Vocabulary
Vocabulary
Westward Expansion/Assimilation
Miscellaneous
100

one cultural group gradually adopting the customs and practices of another, often leading to the loss of their original identity

What is assimilation?

100

A group of Native American Marines who developed and used a secret code based on Navajo language during World War II

Who are the Navajo Code Talkers?

100

What is one reason why bison were hunted to near extinction?

  • commercial gain

  • railroad expansion

  • sport and entertainment

  • weaken Native resistance

100

How did the Dawes Act directly contradict Native beliefs and philosophies regarding land ownership?

The Dawes Act contradicted Native beliefs about land ownership by dividing communal tribal lands into individual plots, forcing Native Americans to adopt private property concepts. Many Native tribes believed that land should be shared by everyone, not owned by one person. Natives who refused to adopt these beliefs, risked losing their land to white settlers.

200

an area of land reserved for a tribe or tribes as permanent tribal homelands

What are reservations?

200

An activist group that advocated for tribal sovereignty, cultural preservation, and self-determination

What is the American Indian Movement (AIM)?

200

List one example of Native resistance to westward expansion policies

Battle of Little Bighorn & Wounded Knee Massacre
200

How did the 1832 Supreme Court Case, Worcester v. Georgia, impact tribal sovereignty and land ownership?

Stated only federal government had authority over tribes, not states
300

the authority of indigenous tribes to govern themselves within U.S. borders

What is sovereignty?

300

battle that was a victory for Native's fight against westward expansion but led to increased U.S. military campaigns against tribes

What is the Battle of Little Bighorn?

300

Give an example of forced assimilation

Dawes Act & Indian Boarding Schools

300

The Occupation of Alcatraz, Trail of Broken Treaties, and Wounded Knee Occupation are examples of?

Protests organized by AIM

400

a law that divided Native tribal lands into individual allotments

What is the Dawes Act?

400

A mass killing of 150 Native men, women, and children that marked the end to Native resistance 

What is the Wounded Knee Massacre?
400

How was the Dawes Act an example of forced assimilation? 

Required native people to adopt private land ownership, while allowing U.S. government to sell surplus to white settlers

400

List one benefit and one drawback of the 1934 Indian Reorganization Act (IRA)

Benefits: ended allotment policies (Dawes Act), encourage tribes to set up own government, gave financial support, encouraged cultural preservation (ended boarding schools)

Drawbacks: original land not returned, U.S. government still had to approve tribal government, not enough money/not all tribes received same funding

500

a 1934 law that ended land allotment, promoted tribal self-government, and aimed to restore Native culture

What is the Indian Reorganization Act (IRA)?

500

Gave 160 acres of free land to encourage westward expansion

What is the Homestead Act?

500

Identify a method utilized by Indian Boarding Schools to assimilate Native children

  • Native clothing, languages, and traditions banned

  • English-only education and Christian teachings

  • Strict routines and discipline

500

What was the outcome of the 1980 Supreme Court Case United States v. Sioux Nation?

Courts ruled in favor of the Sioux, government awarded Sioux $105 million, Sioux turned it down and demanded other land back
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