Native Americans resisted the Removal Act through various means, including legal challenges, protests, and armed resistance. Some tribes, like the Cherokee, utilized the U.S. legal system to assert their rights, notably winning the Supreme Court case Worcester v. Georgia, although the ruling was largely ignored by the government. Others, such as the Seminole, engaged in armed conflict during the Seminole Wars to defend their lands. Additionally, many Native Americans sought to negotiate treaties, hoping to protect their territories and sovereignty in the face of encroaching settlers.
Native Americans were enslaved by the missionaries. They were forced to convert to Christianity by the missionaries and to leave their cultural ways to live and work at the missions. Thousands of Native Americans are buried in mass graves at California missions. They were killed by the missionaries. Your question should be asking how did the missionaries impact the Native Americans.
They didn’t need to resist. The white culture didn’t want them. They wanted them dead or on reservations starving. Native American children were removed to government schools. These schools didn’t allow them to practice their traditions, native languages, and made them wear clothing that wasn’t traditional. These children stayed at the schools until they were 21, but when they went home they weren’t accepted by their tribes and white cultures didn’t acccept them. Many killed them selves.
True. The 14th and 15th Amendments to the U.S. Constitution granted citizenship and voting rights to African Americans but did not extend these rights to Native Americans. It wasn't until 1924, with the Indian Citizenship Act, that Native Americans were granted U.S. citizenship, and even then, many states found ways to keep them from voting until the 1950s and 1960s.
The settlement in the west affected the native Americans that lived there because once us Americans kept on pushing west after making Ohio a state we pushed into new areas .we settled in the territory of Indiana and other lands further west and the tide of settlement had a grave impact on native Americans like exposing them to disease's such as small pox,measles,and influenza killed thousands of them.and settlers took over a large part of there hunting grounds.took the forest for there farming. native Americans tradition,pover,home,life,and population declined.and that's how the settlement in the west affected the native Americans)
It sent people to negotiate with the Native Americans. It established a postal system & a Continental Navy and Marine Corps. And it authorized poverty.
The Native Americans preserved aspects of their own culture to resist the Europeans. For example, language, religious traditions and clothing.
Native americans
Native Americans resisted the Indian Removal Act through various means, including legal challenges, peaceful protests, and armed resistance. Notably, the Cherokee Nation took their case to the U.S. Supreme Court in Worcester v. Georgia (1832), which affirmed their sovereignty, although the ruling was largely ignored by the government. Other tribes, like the Seminoles in Florida, engaged in armed conflict, leading to the Seminole Wars. Additionally, many Native Americans sought to adapt and negotiate with the U.S. government to protect their lands and way of life.
Before any Europeans came Native Americans already had their own belief systems and ways of life . Plus the way that the Eurpeans went about trying to assimilate them(killing, conquest, lies,torture, kidnapping..ect) was barbaric to say the least.
By adopting the contemporary culture of white people.
it forced native Americans to adopt Spanish ways as well as beliefs the priests also made it possible for some blending of the native Americans and Spanish cultures.
Native Americans got their foods by either hunting animals or growing their own food.
yes in some ways
William Penn was more respectful of the Native Americans in some ways.
William Penn was more respectful of the Native Americans in some ways.
William Penn was more respectful of the Native Americans in some ways.
William Penn was more respectful of the Native Americans in some ways.