Assignment:
1.) Read the following document, “Another Race of White Men Come Amongst Us”: Native American Views as British Replace the French in the Lower Mississippi Valley, 1765
2.) Answer the following questions based on a reading of the above document and material from your textbook.
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1.) TYPE OF DOCUMENT:
Is this a primary or a secondary source?
-Primary
2.) DATE(S) OF DOCUMENT:
When was this document created?
-It was created shortly after the British replaced the French in the Lower Mississippi Valley in 1765
3.) AUTHOR (OR CREATOR) OF THE DOCUMENT:
Who created this document?
-Alibamon Mingo, elderly leader of the Choctaw nation
4.) DOCUMENT INFORMATION (There are
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- Men who did not honor the authority usually treated Indian women with dirspect and used them for their own sexual expectations. It was normal for British men to take Indian women and marry them. I supposed this is how is started.
5.) FRANCE/ENGLAND/NATIVE AMERICANS
Your textbook discusses how Native Americans developed different relations with the French and the English (Chapter 6, pp. 162-167). Read over that section of your book to answer the following questions.
A.) Although Native Americans were not mentioned in the 1763 Treaty of Paris that ended the Seven Years’ War (French and Indian War), how did this treaty affect indigenous peoples who lived in Canada and areas east of the Mississippi River?
-Britain gained control of Canada, eliminating the French threat from the North. France transferred all its territory west of the Mississippi River, including New Orleans to Spain as compensation for help during the war.
B.) What type of political/economic relationship did the French establish with Native Americans prior to 1763?
-The French had
The Royal Proclamation of 1763 was issued October 7, 1763, by King George III following Great Britain 's acquisition of French territory in North America after the end of the French and Indian War/Seven Years ' War, which forbade all settlement past a line drawn along the Appalachian Mountains.[1] The Royal Proclamation continues to be of legal importance to First Nations in Canada and is significant for the variation of indigenous status in the United States. The Royal Proclamation may have played a role in the separation of the United States from Great Britain as colonists at the time wanted to continue in the economically beneficial cultural practice of taking land for one 's own livelihood as part of the drive west. It eventually ensured that British culture and laws were applied in Upper Canada after 1791, which was done to attract British settlers to the province. Its geographic location is similar to the Eastern Continental Divide 's path running northwards from Georgia to the Pennsylvania-New York State border, and north-eastwards past the drainage divide on the "St. Lawrence Divide" from there northwards through New England.
British empire was in control of Canada, “a deep and complex transformation.” (Calloway, 112) British empire envision North America with field of action while the French spent the next two decade revenging on their loss with the Seven Years’ War and Treaty of Paris. Even though the French did not succeed in North America, eventually they migrated towards large swaths of Canada, The Great Lakes, and Mississippi Valley using their social systems and culture to survive. “The Interior French”, (Calloway, 123) were French-Canadian who lived beyond the Great Lakes country. They had formed an alliance within the Indians and having a good reputation with dealing goods. Louisiana went to Spain eventually, a few French migrated to Louisiana as a Peace of Paris. More settlers were French in Louisiana during the Spanish era instead of the French. Louisiana changes hand in Paris a couple times in 1763.
Around the time when most establishments were made in the Americas, French had taken control of the Inland North America and St. Lawrence River.
Peter Silver’s thesis in Our Savage Neighbors explains that The French and Indian War was the primary cause of the change in social and political standings in the Mid-Atlantic colonies. Silver argues that Europe’s disunity in times of war further influenced the split within the American people and the American natives both culturally and politically. Silver claims that the shift in competitive governmental and economic attitude between the French and the British forced the existing native peoples to become casualties in Europe’s battle for territory. Since the Native American people were not considered a say in their land being taken out from under them, they retaliated from a place of self-defense and fear of their conquerors; consequently,
Although the federal governments attitudes and actions towards blacks and Native Americans civil rights in the 19th century were very different they also had lots of similarities. Both blacks and Native Americans were treated poorly and did not have many rights. Blacks were slaves and Indians (Native Americans) were fighting to stay alive. All these negative actions were a bad look for a country that was growing bigger and bigger by the day to someday reach what the United States is today.
Ever since the very first colonies were formed, the Native Americans have been forced out of their beloved inveterate lands in order for the Americans to be able to expand their new found territory. Yet, nothing ever changed and the same economic policies continued, bringing nothing but destruction to the Native people. Meanwhile, the political and social policies were dramatically distorted, deceiving the tribes into losing land and cultural values. Jackson’s efforts to remove any and all Cherokee Indians to territory west of the Mississippi in the 1830’s maintained the same economical attitudes as before but changed the social and political policies set by the previous colonies and the United States government towards the Native Americans.
The French had won the French and Indian War. “This area was the area between the Appalachian and Mississippi River” stated www.indians.org . “The colonials resited many changes, since they felt secure without the French to the north”. “North American territory was dominated by the British on the eastern coast, French down in Louisiana up through Canada following the Mississipi Valley, and the Spanish in Florida”. They had surrounded that area when the war was being fought. They felt power since the French weren’t attacking them. The British went across to the east coast, the French went down to Louisiana up through Canada followed by the Mississippi Valley and the Spanish were in Florida. Overall the French won the French and Indian War by
The picture that one detects when thinking of the relationship between Native Americans and Europeans is depicted by circumstances that eventually shaped the New World.
They gained all the land the French previously owned. However, they were left economically damaged. The cost of war was so much for the British to handle. According to an article on the effects of the war, it said the British victory on the war “meant a great expansion of British territorial claims in the New World.
The Treaty of Paris officially ended the French and Indian War. The British gained control over the area west of the 13 British colonies all the way to the Mississippi River. The French agreed to give up any colonies in North America, including all of Canada. Since Spain had helped the French, the Spanish were also forced to give up all of Florida. But the Spanish still helped their territory west of the Mississippi River and in central and South America.
(Please see your Study Reference Guide on pages 619-6-1 and 619-6-2 to answer the following questions.)
When the French enter North America in the 16th century, it irreversibly changed the lives of the native people that inhabited it. The most drastic transformation was on the Native Americans of the Midwest, who came to be key parts of the French’s entire colonial strategy. Most tribes’ everyday lives became completely different as they had to adapt to the ways of the new occupants around them. The most major aspects that came to be affected were gender roles within the tribes, and a newfound sense of constant warfare and alliances that were formed not only between different tribes but also between tribes and the French themselves.
This movie tells the story of a young man, from Southern California, that is the product of several unfortunate incidents, and his misguided search trying to answer the question why his life is the way it is.
Once you have read the textbook chapter and the Reading, answer discussion questions 1, 3- 5 (ignore questions 2 and 6).
Respond to each of the following. Your responses must be written in complete sentences and should demonstrate an understanding of the course content.