangular board structure, painted with
symbolic designs, and with the great totem pole carved with the heraldic
crests of the owner, towering above the doorway.
Not even pueblo architecture had evolved a chimney.
Food and its Procurement
In the timbered regions of the eastern and southern states and the
adjacent portions of Canada, along the Missouri and among the Pueblos,
Pima, and other tribes of the south-west, the chief dependence was upon
agriculture, the principal crops being corn, beans, and squashes, besides a
native tobacco. The New England tribes understood the principal of
manuring, while those of the arid south-west built canals and practiced
irrigation. Along the whole ocean-coast, in the lake region and on the
Columbia, fishing was an important source of subsistence. On the south
Atlantic seaboard elaborate weirs were in use, but elsewhere the hook and
line, the seine or the harpoon, were more common. Clams and oysters were
consumed in such quantities along the Atlantic coast that in some
favourable gathering-places empty shells were piled into mounds ten feet
high. From central California northward along the whole west coast, the
salmon was the principle, and on the Columbia, almost the entire, food
dependence. The northwest-coast tribes, as well as the Eskimo, were
fearless whalers. Everywhere the wild game, of course, was an important
factor in the food supply, particularly the deer in the timber region and
the buffalo on the plains. The nomad tribes of the plains, in fact, lived
by the buffalo, which, in one way or another, furnished them with food,
clothing, shelter, household equipment, and fuel.
In this connection there were many curious tribal and personal taboos
founded upon clan traditions, dreams, or other religious reasons. Thus the
Navajo and the Apache, so far from eating the meat of a bear, refuse even
to touch the skin of one, believing the bear to be of human kinship. For a
somewhat similar reason some tribes of the plains and the arid South-West
avoid a fish, while considering the dog a delicacy.
Besides the cultivated staples, nuts, roots, and wild fruits were in use
wherever procurable. The Indians of the Sierras lived largely upon acorns
and piñons. Those of Oregon and the Columbia region gathered large stores
of camass and other roots, in addition to other species of berries. The
Apache and other south-western tribes gathered the cactus fruit and toasted
the root of the maguey. The tribes of the upper lake region made great use
of wild rice, while those of the Ohio Valley made sugar from the sap of the
maple, and those of the southern states extracted a nourishing oil from the
hickory nut. Pemmican and hominy are Indian names as well as Indian
inventions, and maple sugar is also an aboriginal discovery. Salt was used
by many tribes, especially on the plains and in the South-West, but in the
Gulf states lye was used instead. Cannibalism simply for the sake of food
could hardly be said to exist, but, as a war ceremony or sacrifice
following a savage triumph, the custom was very general, particularly on
the Texas coast and among the Iroquoian and Algonquian tribes of the east.
The Tonkawa of Texas were know to all their neighbours as the "Man-Eaters".
Apparently the only native intoxicant was tiswin, a sort of mild beer
fermented from corn by the Apache and neighbouring tribes.
Domesticated Animals
The dog was practically the only domesticated animal before the advent of
the whites and was found in nearly all tribes, being used as a beast of
burden by day and as a constant sentinel by night, while with some tribes
the flesh was also a favourite dish. He was seldom, if ever, trained to
hunting. There were no wild horses, cows, pigs, or chickens. Therefore, the
Indians knew nothing about these animals. In Massachusetts, they began to
domesticate the turkey. Eagles and other birds were occasionally kept for
their feathers, and the children sometimes had other pets than puppies. The
horse, believed to have been introduced by the Spaniards, speedily became
as important a factor in the life of the plains tribes as the buffalo
itself. In the same way the sheep and goats, introduced by the early
Franciscans, have become the chief source of wealth to the Navajo,
numbering now half a million animals from which they derive an annual
income of over a million dollars.
Industries and Arts
In the fabrication of domestic instruments, weapons, ornaments,
ceremonial objects, boats, seines, and traps, in house-building and in the
making of pottery and baskets, the Indian showed considerable ingenuity in
design and infinite patience of execution. In the division of labour, the
making of weapons, hunting and fishing requirements, boats, pipes, and most
ceremonial objects fell to the men, while the domestic arts of pottery and
basket-making, weaving and dressing of skins, the fashioning of clothing
and the preparation and preservation of food commonly devolved upon the
women.
Among the sedentary or semi-sedentary tribes house-building belonged
usually to the men, although the women sometimes assisted. On the plains
the entire making and keeping of the tipi were appointed to the women. In
many tribes the man cut, sewed, and decorated his own buckskin suit, and in
some of the Pueblo villages the men were the basket-weavers.
While the house, in certain tribes, evinced considerable architecture
skill, its prime purpo se was always utilitarian, and there was usually but
little attempt at decorative effect, excepting the Haida, Tlingit, and
others of the north-west coast, where the great carved and painted totem
poles, sometimes sixty feet in height, set up in front of every dwelling,
were a striking feature of the village picture. The same tribes were
notable for their great sea-going canoes, hollowed out from a single cedar
trunk, elaborately carved and painted, and sometimes large enough to
accommodate forty men. The skin boat or kaiak of the Eskimo was a marvel of
lightness and buoyancy, being practically unsinkable. The birch-bark canoe
of the eastern tribes was especially well-adapted to its purposes of inland
navigation. In the southern states we find the smaller "dug-out" log canoe.
On the plains the boat was virtually unknown, except for the tub-shaped
skin boat of the Mandan and associated tribes of the upper Missouri.
The Eskimo were noted for their artistic carvings of bones and walrus
ivory; the Pueblo for their turquoise-inlaid work and their wood carving,
especially mythologic figurines, and the Atlantic and California coast
tribes for their work in shell. The wampum, or shell beads, made chiefly
from the shells of various clams found along the Atlantic coast have become
historic, having been extensively used not only for dress ornamentation,
but also on treaty belts, as tribal tribute, and as a standard of value
answering the purpose of money. The ordinary stone hammer or club, found in
nearly every tribe, represented much patient labour, while the whole skill
of the artist was frequently expended upon the stone-carved pipe. The black
stone pipes of the Cherokee were famous in the southern states, and the red
stone pipe of catlinite from a single quarry in Minnesota was reputed
sacred and was smoked at the ratification of all solemn tribal engagements
throughout the plains and the lake-region. Knives, lance-blades, and arrow-
heads were also usually of stone, preferably flint or obsidian. Along the
Gulf Coast, keen-edged knives fashioned from split canes were in use. Corn
mortars and bowls were usually of wood in the timber region and of stone in
the arid country. Hide-scrapers were of bone, and spoons of wood or horn.
Metal-work was limited chiefly to the fashioning of gorgets and other
ornaments hammered out from native copper, found in the southern
Alleghenies, about Lake Superior, and about Copper River in Alaska. The art
of smelting was apparently unknown. Under Franciscan and later Mexican
teaching the Navahos have developed a silver-working art which compares in
importance with their celebrated basket-weaving, the material used being
silver coins melted down in stone molds of their own carving. Mica was
mined in the Carolina mountains by the local tribes and fashioned into
gorgets and mirrors, which found their way by trade as far as the western
prairies, All of these arts belonged to the men.
Basket-weaving in wood splits, cane, rushes, yucca- or bark-fibre, and
various grasses was practiced by the same tribes which made pottery, and
excepting in a few tribes, was likewise a women's work. The basket was
stained in various designs with vegetable dyes. The Cherokee made a double-
walled basket. Those of the Choctaw, Pueblo tribes, Jicarillo, and Piute
were noted for beauty of design and execution, but the Pomo and other
tribes of California excelled in all closeness and delicacy of weaving and
richness of decoration, many of their grass baskets being water-tight and
almost hidden under an inter-weaving of bright-coloured plumage, and
further decorated around the top with pendants of shining mother-of-pearl.
The weaving of grass or rush mats for covering beds or wigwams may be
considered as a variant of the basket-weaving process, as likewise the
delicate porcupine quill appliqué work of the northern plains and upper-
Mississippi tribes.
Silver jewelry is probably the best known form of Native American art.
It is not an ancient art. Southwest Native Americans began working in
silver around 1850. Jewelry was the way many Native Americans showed their
wealth. Coins were used for silver in the early days. Navajo silverwork can
be made many ways. One way is to carve a stone with a knife and pour the
silver into the shape. This is called sandcasting. Another way is to cut
the shape out of silver and use a stamp to make a design. Stamps were made
from any bit of scrap iron, including spikes, old chisels and broken files.
Turquoise is used in jewelry. This didn't start happening until 1880's.
Turquoise is found in Colorado, Nevada, Arizona and New Mexico.The color of
turquoise is from a pale chalky blue -almost white- to a very deep green.
The making of pottery belonged to the women and was practiced in nearly
all tribes, excepting those in the plains and interior basin, and the cold
north. The Eastern pottery is usually decorated with stamped patterns. That
of the Pueblo and other south-western tribes was smooth and painted over
with symbolic designs. A few specimens of glazed ware have been found in
the same region, but it is doubtful if the process is of native origin. The
Catawba and some other tribes produced a beautiful black ware by burning
the vessel under cover, so that the smoke permeated the pores of the clay.
The simple hand process by coiling was universally used.
The useful art of skin-dressing also belonged exclusively to the women,
excepting along the Arctic coasts, where furs, instead of denuded skins,
were worn by the Eskimo, while the entrails of the larger sea animals were
also utilized for waterproof garments. The skins in most general use were
those of the buffalo, elk, and deer, which were prepared by scraping,
stretching, and anointing with various softening or preservative mixtures,
of which the liver or brains of the animal were commonly a part. The timber
tribes generally smoked the skins, a process unknown on the plains. A
limited use was made of bird skins with the feathers intact.
The weaving art proper was also almost exclusively in the hands of the
women. In the east, aside from basket- and mat-making it was confined
almost entirely to the twisting of ropes or bowstrings, and the making of
belts, the skin fabric taking the place of the textile. In the South-West
the Pueblo tribes wove native cotton upon looms of their own device, and,
since the introduction of sheep by the Franciscan missionaries in the
sixteenth century, the Navaho, enlarging upon their Pueblo teaching have
developed a weaving art which has made the Navaho blanket famous throughout
the country, the stripping, spinning, weaving, and dyeing of the wool all
being their own. The Piute of Nevada and others of that region wore
blankets woven from strips of rabbit-fur. Some early writers mention
feather-woven cloaks among the gulf tribes, but it is possible that the
feathers were simply overlaid upon the skin garment.
It is notable that the Indian worker, man or woman, used no pattern,
carrying the design in the head. Certain designs, however, were
standardized and hereditary in particular tribes and societies.
According to Navajo beliefs, the Universe is a balanced place. Illness
and other disasters happen if the balance is upset. It is believed only
Humans can upset this balance, not animals or plants! To make the person
healthly again a ceremony is performed. The sandpaintings, called ikaah,
used in these ceremonies are made between sunrise and sunset of the same
day.
Games and Amusements
Naturally careless of the future, the Indian gave himself up to pleasure
when not under immediate necessity or danger, and his leisure time at home
was filled with a constant round of feasting, dancing, story-telling,
athletic contests, and gambling games.
The principal athletic game everywhere east of the Missouri, as well as
with some tribes of the Pacific coast, was the ballplay adopted by the
French of Canada under the name lacrosse and in Louisiana as racquette. In
this game the ball was caught, not with the hand, but with a netted ball-
stick somewhat resembling a tennis racket.
A special dance and secret ceremonial preceded the contest. Next in
tribal favour in the eastern region was the game known to the early traders
under the corrupted Creek name of chunkee, in which one player rolled a
stone wheel along the ground, while his competitor slid after it a stick
curved at one end like an umbrella handle with the design of having the
spent wheel fall within the curve at the end of its course. This game,
which necessitated much hard running, was sometimes kept up for hours. A
somewhat similar game played with a netted wheel and a straight stick was
found upon the plains, the object being to dart the stick through the
certain netted holes in the wheel, known as the buffalo, bull, calf,
etc.(remember ‘to catch the bull’s eye’).
Foot races were very popular with certain tribes, as the Pueblo, Apache.
Wichita and Crows, being frequently a part of great ceremonial functions.
On the plains horse-racing furnished exciting amusement. There were
numerous gambling games, somewhat of the dice order, played with marked
sticks, plum stones, carved bones, etc., these being in special favour with
the women. Target shooting with bow and arrow, and various forms of dart
shooting were also popular.
Among distinctly women's games were football and shinny, the former,
however, being merely the bouncing of the ball from the toes with the
purpose of keeping in the air as long as possible. Hand games, in which a
number of players arranged themselves in two opposing lines and alternately
endeavoured to guess the whereabouts of a small object shifted rapidly from
hand to hand, were a favourite tipi pastime with both sexes in the winter
evenings, to the accompaniment of songs fitted to the rapid movement of the
hands.
Story-telling and songs, usually to the accompaniment of the rattle or
small hand-drum, filled in the evening. The Indian was essentially musical,
his instruments being the drum, rattle, flute, or flageolet, eagle-bone
whistle and other more crude devices. Each had its special religious
significance and ceremonial purposes, particularly the rattle, of which
there were many varieties. Besides the athletic and gambling games, there
were games of diversion played only on rare occasions of tribal necessity
with sacred paraphernalia in keeping of sacred guardians. The Indian was
fond also of singing and had songs for every occasion — love, war, hunting,
gaming, medicine, satire, children's songs, and lullabies.
The children played with tops, whips, dolls, and other toys, or imitated
their elders in shooting, riding, and "playing house".
War
As war is the normal condition of savagery, so to the Indian warlike
glory was the goal of his ambition, the theme of his oratory, and the
purpose of his most elaborate ceremonial. His weapons were the knife, bow,
club, lance, and tomahawk, or stone axe, which last was very soon
superseded by the light steel hatchet supplied by the trader. To these,
certain tribes added defensive armour, as the body-armour of rawhides or
wooden rods in use along the northwest coast and some other sections, and
the shield more particularly used by the equestrian tribes of the plains.
As a rule, the lance and shield were more common in the open country, and
the tomahawk in the woods. The bow was usually of some tough and flexible
wood with twisted sinew cord, but was sometimes of bone or horn backed with
sinew rapping. It is extremely doubtful if poisoned arrows were found north
of Mexico, notwithstanding many assertions to the contrary.
Where the clan system prevailed the general conduct of war matters was
often in the keeping of special clans, and in some tribes, such as the
Creeks, war and peace negotiations and ceremonials belonged to certain
towns designated as "red" or "white". With the Iroquois and probably with
other tribes, the final decision on war or peace rested with a council of
the married women. On the plains the warriors of the tribes were organized
into military societies of differing degrees of rank, from the boys in
training to the old men who had passed their active period. Military
service was entirely voluntary with the individual who, among the eastern
tribes, signified his acceptance in some public manner, as by striking the
red-painted war-post, or, on the plains, by smoking the pipe sent round by
the organizers of the expeditions. Contrary to European practice, the
command usually rested with several leaders of equal rank, who were not
necessarily recognized as chiefs on other occasions. The departure and the
return were made according to the fixed ceremonial forms, with solemn
chants of defiance, victory, or grief at defeat. In some tribes there were
small societies of chosen warriors pledged never to turn or flee from an
enemy except by express permission of their fellows, but in general the
Indian warrior chose not to take large risks, although brave enough in
desperate circumstance.
To the savage every member of a hostile tribe was equally an enemy, and
he gloried as much in the death of an infant as in that of the warrior
father. Victory meant indiscriminate massacre, with most revolting
mutilation of the dead, followed in the early period in nearly every
portion of the East and South by a cannibal feast. The custom of scalping
the dead, so general in later Indian wars, has been shown by Frederici to
have been confined originally to a limited area east of the Mississippi,
gradually superseding the earlier custom of beheading. In many western
tribes, the warrior's prowess was measured not by the number of his scalp
trophies, but by the number of his coups (French term), or strokes upon the
enemy, for which there was a regular scale according to kind, the highest
honour being accorded not to one one who secured the scalp, but to the
warrior who struck the first blow upon the enemy, even though with no more
than a willow rod. The scalp dance was performed, not by the warriors, but
by the women, who thus rejoiced over the success of their husbands and
brothers. There was no distinctive "war dance".
Captives among the eastern tribes were either condemned to death with
every horrible form of torture or ceremonially adopted into the tribe, the
decision usually resting with the women. If adopted, he at once became a
member of a family, usually as representative of a deceased member, and at
once acquired full tribal rights. In the Huron wars whole towns of the
defeated nation voluntarily submitted and were adopted into the Iroquois
tribes. On the plains torture was not common. Adults were seldom spared,
but children were frequently spared and either regularly adopted or brought
up in a mild sort of slavery. Along the north-west coast, and as far south
as California slavery prevailed in its harshest form and was the usual fate
of the captive.
Languages
One of the remarkable facts in American ethnology is the great diversity
of languages. Nearly two hundred major languages, besides minor dialects,
were spoken north of Mexico, classified in fifty-one distinct linguistic
stocks, as given below, of which nearly one-half were represented in
California. Those marked with an asterisk are extinct, while several others
are now reduced to less than a dozen individuals keeping the language:
Algonquian, Athapascan (Déné), Attacapan, *Beothukan, Caddoan, Chimakuan,
*Chimarikan, Chimmesyan, Chinookan, Chitimachan, *Chumashan, *Coahuiltecan
(Pakawá), Copehan (Wintun), Costanoan, Eskimauan, *Esselenian, Iroquoian,
Kalapooian, *Karankawan, Keresan, Kiowan, Kitunahan, Kaluschan (Tlingit),
Kulanapan (Pomo), *Kusan, Mariposan (Yokuts), Moquelumnan (Miwok),
Muskogean, Pujunan (Maidu), Quoratean (Karok), *Salinan, Salishan,
Shahaptian, Shoshonean, Siouan, Skittagetan (Haida), Takilman, *Timucuan,
*Tonikan, Tonkawan, Uchean, *Waiilatpuan (Cayuse), Wakashan (Nootka),
Washoan, Weitspekan (Yurok), Wishoskan, Yakonan, *Yanan (Nosi), Yukian,
Yuman, Zuñian.
The number of languages and well-marked dialects may well have reached
one thousand, constituting some 150 separate linguistic stocks, each stock
as distinct from all the others as the Aryan languages are distinct from
the Turanian or the Bantu. Of these stocks, approximately seventy were in
the northern, and eighty in the southern continent. They were all in nearly
the same primitive stage of development, characterized by minute exactness
of description with almost entire absence of broad classification. Thus the
Cherokee, living in a country abounding in wild fruits, had no word for
grape, but had instead a distinct descriptive term for each of the three
varieties with which he was acquainted. In the same way, he could not
simply say "I am here", but must qualify the condition as standing,
sitting, etc.
The earliest attempt at a classification of the Indian languages of the
United States and British America was made by Albert Gallatin in 1836. The
beginning of systematic investigation dates from the establishment of the
Bureau of American Ethnology under Major J.W. Powell in 1879. For the
languages of Mexico and Central America, the basis is the "Geografía" of
Orozco y Berra, of 1864, supplemented by the later work of Brinton, in his
"American Race" (1891), and corrected and brought up to the latest results
in the linguistic map by Thomas and Swanton now in preparation by the
Bureau of Ethnology. For South America, we have the "Catálogo" of Hervas
(1784), which covers also the whole field of languages throughout the
world; Brinton's work just noted, containing the summary of all known up to
that time, and Chamberlain's comprehensive summary, published in 1907.
To facilitate intertribal communication, we frequently find the languages
of the more important tribes utilized by smaller tribes throughout the same
region, as Comanche in the southern plains and Navajo (Apache) in the South-
West. From the same necessity have developed certain notable trade jargons,
based upon some dominant language, with incorporations from many others,
including European, all smoothed down and assimilated to a common standard.
Chief among these were the "Mobilian" of the Gulf states based upon
Choctaw; the "Chinook jargon" of the Columbia and adjacent territories of
the Pacific coast, a remarkable conglomerate based upon the extinct Chinook
language; and the lingoa geral of Brazil and the Paraná region, based upon
Tupí-Guaraní. To these must be added the noted "sign language" of the
plains, a gesture code, which answered every purpose of ordinary
intertribal intercourse from Canada to the Rio Grande.
Religion and Mythology
The Indian was an animist, to whom every animal, plant, and object in
nature contained a spirit to be propitiated or feared. Some of these, such
as the sun, the buffalo, and the peyote plant, the eagle and the
rattlesnake, were more powerful or more frequently helpful than others, but
there was no overruling "Great Spirit" as so frequently represented.
Certain numbers, particularly four and seven, were held sacred. Colours
were symbolic and had abiding place, and sometimes sex. Thus with the
Cherokee the red spirits of power and victory live in the Sun Land, or the
East, while the black spirits of death dwell in the Twilight Land of the
West. Certain tribes had palladiums around which centered their most
elaborate ritual. Each man had also his secret personal "medicine". The
priest was likewise the doctor, and medicine and religious ritual were
closely interwoven. Secret societies were in every tribe, claiming powers
of prophecy, hypnotism, and clairvoyance. Dreams were in great repute, and
implicitly trusted and obeyed, while witches, fairies, and supernatural
monsters were as common as in medieval Europe. Human sacrifices, either of
infants or adults, were found among the Timucua of Florida, the Natchez of
Mississippi, the Pawnee of the plains, and some tribes of California and
the north-west coast, the sacrifice in the last-mentioned region being
frequently followed by a cannibal feast. From time to time, as among more
civilized nations, prophets arose to purify the old religion or to preach a
new ritual. Each tribe had its genesis, tradition, and mythical hero, with
a whole body of mythologic belief and folklore, and one or more great
tribal ceremonials. Among the latter may be noted the Green-Corn Dance
thanksgiving festival of the eastern and southern tribes, the Sun-Dance of
the plains, the celebrated snake dance of the Hopi and the Salmon Dance of
the Columbia tribes.
The method of disposing of the dead varied according to the tribe and the
environment, inhumation being probably the most widespread. The Hurons and
the Iroquois allowed the bodies to decay upon scaffolds, after which the
bones were gathered up and deposited with much ceremony in the common
tribal sepulchre. The Nanticoke and Choctaw scraped the flesh from the
bones, which were then wrapped in a bundle, and kept in a box within the
dwelling. Tree, scaffold, and cave burial were common on the plains and in
the mountains, while cremation was the rule in the arid regions father to
the west and south-west. Northward from the Columbia the body was deposited
in a canoe raised upon posts, while cave burial reappeared among the Aleut
of Alaska, and earth burial among the Eskimo. The dread of mentioning the
name of the dead was as universal as destroying the property of the
deceased, even to the killing of his horse or dog, while the custom of
placing food near the grave for the spirit during the journey to the other
world was almost as common, Laceration of the body, cutting off of the
hair, general neglect of the person, and ceremonial wailing, morning and
evening, sometimes for weeks, were also parts of their funeral customs.
Beyond the directly inherited traditional Native American religions, a
wide body of modified sects abounds.The Native American Church claims a
membership of 250,000, which would constitute the largest of the Native
America religious organizations. Though the church traces the sacramental
use ofthe peyote cactus back ten thousand years, the Native American Ñhurch
was only founded in 1918. Well into the reservation era, this organization
was achieved with the help of a Smithsonian Institute anthropologist. The
church incorporates generic Native American religious rites, Christianity,
and the use of the peyote plant. The modern peyote ritual is comprised of
four parts: praying, singing, eating peyote, and quietly contemplating.
The Native American Church, or Peyote Church illustrates a trend of
modifying and manipulating traditional Native American spirituality. The
Native American Church incorporates Christianity, as well as moving away
from tribal specific religion. Christianity has routinely penetrated Native
American spirituality in the last century. And in the last few decades, New
Age spirituality has continued the trend.
***
All of the American Native cultures had in common a deep spiritual
relationship with the land and the life forms it supported. According to
First Nations spiritual beliefs, human beings are participants in a world
of interrelated spiritual forms. First Nations maintain great respect for
all living things. With the arrival of European newcomers, this delicate
balance of life forms was disrupted. In the 18th and 19th centuries,
contact with Europeans began to change traditional ways of life forever.
Native americans and the newcomers
The formulation of public policy toward the Indians was of concern to
the major European colonizing powers.
Colonization
The Spanish tried assiduously to Christianize the natives and to
remake their living patterns. Orders were issued to congregate scattered
Indian villages in orderly, well-placed centers, assuring the Indians at
the same time that by moving to such centers they would not lose their
outlying lands. This was the first attempt to create Indian reservations.
The promise failed to protect Indian land, according to the Franciscan monk
and historian of Mexico, Juan Torquemada, who reported about 1599 that
there was hardly "a palm of land" that the Spaniards had not taken. Many
Indians who did not join the congregations for fear of losing what they
owned fled to mountain places and lost their lands anyway.
The Russians never seriously undertook colonization in the New World.
When Peter I the Great sent Vitus Jonassen Bering into the northern sea
that bears his name, interest was in scientific discovery, not overseas
territory. Later, when the problem of protecting and perhaps expanding
Russian occupation was placed before Catherine II the Great, she declared
(1769): It is for traders to traffic where they please. I will furnish
neither men, nor ships, nor money, and I renounce forever all lands and
possessions in the East Indies and in America.
The Swedish and Dutch attempts at colonization were so brief that
neither left a strong imprint on New World practices. The Dutch government,
however, was probably the first (1645) of the European powers to enter into
a formal treaty with an Indian tribe, the Mohawk. Thus began a
relationship, inherited by the British, that contributed to the ascendancy
of the English over the French in North America.
France handicapped its colonial venture by transporting to the New
World a modified feudal system of land tenure that discouraged permanent
settlement. Throughout the period of French occupation, emphasis was on
trade rather than on land acquisition and development, and thus French
administrators, in dealing with the various tribes, tried primarily only to
establish trade relations with them. The French instituted the custom of
inviting the headmen of all tribes with which they carried on trade to come
once a year to Montreal, where the governor of Canada gave out presents and
talked of friendship. The governor of Louisiana met southern Indians at
Mobile.
The English, reluctantly, found themselves competing on the same basis
with annual gifts. Still later, United States peace commissioners were to
offer permanent annuities in exchange for tribal concessions of land or
other interests. In contrast to the French, the English were primarily
interested in land and permanent settlements; beginning quite early in
their occupation, they felt an obligation to bargain with the Indians and
to conclude formal agreements with compensation to presumed Indian
landowners. The Plymouth settlers, coming without royal sanction, thought
it incumbent upon them to make terms with the Massachuset Indians. Cecilius
Calvert (the 2nd Baron Baltimore) and William Penn, while possessing royal
grants in Maryland and Pennsylvania respectively, nevertheless took pains
to purchase occupancy rights from the Indians. It became the practice of
most of the colonies to prohibit indiscriminate and unauthorized
appropriation of Indian land. The usual requirement was that purchases
could be consummated only by agreement with the tribal headman, followed by
approval of the governor or other official of the colony. At an early date
also, specific areas were set aside for exclusive Indian use. Virginia in
1656 and commissioners for the United Colonies of New England in 1658
agreed to the creation of such reserved areas. Plymouth Colony in 1685
designated for individual Indians separate tracts that could not be
alienated without their consent.
In spite of these official efforts to protect Indian lands,
unauthorized entry and use caused constant friction through the colonial
period. Rivalry with the French, who lost no opportunity to point out to
the Indians how their lands were being encroached upon by the English; the
activity of land speculators, who succeeded in obtaining large grants
beyond the settled frontiers; and, finally, the startling success of the
Ottawa chief Pontiac in capturing English strongholds in the old Northwest
(the Great Lakes region) as a protest against this westward movement,
together prompted King George III's ministers to issue a proclamation
(1763) that formalized the concept of Indian land titles for the first time
in the history of European colonization in the New World. The document
prohibited issuance of patents to any lands claimed by a tribe unless the
Indian title had first been extinguished by purchase or treaty. The
proclamation reserved for the use of the tribes "all the Lands and
Territories lying to the Westward of the sources of the Rivers which fall
into the Sea from the West and Northwest. ”Land west of the Appalachians
might not be purchased or entered upon by private persons, but purchases
might be made in the name of the king or one of the colonies at a council
meeting of the Indians”.
This policy continued up to the termination of British rule and was
adopted by the United States. The Appalachian barrier was soon passed -
thousands of settlers crossed the mountains during the American Revolution
- but both the Articles of Confederation and the federal Constitution
reserved either to the president or to Congress sole authority in Indian
affairs, including authority to extinguish Indian title by treaty. When
French dominion in Canada capitulated in 1760, the English announced that
"the Savages or Indian Allies of his most Christian Majesty, shall be
maintained in the lands they inhabit, if they choose to remain there."
Thereafter, the proclamation of 1763 applied in Canada and was embodied in
the practices of the dominion government. (The British North America Act of
1867, which created modern Canada, provided that the parliament of Canada
should have exclusive legislative authority with respect to "Indians, and
lands reserved for the Indians." Thus, both North American countries made
control over Indian matters a national concern.)
United States policy: the late 18th and 19th centuries
The first full declaration of U.S. policy was embodied in the
Northwest Ordinance (1787): The utmost good faith shall always be
observed toward the Indians, their lands and property shall never be
taken from them without their consent; and in their property, rights, and
liberty, they shall never be invaded or disturbed, unless in just and
lawful wars authorized by congress; but laws founded in justice and
humanity shall from time to time be made, for preventing wrongs being
done to them, and for preserving peace and friendship with them.This
doctrine was embodied in the act of August 7, 1789, as one of the first
declarations of the U.S. Congress under the Constitution.The final
shaping of the legal and political rights of the Indian tribes is found
in the opinions of Chief Justice John Marshall, notably in decision in
the case of Worcester v. Georgia: The Indian nations had always been
considered as distinct, independent, political communities, retaining
their original natural rights, as the undisputed possessors of the land,
from time immemorial. . . . The settled doctrine of the law of nations
is, that a weaker power does not surrender its independence - its right
to self-government - by associating with a stronger, and taking its
protection. A weak state, in order to provide for its safety, may place
itself under the protection of one more powerful, without stripping
itself of the right of government, and ceasing to be a state.The first
major departure from the policy of respecting Indian rights came with the
Indian Removal Act of 1830. For the first time the United States resorted
to coercion, particularly in the cases of the Cherokee and Seminole
tribes, as a means of securing compliance. The Removal Act was not in
itself coercive, since it authorized the president only to negotiate with
tribes east of the Mississippi on a basis of payment for their lands; it
called for improvements in the east and a grant of land west of the
river, to which perpetual title would be attached. In carrying out the
law, however, resistance was met with military force. In the decade
following, almost the entire population of perhaps 100,000 Indians was
moved westward. The episode moved Alexis de Tocqueville to remark in
1831: The Europeans continued to surround [the Indians] on every side,
and to confine them within narrower limits . . . and the Indians have
been ruined by a competition which they had not the means of sustaining.
They were isolated in their own country, and their race only constituted
a little colony of troublesome strangers in the midst of a numerous and
dominant people.
The territory west of the Mississippi, it turned out, was not so
remote as had been supposed. The discovery of gold in California (1848)
started a new sequence of treaties, designed to extinguish Indian title
to lands lying in the path of the overland routes to the Pacific. The
sudden surge of thousands of wagon trains through the last of the Indian
country and the consequent slaughtering of prairie and mountain game that
provided subsistence for the Indians brought on the most serious Indian
wars the country had experienced. For three decades, beginning in the
1850s, raids and sporadic pitched fighting took place up and down the
western Plains, highlighted by such incidents as the Custer massacre by
Sioux and Cheyenne Indians (1876), the Nez Perce chief Joseph's running
battle in 1877 against superior U.S. army forces, and the Chiricahua
Geronimo's long duel with authorities in the Southwest, resulting in his
capture and imprisonment in 1886. Toward the close of that period, the
Ghost Dance religion, arising out of the dream revelations of a young
Paiute Indian, Wovoka, promised the Indians a return to the old life and
reunion with their departed kinsmen. The songs and ceremonies born of
this revelation swept across the northern Plains. The movement came to an
abrupt end December 29, 1890, at Wounded Knee Creek, South Dakota.
Believing that the Ghost Dance was disturbing an uneasy peace, government
agents moved to arrest ringleaders. Sitting Bull was killed (December 15)
while being taken into custody, and two weeks later units of the U.S. 7th
Cavalry at Wounded Knee massacred more than 200 men, women, and children
who had already agreed to return to their homes. A further major shift of
policy had occurred in 1871 after congressional discussions lasting
several years. U.S. presidents, with the advice and consent of the
Senate, had continued to make treaties with the Indian tribes and commit
the United States to the payment of sums of money. The House of
Representatives protested, since a number of congressmen had come to the
view that treaties with Indian tribes were an absurdity (a view earlier
held by Andrew Jackson). The Senate yielded, and the act of March 3,
1871, declared that "hereafter no Indian nation or tribe" would be
recognized "as an independent power with whom the United States may
contract by treaty." Indian affairs were brought under the legislative
control of the Congress to an extent that had not been attempted
previously. Tribal authority with respect to criminal offenses committed
by members within the tribe was reduced to the extent that murder and
other major crimes were placed under the jurisdiction of the federal
courts. The most radical undertaking of the new legislative policy was
the Dawes General Allotment Act of 1887. By that time the Indian tribes
had been moved out of the mainstreams of traffic and were settled on
lands that they had chosen out of the larger areas that they had formerly
occupied. Their choice in most cases had been confirmed by treaty,
agreement, act of Congress, or executive order of the president. The
tribes that lived by hunting over wide areas found reservation
confinement a threat to their existence. Generally, they had insisted on
annuity payments or rations, or both, and the U.S. peace commissioners
had been willing to offer such a price in return for important land
cessions. In time the view came to be held that reservation life fostered
indolence and perpetuated customs and attitudes that held Indians back
from assimilation. The strategy offered by proponents of this theory was
the Allotment Act authorizing the president to divide the reservations
into individual parcels and to give every Indian, whether he wanted it or
not, a particular piece of the tribally owned land. In order not to make
the transition too abrupt, the land would be held in trust for a period
of 25 years, after which ownership would devolve upon the individual.
With it would go all the rights and duties of citizenship. Reservation
land remaining after all living members of the tribes had been provided
with allotments was declared surplus, and the president was authorized to
open it for entry by non-Indian homesteaders, the Indians being paid the
homestead price. A total of 118 reservations was allotted in this manner,
but the result was not what had been anticipated. Through the alienation
of surplus lands (making no allowance for children yet unborn) and
through patenting of individual holdings, the Indians lost 86,000,000
acres (34,800,000 hectares), or 62 percent, of a total of 138,000,000
acres in Indian ownership prior to 1887. A generation of landless Indians
resulted, with no vocational training to relieve them of dependence upon
land. The strategy also failed in that ownership of land did not effect
an automatic acculturation in those Indians who received individual
parcels. Through scattering of individuals and families, moreover, social
cohesiveness tended to break down. The result was a weakening of native
institutions and cultural practices with nothing offered in substitution.
What was intended as transition proved to be a blind alley. The Indian
population had been dwindling through the decades after the mid-19th
century. The California Indians alone, it was estimated, dropped from
100,000 in 1853 to not more than 30,000 in 1864 and 19,000 in 1906.
Cholera in the central Plains in 1849 struck the Pawnee. As late as 1870-
71 an epidemic of smallpox brought disaster to the Blackfeet, Assiniboin,
and Cree. These events gave currency to the concept of the Indian as "the
vanishing American." The decision of 1871 to discontinue treaty making
and the passage of the Allotment Act of 1887 were both founded in the
belief that the Indians would not survive, and hence it did not much
matter whether their views were sought in advance of legislation or
whether lands were provided for coming generations. When it became
obvious after about 1920 that the Indians, whose numbers had remained
static for several years, were surely increasing, the United States was
without a policy for advancing the interests of a living people.
20th-century reforms of U.S. policy
A survey in 1926 brought into clear focus the failings of the previous
40 years. The investigators found most Indians "extremely poor," in bad
health, without education, and lacking adjustment to the dominant culture
around them. Under the impetus of these findings and other pressures for
reform, Congress adopted the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, which
contemplated an orderly decrease of federal control and a concomitant
increase of Indian self-government and responsibility. The essentials of
the new law were as follows: (1) allotment of tribal lands was prohibited
in the future, but tribes might assign use rights to individuals; (2) so-
called surplus lands not pre-empted by homesteaders might be returned to
the tribes; (3) tribes might adopt written constitutions and charters of
incorporation embodying their continuing inherent powers to manage internal
affairs; and (4) funds were authorized for the establishment of a revolving
credit program, for land purchases, for educational assistance, and for
aiding the tribes in forming organizations. Moreover, the act could be
rejected on any reservation by referendum.
The response to the 1934 act was indicative of the Indians' ability to
rise above adversity. About 160 tribes, bands, and Alaska villages adopted
written constitutions, some of which combined traditional practices with
modern parliamentary methods. The revolving credit fund helped Indians
build up their herds and improve their economic position in other ways.
Borrowers from the fund were tribal corporations, credit associations, and
cooperatives that loaned to individual Indians and to group enterprises on
a multimillion-dollar scale. Educational and health services were also
improved through federal aid.
Originally, the United States exercised no guardianship over the
person of the Indian; after 1871, when internal tribal matters became the
subject of national legislation, the number and variety of regulatory
measures multiplied rapidly. In the same year that the Indian
Reorganization Act was passed, Congress significantly repealed 12 statutes
that had made it possible to hold Indians virtual prisoners on their
reservations. Indians were then able to come and go as freely as all other
persons. The Snyder Act of 1924, extending citizenship to all Indians born
in the United States, opened the door to full participation. But few
Indians took advantage of the law, and because of their lack of interest a
number of states excluded Indians from the franchise. Organization of
tribal governments following the Reorganization Act, however, seemed to
awaken an interest in civic affairs beyond tribal boundaries, and when
Indians asked for the franchise, they were generally able to secure it
eventually, though not until 1948 in Arizona and New Mexico, after lengthy
court action.
The federal courts consistently upheld the treaties made with Indian
tribes and also held that property may not be taken from Indians, whether
or not a treaty exists, "except in fair trade." The latter contention was
offered by the Hualapai Indians against the Santa Fe Railway. The company
was required by the courts in 1944 to relinquish about 500,000 acres it
thought had been granted to it by the U.S. The lands had been occupied
since prehistory by the Indians, without benefit of treaty recognition, and
the Supreme Court held that, if the occupancy could be proved, as it
subsequently was, the Indians were entitled to have their lands restored.
In 1950 the Ute Indians were awarded a judgment against the United States
of $31,750,000 for lands taken without adequate compensation. A special
Indian Claims Commission, created by act of Congress on August 13, 1946,
received many petitions for land claims against the United States and
awarded, for example, about $14,789,000 to the Cherokee nation, $10,242,000
to the Crow tribe, $3,650,000 to the Snake-Paiute of Oregon, $3,000,000 to
the Nez Perce, and $12,300,000 to the Seminole. The period from the early
1950s to the 1970s was one of increasing federal attempts to establish new
policies regarding the Indians, and it was also a period in which Indians
themselves became increasingly vocal in their quest for an equal measure of
human rights and the correction of past wrongs. The first major shift in
policy came in 1954, when the Department of the Interior began terminating
federal control over those Indians and reservations deemed able to look
after their own affairs. From 1954 to 1960, support to 61 tribes and other
Indian groups was ended by the withdrawal of federal services or trust
supervision. The results, however, were unhappy. Some extremely
impoverished Indian groups lost many acres of land to private exploitation
of their land and water resources. Indians in certain states became subject
exclusively to state laws that were less liberal or sympathetic than
federal laws. Finally the protests of Indians, anthropologists, and others
became so insistent that the program was decelerated in 1960. In 1961 a
trained anthropologist was sworn in as commissioner of Indian Affairs, the
first anthropologist ever to hold that position. Federal aid expanded
greatly, and in the ensuing decade Indians were brought into various
federal programs for equal economic opportunity. Indian unemployment
remained severe, however.
American Indians came more and more into public attention in the late
20th century as they sought (along with other minorities) to achieve a
better life. Following the example set by black civil-rights activists of
the 1960s, Indian groups drew attention to their cause through mass
demonstrations and protests. Perhaps the most publicized of these actions
were the 19-month seizure (1970-71) of Alcatraz Island in San Francisco Bay
(California) by members of the militant American Indian Movement (AIM) and
the February 1973 occupation of a settlement at the Oglala Sioux Pine Ridge
(South Dakota) reservation; the latter incident was the second conflict to
occur at Wounded Knee. Representing an attempt to gain a more traditional
political power base was the establishment in 1971 of the National Tribal
Chairman's Association, which eventually grew to include more than 100
tribes.
Indian leaders also expanded their sphere of influence into the
courts; fishing, mineral, forest, casino gambling, and other rights
involving tribal lands became the subject of litigation by the Puyallup
(Washington state), the Northern Cheyenne (Montana), and the Penobscot and
the Passamaquoddy (Maine), among others. Although control of economic
resources was the focus of most such cases, some groups sought to regain
sovereignty over ancient tribal lands of primarily ceremonial and religious
significance.
facts about American Indians today
Source: Bureau of Indian Affairs, U.S. Department of the Interior
Who is an Indian?
No single federal or tribal criterion establishes a person's identity as
an Indian. Tribal membership is determined by the enrollment criteria of
the tribe from which Indian blood may be derived, and this varies with each
tribe. Generally, if linkage to an identified tribal member is far removed,
one would not qualify for membership.
To be eligible for Bureau of Indian Affairs services, an Indian must (1)
be a member of a tribe recognized by the federal government, (2) be of one-
half or more Indian blood of tribes indigenous to the United States; or (3)
must, for some purposes, be of one-fourth or more Indian ancestry. By
legislative and administrative decision, the Aleuts, Eskimos and Indians of
Alaska are eligible for BIA services. Most of the BIA's services and
programs, however, are limited to Indians living on or near Indian
reservations.
The Bureau of the Census counts anyone an Indian who declares himself or
herself to be an Indian. In 1990 the Census figures showed there were
1,959,234 American Indians and Alaska Natives living in the United States
(1,878,285 American Indians, 57,152 Eskimos, and 23,797 Aleuts). This is a
37.9 percent increase over the 1980 recorded total of 1,420,000. The
increase is attributed to improved census taking and more self-
identification during the 1990 count.
Why are Indians sometimes referred to as Native Americans?
The term, “Native American,” came into usage in the 1960s to denote the
groups served by the Bureau of Indian Affairs: American Indians and Alaska
Natives (Indians, Eskimos and Aleuts of Alaska). Later the term also
included Native Hawaiians and Pacific Islanders in some federal programs.
It, therefore, came into disfavor among some Indian groups. The preferred
term is American Indian. The Eskimos and Aleuts in Alaska are two
culturally distinct groups and are sensitive about being included under the
“Indian” designation. They prefer “Alaska Native.”
How does one trace Indian ancestry and become a member of a tribe?
The first step in tracing Indian ancestry is basic genealogical research
if one does not already have specific family information and documents that
identify tribal ties. Some information to obtain is: names of ancestors;
dates of birth; marriages and death; places where they lived; brothers and
sisters, if any; and, most importantly, tribal affiliations. Among family
documents to check are Bibles, wills, and other such papers. The next step
is to determine whether one's ancestors are on an official tribal roll or
census by contacting the tribe.
What is a federally recognized tribe?
There are more than 550 federally recognized tribes in the United States,
including 223 village groups in Alaska. “Federally recognized” means these
tribes and groups have a special, legal relationship with the U.S.
government. This relationship is referred to as a government-to-government
relationship.
A number of Indian tribes and groups in the U.S. do not have a federally
recognized status, although some are state-recognized. This means they have
no relations with the BIA or the programs it operates. A special program of
the BIA, however, works with those groups seeking federal recognition
status. Of the 150 petitions for federal recognition received by the BIA
since 1978, 12 have received acknowledgment through the BIA process, two
groups had their status clarified by the Department of the Interior through
other means, and seven were restored or recognized by Congress.
Reservations.
In the U.S. there are only two kinds of reserved lands that are well-
known: military and Indian. An Indian reservation is land reserved for a
tribe when it relinquished its other land areas to the U.S. through
treaties. More recently, Congressional acts, Executive Orders, and
administrative acts have created reservations. Today some reservations have
non-Indian residents and land owners.
There are approximately 275 Indian land areas in the U.S. administered
as Indian reservations (reservations, pueblos, rancherias, communities,
etc.). The largest is the Navajo Reservation of some 16 million acres of
land in Arizona, New Mexico, and Utah. Many of the smaller reservations are
less than 1,000 acres with the smallest less than 100 acres. On each
reservation, the local governing authority is the tribal government.
Approximately 56.2 million acres of land are held in trust by the
United States for various Indian tribes and individuals. Much of this is
reservation land; however, not all reservation land is trust land. On
behalf of the United States, the Secretary of the Interior serves as
trustee for such lands with many routine trustee responsibilities delegated
to BIA officials.
The states in which reservations are located have limited powers over
them, and only as provided by federal law. On some reservations, however, a
high percentage of the land is owned and occupied by non-Indians. Some 140
reservations have entirely tribally owned land.
Taxes.
Indians pay the same taxes as other citizens with the following
exceptions: federal income taxes are not levied on income from trust lands
held for them by the United States; state income taxes are not paid on
income earned on an Indian reservation; state sales taxes are not paid by
Indians on transactions made on an Indian reservation; and local property
taxes are not paid on reservation or trust land.
Laws.
As U.S. citizens, Indians are generally subject to federal, state, and
local laws. On Indian reservations, however, only federal and tribal laws
apply to members of the tribe unless the Congress provides otherwise. In
federal law, the Assimilative Crimes Act makes any violation of state
criminal law a federal offense on reservations. Most tribes now maintain
tribal court systems and facilities to detain tribal members convicted of
certain offenses within the boundaries of the reservation.
Language and Population
American Indian Languages
Spoken at Home by American Indian Persons 5 Years and Over in Households:
1990
|Languages |Number of |
| |households |
|All American Indian languages |281,990 |
|Algonquian languages |12,887 |
|Athapascan Eyak languages |157,694 |
|Caddoan languages |354 |
|Central and South American Indian languages |431 |
|Haida |110 |
|Hokan languages |2,430 |
|Iroquoian languages |12,046 |
|Keres |8,346 |
|Muskogean languages |13,772 |
|Penutian languages |8,190 |
|Siouan languages |19,693 |
|Tanoan languages |8,255 |
|Tlingit |1,088 |
|Tonkawa |3 |
|Uto-Aztecan languages |23,493 |
|Wakashan and Salish languages |1,105 |
|Yuchi |65 |
|Unspecified American Indian languages |12,038 |
Source: U.S. Census Bureau. The American Indian languages shown above are
the major languages.
Many American places have been named after Indian words. In fact,
about half of the states got their names from Indian words. Here are some:
|Alabama |may come from Choctaw meaning “thicket-clearers” |
| |or “vegetation-gatherers.” |
|Alaska |corruption of Aleut word meaning “great land” or |
| |“that which the sea breaks against.” |
|Arizona |from the Indian “Arizonac,” meaning “little |
| |spring” or “young spring.” |
|Arkansas |from the Quapaw Indians |
|Chicago, |Algonquian for "garlic field." |
|Ill | |
|Chesapeake |Algonquian name of a village |
|(bay) | |
|Connecticut|from an Indian word (Quinnehtukqut) meaning |
| |“beside the long tidal river.” |
|Dakota |from the Sioux tribe, meaning “allies.” |
|Illinois |Algonquin for “tribe of superior men.” |
|Indiana |meaning “land of Indians.” |
|Iowa |probably from an Indian word meaning “this is the|
| |place” or “the Beautiful Land.” |
|Kansas |from a Sioux word meaning “people of the south |
| |wind.” |
|Kentucky |from an Iroquoian word “Ken-tah-ten” meaning |
| |“land of tomorrow.” |
|Massachuset|from Massachusett tribe of Native Americans, |
|ts |meaning “at or about the great hill.” |
|Michigan |from Indian word “Michigana” meaning “great or |
| |large lake.” |
|Minnesota |from a Dakota Indian word meaning “sky-tinted |
| |water.” |
|Mississippi|from an Indian word meaning “Father of Waters.” |
|Malibu |believed to come from the Chumash Indians. |
|Manhattan |Algonquian, believed to mean "isolated thing in |
| |water." |
|Milwaukee |Algonquian, believed to mean "a good spot or |
| |place." |
|Missouri |named after the Missouri Indian tribe. “Missouri”|
| |means “town of the large canoes.” |
|Narraganset|named after the Indian tribe |
|t | |
|Nebraska |from an Oto Indian word meaning “flat water.” |
|Niagara |named after an Iroquoian town, "Ongiaahra." |
|Ohio |from an Iroquoian word meaning “great river.” |
|Oklahoma |from two Choctaw Indian words meaning “red |
| |people.” |
|Pensacola |Choctaw for "hair" and "people." |
|(Florida) | |
|Roanoke |Algonquian for "shell money" (Indian tribes often|
|(Virginia) |used shells that were made into beads called |
| |wampum, as money). |
|Saratoga |believed to be Mohawk for "springs (of water) |
|(New York) |from the hillside." |
|Sunapee |Pennacook for "rocky pond." |
|(lake in | |
|New | |
|Hampshire) | |
|Tahoe (the |is Washo for "big water." |
|lake in | |
|California/| |
|Nevada) | |
|Tennessee |of Cherokee origin; the exact meaning is unknown.|
|Texas |from an Indian word meaning “friends.” |
|Utah |is from the Ute tribe, meaning “people of the |
| |mountains.” |
|Wisconsin |French corruption of an Indian word whose meaning|
| |is disputed. |
|Wyoming |from the Delaware Indian word, meaning “mountains|
| |and valleys alternating”; the same as the Wyoming|
| |Valley in Pennsylvania. |
American Indian Loan Words
From their earliest contact with traders and explorers, American
Indians borrowed foreign words, often to describe things not previously
encountered. The language exchange went both ways. Today, thousands of
place names across North America have Indian origins - as do hundreds of
everyday English words.
Many of these "loan words" are nouns from the Algonquian languages
that were once widespread along the Atlantic coast. English colonists,
encountering unfamiliar plants and animals—among them moose, opossum, and
skunk—borrowed Indian terms to name them. Pronunciations generally changed,
and sometimes the newcomers shortened words they found difficult; for
instance, "pocohiquara" became "hickory."
Some U.S. English Words with Indian Origins:
anorak from the Greenlandic Inuit "annoraq"
bayou from the Choctaw "bayuk"
chipmunk from the Ojibwa "ajidamoon," red squirrel
hickory from the Virginia Algonquian "pocohiquara"
hominy from the Virginia Algonquian "uskatahomen"
igloo from the Canadian Inuit "iglu," house
kayak from the Alaskan Yupik "qayaq"
moccasin from the Virginia Algonquian
moose from the Eastern Abenaki "mos"
papoose from the Narragansett "papoos," child
pecan from the Illinois "pakani"
powwow from the Narragansett "powwaw," shaman
quahog from the Narragansett "poquauhock"
squash from the Narragansett "askutasquash"
succotash from the Narragansett "msickquatash," boiled corn
tepee from the Sioux "tipi," dwelling
toboggan from the Micmac "topaghan"
tomahawk from the Virginia Algonquian "tamahaac"
totem from the Ojibwa "nindoodem," my totem
wampum from the Massachusett "wampumpeag"
wigwam from the Eastern Abenaki "wik'wom" Natives.
Population
While the Indian population was never dense, the idea that the Indian has
held his own, or even actually increased in number, is a serious error,
founded on the fact that most official estimates begin with the federal
period, when the native race was already wasted by nearly three centuries
of white contact and in many regions entirely extinct. An additional source
of error is that the law recognizes anyone of even remote Indian ancestry
as entitled to Indian rights, including in this category, especially in the
former "Five Civilized Nations" of Indian Territory (now Oklahoma), several
thousand individuals whose claims have always been stoutly repudiated by
the native tribal courts. Moreover, the original Indian was a full-blood,
while his present-day representative has often so little aboriginal blood
as to practically a white man or a negro. Many broken tribes of today
contain not a single full-blood, and some few not even one of half Indian
blood. The Cherokee Nation, officially reported to number 36,000 persons of
pure or mixed Cherokee blood contains probably not 4000 of even fairly pure
blood, the rest being all degrees of admixture even down to one-sixty-
fourth or less of Indian blood, besides some 7000 claimants officially
recognized, but repudiated by the former Indian Government. In
Massachusetts an official census of 1860 reported a "Yartmouth tribe" of
105 persons, all descended from a single Indian woman with a negro husband
residing there in 1797. It is obvious that the term Indian cannot properly
be applied to such diluted mixtures.
The entire aboriginal population of Florida, of the mission period,
numbering perhaps 30,000, is long since extinct without descendants, the
Seminole being a later emigrations from the Creeks. The aborigines of South
Carolina, counting in 1700 some fifteen tribes of which the Catawba, the
largest tribe, numbered some six thousand souls, are represented today by
about a hundred mixed blood Catawba, together with some scattered mongrels,
whose original ancestry is a matter of doubt.
The same holds good upon the plains, The celebrated Pawnee tribe of some
10,000 souls in 1838 is now reduced to 650; the Kansas of 1500 within the
same period have now 200 souls, and the aborigines of Texas, numbering in
1700 perhaps some 40,000 souls in many small tribes with distinct
languages, is extinct except for some 900 Caddo, Wichita, and Tonkawa. The
last-named, estimated at 1,000 in 1805, numbered 700 in 1849, 300 in 1861,
108 in 1882, and 48 in 1908, including several aliens. In California the
aboriginal population has decreased within the same period from perhaps a
quarter of a million to perhaps 15,000, and nearly the same proportion of
decrease holds good along the whole Pacific coast into Alaska. Not only
have tribes dwindled, but whole linguistic stocks have become extinct
within the historic period. The only apparent exceptions to the general
rule of decay are the Iroquois, Sioux, and Navaho, the first two of whom
have kept up their number by wholesale adoptions, while the Navaho have
been preserved by their isolation. The causes of decrease may be summarized
as: (1) introduced diseases and dissipation, particularly smallpox, sexual
disease, and whiskey; (2) wars, also hardship and general enfeeblement
consequent upon frequent removals and enforced change from accustomed
habitat. The present Indian population north of Mexico is approximately
400,000, or whom approximately 265,000 are within the United States proper.
other native Americans
The Eskimo (Inuit and Yupiit) and Aleuts are people of the treeless
shores and tundra-covered coastal hinterlands of northernmost North America
and Greenland and the eastern tip of the Chukchi Peninsula of Siberia.
Custom alone designates them Eskimo and Aleuts rather than American Indians
like all other native Americans, from whom they are distinguished
principally by their language.
The Eskimo are an Asian people who are distinguishable from the American
Indians by their more Asian features, by the relative smallness of their
hands and feet, and by a few less obvious traits.
Eskimo culture was totally adapted to an extremely cold, snow- and
icebound environment in which vegetable foods were almost nonexistent,
trees were scarce, and caribou, seal, walrus, and whale meat, whale
blubber, and fish were the major food sources. The Eskimo used harpoons to
kill seals, which they hunted either on the ice or from skin-covered, one-
person canoes known as kayaks. Whales were hunted using larger boats called
umiaks. In the summer most Eskimo families hunted caribou and other land
animals with the help of bows and arrows. Dogsleds were the basic means of
transport on land. Eskimo clothing was fashioned of caribou furs, which
provided protection against the extreme cold. Most Eskimo wintered in
either snow-block houses called igloos or semisubterranean houses of stone
or sod over wooden or whalebone frameworks. In summer many Eskimo lived in
animal-skin tents. Their b asic social and economic unit was the nuclear
family, and their religion was animistic.
Eskimo life changed greatly in the 20th century owing to increased
contacts with societies to the south. Snowmobiles have generally replaced
dogs for land transport, and rifl es have replaced harpoons for hunting
purposes. Outboard motors, store-bought clothing, and numerous other
manufactured items have entered the culture, and money, unknown in
traditional Eskimo economy, has become a necessity. Many Eskimo have
abandoned their nomadic hunting pursuits to move into northern towns and
cities or to work in mines and oil fields. Others, particularly in Canada,
have formed cooperatives to market their handicrafts, fish catches, and
ventures in tourism.
Aleut - a native of the Aleutian Islands and western portion of the
Alaska Peninsula of northwest North America. Aleuts speak three mutually
intelligible dialects and are closely related to the Eskimo in language,
race, and culture. The earliest people, the Paleo-Aleuts, arrived in the
Aleutian Islands from the Alaskan mainland about 2000 BC. The Aleuts hunted
seals, sea otters, whales, sea lions, sometimes walrus, and, in some areas,
caribou and bears. Fish, birds, and mollusks were also taken. One-man and
two-man skin boats known as bidarkas, or kayaks, and large, open, skin
boats (Eskimo umiaks) were used. Aleut women wove fine grass basketry;
stone, bone, and ivory were also worked. Ancient Aleut villages were
situated on the seashore near fresh water, with a good landing for boats
and in a position safe from surprise attack from other Aleuts or
neighbouring tribes. Villages were usually composed of related families. A
chief might govern several villages or an island, but there was no chief
over all Aleuts or even over several islands.
epilogue
A long time ago North America was very different from the way it is
today. There were no highways, cars, or cities. There were no
schools, malls, or restaurants. But even long, long ago, there were still
communities. People made their own homes, food, and clothing from the
plants and animals they found around them.
Americans today owe a great deal to the First Americans. Over half of
the states and many of the cities, rivers and streets still have Native
Americans names. Nearly 550 Indian words are part of everyday English. Many
foods, such as potatoes, corn, peanuts, turkey, tomatoes, cocoa, beans were
borrowed by later settlers from the Native Americans. It was from the
Indians that other Americans learned how to use rubber.
In fact without the help of the Native Americans many other early
settlers might never have survived.
In conclusion I would like to cite the words of George W. Bush, today’s
President of the U.S., which he said in National American Indian Heritage
Month proclamation, dated November 19, 2001:
“As the early inhabitants of this great land, the native peoples of
North America played a unique role in the shaping of our Nation's
history and culture. During this month when we celebrate Thanksgiving,
we especially celebrate their heritage and the contributions of
American Indian and Alaska Native peoples to this Nation. [ …]
American Indian and Alaska Native cultures have made remarkable
contributions to our national identity. Their unique spiritual,
artistic, and literary contributions, together with their vibrant
customs and celebrations, enliven and enrich our land.
As we move into the 21st century, American Indians and Alaska
Natives will play a vital role in maintaining our Nation's strength
and prosperity. Almost half of America's Native American tribal
leaders have served in the United States Armed Forces, following in
the footsteps of their forebears who distinguished themselves during
the World Wars and the conflicts in Korea, Vietnam, and the Persian
Gulf. […]
During National American Indian Heritage Month, I call on all
Americans to learn more about the history and heritage of the Native
peoples of this great land. Such actions reaffirm our appreciation and
respect for their traditions and way of life and can help to preserve
an important part of our culture for generations yet to come. “
main sourses
1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, electronic edition, 1999
2. Gilbert Legay, Atlas of Indians of Northern America, Barrons Educ, 1995
3. Keith C. Wilbur, The New England Indians, The Globe Pequot Press, 1978
4. Bryn O’Calladhan, An Illustrated Hystory of the USA, Longman, 1990
5. V.M. Pavlotsky, American studies, Karo, St.- Pt., 2000
6. http://www.first-americans.spb.ru/n4/win/current.htm – Russian Pages of
American Indian Almanac
7. http://www.nativetech.org - Native American technologies and art
8. http://etext.virginia.edu/subjects/Native-American.html – electronic
texts by and about American Indians
9. http://www.si.edu/resource/faq/start.htm – very useful encyclopaedia
10. http://www.ilt.columbia.edu/k12/naha/maps/nausa.html – tribe finder
11. http://www.infoplease.com – statistics and useful data
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