Colonial America
Two dark chapters in American history are slavery and the
treatment of the American Indian. We have an article on slavery, and in this article
we will focus briefly on the story of the American Indians (or Native
Americans).
It is difficult to estimate the number of Indians in the Western Hemisphere. In Central and South America, there were advanced civilizations like
the Aztecs in Mexico and the Incas in Peru. So it is estimated there was a
population of about twenty million before the Europeans came. By contrast, the
Indian tribes north of what is now the Mexican border were “still at the
hunter-gatherer stage in many cases, and engaged in perpetual warfare” and
numbered perhaps one million.{1}
One of the best-known stories from colonial America is the story of John Smith and Pocahontas. John Smith was the third leader of Jamestown. He traded with the Indians and learned their language. He also learned how they
hunted and fished.
On one occasion, Smith was captured by the Indians and
brought before Chief Powhatan. As the story goes, a young princess by the name
of Pocahontas laid her head across Smith’s chest and pleaded with her father to
spare his life. This may have been an act of courage or part of the Indian
ceremony. In either case, Smith was made an honorary chief of the tribe.
Although the Disney cartoon about Pocahontas ends at this
point, it is worth noting that she later met an English settler and traveled to
England. There she adopted English clothing, became a Christian, and was
baptized.
Another famous story involves Squanto. He was originally kidnapped
in 1605 and taken to England where he learned English and was eventually able
to return to New England. When he found his tribe had been wiped out by a
plague, he lived with a neighboring tribe. Squanto then learned that the
Pilgrims were at Plymouth, so he came to them and showed them how to plant corn
and fertilize with fish. He later converted to Christianity. William Bradford
said that Squanto “was a special instrument sent of God for their good beyond
their expectation.”{2}
These stories are typical of the some of the initial
interactions between the Indians and the colonists. Relations between the two
were usually peaceful, but as we will see, the peace was a fragile one.
Many of the settlers owed their lives to the Indians and
learned many important skills involving hunting, trapping, fishing, and
farming. Roger Williams purchased land from the Indians to start Providence, Rhode Island, and William Penn bought land from the Indians who lived in
present-day Pennsylvania. Others, however, merely took the land and began what
became the dark chapter of exploitation of the American Indians.
Indian Wars in New England
Let’s take a look at the history of Indians in New England.
One of the leaders in New England was Roger Williams. He
believed that it was right and proper to bring Christianity to the Indians.
Unfortunately, “few New Englanders took trouble to instruct Indians in
Christianity. What they all wanted to do was to dispossess them of their land
and traditional hunting preserves.”{3}
Williams thought this was unchristian and argued that title
to all Indian lands should be negotiated at a fair price. He felt anything less
was sinful.{4}
Because of this, his Rhode Island colony gained the
reputation of being a place where Indians were honored and protected. That
colony managed to avoid any conflict with the Indians until King Philip’s War.
King Philip’s War was perhaps the most devastating war
between the colonists and the Indians living in the New England area. There had
been peace until that time between the Pilgrims and the Wampanoag tribe due to
their peace treaty signed in the 1620s.
The war was named for King Philip who was the son of Chief
Massasoit. His Indian name was Metacom, but he was called King Philip by the
English because he adopted European dress and customs. In 1671, he was
questioned by the colonists and fined. They also demanded that the Wampanoag
surrender their arms.
In 1675, a Christian Indian who had been working as an
informer to the colonists was murdered (probably by King Philip’s order). Three
Indians were tried for murder and executed. In retaliation, King Philip led his
men against the settlers. At one point they came within twenty miles of Boston itself. If he could have organized a coalition of Indian tribes, he might have
extinguished the entire colony.
Throughout the summer and fall of 1675, Philip and his
followers destroyed farms and townships over a large area. The Massachusetts governor dispatched military against the Indians with the conflict ending in
the fall of 1677 when Philip was killed in battle.
The war was costly to the colonists in terms of lives and
finances. It also resulted in the near extermination of many of the tribes in
southern New England.
The Pequot War in the 1630s developed initially because of
conflict between Indian tribes. It began with a dispute between the Pequots and
the Mohicans in the Connecticut River area over valuable shoreline where shells
and beads were collected for wampum.
Neither the English nor the nearby Dutch came to the aid of
the Mohicans. Thus, the Pequots became bold and murdered a number of settlers.
In response, the Massachusetts governor sent armed vessels to destroy two
Indian villages. The Pequots retaliated by attacking Wethersfield, Connecticut, killing nine people and abducting two others.{5}
The combined forces of the Massachusetts and Connecticut militia set out to destroy the Pequot. They surrounded the main Pequot fort in
1637 and slaughtered five hundred Indians (men, women, and children). The
village was set fire, and most who tried to escape were shot or clubbed to
death.{6}
Post Revolutionary America
Chief Tecumseh was a Shawnee chief who lived in the Ohio River Valley and benefited from the British. During the War of 1812, the British had a
policy of organizing and arming minorities against the United States. Not only did they liberate black slaves, but they armed and trained many of
the Indian tribes.{7}
As thousands of settlers moved into this area, the Indians
were divided as to whether to attack American settlements. Tecumseh was not one
of them. He refused to sign any treaties with the government and organized an
Indian resistance movement against the settlers.
Together with his brother Tenskwatawa, who was also known as
“the Prophet,” he called for a war against the white man: “Let the white race
perish! They seize your land. They corrupt your women. They trample on the
bones of your dead . . . . Burn their dwellings—destroy their stock—slay their
wives and children that their very breed may perish! War now! War always! War
on the living! War on the dead!”{8}
Tecumseh and “the Prophet” met with other Indian tribes in
order to unite them into a powerful Indian confederacy. This confederacy began
to concern government authorities especially when the militant Creeks (known as
the Red Sticks because they carried bright red war clubs) joined and began to
massacre the settlers.
General William Henry Harrison was at that time the governor
of the Indiana Territory (he later became president). While Tecumseh was
recruiting more Indian tribes, Harrison’s army defeated fighters led by “the
Prophet” at the Tippecanoe River. This victory was later used in his
presidential campaign (“Tippecanoe and Tyler too”).
American settlers as well as some Indian tribes attempted to
massacre the Creeks in the south. When this attempt failed, they retreated to Fort Mims. The Creeks took the fort and murdered over five hundred men, women, and children
and took away two hundred fifty scalps on poles.{9}
At this point, Major-General Andrew Jackson was told to take
his troops south and avenge the disaster. Those who joined him included David
Crockett and Samuel Houston. Two months after the massacre, Jackson surrounded
an Indian village and sent in his men to destroy it. David Crockett said: “We
shot them like dogs.”{10}
A week later, Jackson won a pitched battle at Talladega, attacking a thousand Creeks and killing three hundred of them. He then moved
against the Creeks at Horseshoe Bend. When the Indians would not surrender,
they were slain. Over five hundred were killed within the fort and another three
hundred drowned trying to escape in the river. Shortly after this decisive battle,
the remaining Creeks surrendered.
Trail of Tears
The Cherokee called Georgia home, and they were an advanced
Indian civilization. Their national council went back to 1792 and had a written
legal code since 1808. They had a representative form of government (with eight
congressional districts). But the settlers moving into the state continued to
take their land.
When Andrew Jackson was elected president in 1828, it sealed
the fate of the Indians. “In his inaugural address he insisted that the
integrity of the state of Georgia, and the Constitution of the United States, came before Indian interests, however meritorious.”{11}
In 1830, Congress passed the “Indian Removal Act.” This act
forced Indians who were organized tribally and living east of the Mississippi
River to move west to Indian Territory. It also authorized the president to use
force if necessary. Many Americans were against the act, including Tennessee
Congressman Davy Crockett. It passed anyway and was quickly signed by President
Jackson.
The Indian tribes most affected by the act were the
so-called “civilized tribes” that had adopted many of the ways of the white
settlers (Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek, Seminole, and Cherokee). The Cherokees had
actually formed an independent Cherokee Nation.
Cherokee leader John Ross went to Washington to ask the
Supreme Court to rule in favor of his people and allow them to keep their land.
In 1832, Chief Justice John Marshall and the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the
Cherokee Nation was not subject to the laws of the United States and therefore
had a right to their land. The Cherokee would have to agree to removal in a
treaty (which would also have to be ratified by the Senate).
A treaty with one of the Cherokee leaders gave Jackson the legal document he needed to remove the Indians. The U.S. Senate ratified the
treaty by one vote over the objections of such leaders as Daniel Webster and
Henry Clay.
In one of the saddest chapters in American history, the
Indians were taken from their land, herded into makeshift forts, and forced to
march a thousand miles. Often there was not enough food or shelter. Four
thousand Cherokees died on the march to Oklahoma. This forced removal has been
called “the Trail of Tears.”
The Seminole resisted this forced march. Their leader Osceola
fought the U.S. Army in the swamps of Florida with great success. However, when
the Seminoles raised the white flag in truce, the U.S. Army seized Osceola. He
died in prison a year later.
Those who made it to Oklahoma did not fare much better.
Although Oklahoma was Indian Territory, settlers began to show interest in the
land. So the government began to push Indians onto smaller and smaller
reservations. The final blow came with the Homestead Act of 1862 which gave one
hundred sixty acres to anyone who paid a ten-dollar filing fee and agreed to
improve the land for five years.
Indian Wars in the West
Until the 1860s, the Plains Indians were not significantly
affected by the white man. But the advance of the settlers and the
transcontinental railroad had a devastating impact on their way of life. The
railroads cut the Great Plains in half so that the west was no longer the place
where the buffalo roam. Prospectors ventured onto Indians lands seeking
valuable minerals. So it was inevitable that war would break out. Between 1869
and 1878, over two hundred pitched battles took place primarily with the Sioux,
Apache, Comanche, and Cheyenne.
The impact of an endless stream of settlers had the effect
of forcing the Plains Indians onto smaller and smaller reservations. Even
though the government signed various treaties with the Indians, they were almost
always broken. Approximately three hundred seventy
treaties were signed from 1778 to 1871 while an estimated eighty or ninety
agreements were also entered into between 1871 and 1906.{12}
One of the most famous Indian battles was “Custer’s Last
Stand.” Sioux and Cheyenne warriors, led by Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull,
fought against Lieutenant Colonel George Armstrong Custer. The Battle of Little
Big Horn actually wasn’t much of a battle. Custer was ordered to observe a
large Sioux camp. But he decided to attack even though he was warned they might
be greatly outnumbered. It turns out they were outnumbered ten to one. Within
an hour, Custer and all his men were dead.
Custer’s defeat angered many Americans, so the government
fought even more aggressively against the Indians. Many historians believe that
the anger generated by “Custer’s Last Stand” led to the slaughter of Sioux men,
women, and children at Wounded Knee in 1890. After the death of Sitting Bull, a
band of Sioux fled into the badlands, where they were captured by the 7th
Cavalry. The Sioux were ordered disarmed, but an Indian fired a gun and wounded
an officer. The U.S. troops opened fire, and within minutes almost two hundred
men, women, and children were killed.
The Apache leader Geronimo led many successful attacks
against the army. By 1877, the Apache had been forced onto reservations. But on
two separate occasions, Geronimo planned escapes and led resistance efforts
from mountain camps in Mexico. He finally surrendered in 1886.
Chief Joseph of the Nez Percé in the Northwest built
friendships with trappers and traders since the first expedition by Lewis and
Clark. He refused to sign treaties with the government that would give up their
homeland. Eventually fighting broke out, so Chief Joseph led his people to Canada. Unfortunately, they were surrounded by soldiers just forty miles from Canada. Chief Joseph died at a reservation in Washington State in 1904.
This is the sad and tragic story of the American Indian in
American history. We cannot change our history, and we should not rewrite our
history. Neither should we ignore the history of the American Indian in the United States.
Notes
- Paul Johnson, A History of the American People (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1997), 7.
- William Bradford, History of Plymouth Plantation, c. 1650.
- Johnson, 47.
- Johnson, 76.
- Alden T. Vaughn, The New England Frontier: Puritans and Indians, 1620-1675 (Boston: Little Brown & Company, 1965).
- Reginald Horsman, "British Indian Policy in the North-West 1807-1812," Mississippi Valley Historical Review, April 1958.
- J. F.H. Claiborne, Mississippi as Providence, Territory and State, 3 quoted in Robert V. Remini, Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Freedom 1822-32, (New York: Harper and Row, 1981), i.
- H. S. Halbert and T. S. Hall, The Creek War of 1813-14 (Tuscaloosa, 1969), 151ff.
- David Crockett, A Narrative of the Life of David Crockett of the State of Tennessee, 1834.
- Johnson, 350.
- Charles M. Harvey, "The Red Man's Last Roll-Call," Atlantic Monthly 97 (1906), 323-330.
© 2006 Probe Ministries
About the Author
About the Author
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is National Director of Probe Ministries International. He holds masters degrees from Yale University (science) and from Georgetown University (government). He is the author of several books, including Christian Ethics in Plain Language, Genetic Engineering, Origin Science, and Signs of Warning, Signs of Hope. His new series with Harvest House Publishers includes: A Biblical Point of View on Islam and A Biblical Point of View on Homosexuality. He is the host of "Point of View" (USA Radio Network) and regular guest on "Prime Time America" (Moody Broadcasting Network) and "Fire Away" (American Family Radio). He produces a daily syndicated radio commentary and writes editorials that have appeared in papers such as the Dallas Morning News, the Miami Herald, the San Jose Mercury, and the Houston Post. What is Probe? Probe Ministries is a non-profit ministry whose mission is to assist the church in renewing the minds of believers with a Christian worldview and to equip the church to engage the world for Christ. Probe fulfills this mission through our Mind Games conferences for youth and adults, our 3-minute daily radio program, and our extensive Web site at www.probe.org. Further information about Probe's materials and ministry may be obtained by contacting us at: Probe Ministries1900 Firman Drive, Suite 100 Richardson, TX 75081 (972) 480-0240 FAX (972) 644-9664
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