Indian History Essay

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    conflicting views on our history. Many have debated when our history actually starts. Was it with the arrival of the Europeans, or did it begin earlier? Dr. John Finger pondered this same question in his article, “Tennessee Indian History: Creativity and Power,” he also successfully answered this question. Our history begun with those Native Americans and how throughout all of the obstacles thrown their way, they managed to adapt and at times thrive. This is why the history of Tennessee and its…

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    Inaccurate Indian Stories

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    the Indians presents one aspect of their culture in which they might recognize themselves. This is a way of shaping identity or reputation, a good way but there is also a bad way. This happens when Indians confess that: “We didn’t begin that way. We haven’t always been entertainment” but due to the lies and deceit and their effects on the Indian people “we ceased being people and somehow became performers in an Aboriginal minstrel show for whites in North America” (King 68). In fact, Indians are…

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    story through panels on the Columbus Doors in front of the U.S. Capitol. Each panel on his doors tells a different section of Columbus’ life. Howard Zinn addresses European colonization of the New World in the first chapter of his book, A People’s History of the United States. Although both Rogers and Zinn tell a story of Christopher Columbus, their stories depict contrasting idea. Randolph Rogers’ portrayal of Columbus shows him as an idealized and glorified person, but Rogers does show some…

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    Native American Struggles

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    and to spread religion. Finding the Indians offered them the chance to do both. These people had never seen anything like the Europeans and were mostly receptive to new goods to trade, and were willing to listen to new religious ideas. No one was prepared for the Old diseases that the Europeans brought with them. Disease swept across the continent in the years of European settlement, paving the way for the European dream of controlling the New World. The Indian people had no way to defend…

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    belonged to the Ottawa tribe, wrote a book called The History of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians of Michigan. This book was set in the time period of the late 1800’s and discussed a range of topics such as the wrong doings the Whites did to the Indians, and how things were changing for the Ottawa and Chippewa tribes. Although Andrew Blackbird discusses topics such as how the white people treated the Indians, Blackbird wrote this book about his personal history to pass along his experiences. To…

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    HISTORY AND OUTCOME In 1846 near a border traced by a river, two neighbors went to war. The fighting between the United States and Mexico, began near the Rio Grande and raged deep into the heart of the Mexican nation. From the shores of the pacific to the Gulf Coast of Veracruz. Mexico’s regular Army was three times as large as that of the United States, but the ranks where filled with inexperienced troops. The American troops near the border where commanded by a 61 year old named General…

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    Delaware’s State History First Inhabitants Before the Europeans arrived, the Nanticoke and Lenni Lenape Indians. The Lenni Lenape Indians were peaceful indians. The Lenapes lived in small tribes and sometimes large villages of 200-300 people. In a Lenape clan, all the work was shared by men and women. The Indians started working at a very young age. The Women of the tribe farmed, dried food for winter, made clothes, slippers, and mats. The men of the tribe did did most of the hunting. The…

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    In the years following the French and Indian War the colonist experienced a sudden change in regulation constrains and authoritative power. The British Parliament placed the debt of the French and Indian War on the shoulders of the colonist and when the colonists refused to pay the dues. As a result the British Parliament decided they would collect the money via taxation. The first tax to be implemented was the Stamp Act: a tax on all printed goods, which included, but was not limited to…

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    The grounds on which the debate on sati was taken up was through the invention, preservation and gendering of Indian culture and tradition. British Colonial authority employed orientalist scholarship as a way to challenge sati from within Indian tradition and in turn become masters of that tradition . Thus, the protection of women and women’s agency became absent in the discourse as scripture was used as the defining feature of sati, furthering the project of preservation. Scripture was thus…

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    Years’ War, the British and French military were able to witness firsthand the savagery of the Native American tribes. The Europeans, who primarily practiced what they called “civilized warfare”, found the Indians style of fighting much too barbaric. Instead of face to face combat, the Indians liked to use surprise tactics and ambushes. Many of the Europeans found this style of fighting cowardly, that they could not face their enemy in combat face to face. But this did not at all halt the use of…

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