In 1890, hundreds of Lakota decided to stop fighting. Although they surrendered they were killed by US soldiers st Wounded Knee, South Dakota. This was the last armed resistance to US rule.
The Battle of Wounded Knee was the last armed American Indian resistance to U.S. rule.
the wounded knee
That would have been the Wounded Knee Siege in 1973 where Lakota and other tribes joined with the American Indian Movement made a final stand for Native Rights. You probably were referring to the First wounded knee Massacre, but that was not an armed resistance. That was cold blooded murder of old men, women and children.
Trail of Tears
The Wounded Knee Massacre of December 29, 1890 ended the Ghost Dance movement. It also ended organized resistance by Native Americans.
Little Big Horn. After the battle and the newspaper accounts of the battle people were upset and wanted the Native Americans to be punished. This was a big event for the late 1800's and the Union army was tasked with a "final solution" to the Native American problem.
The Freedonian Rebelion
The Wounded Knee Massacre was significant because it marked the end of armed resistance by Native Americans against the U.S. government. It resulted in the deaths of at least 150 Native Americans, including women and children, and was seen as a brutal and tragic event. It also highlighted the ongoing injustices and mistreatment faced by Native Americans throughout history.
Little Big Horn was the last major resistance to the loss of Native American lands. The consequences of that battle echo down to today. The soldiers who died there were regarded as heroes and newspapers of the time listed their names on the front pages. The national response of the event was very similar to the response about the Alamo and 9-11. There was a cry to solve " the Indian problem " once and for all. Red Cloud and other chiefs were arrested and hunted down.
Consider the Mound builders or other Native American history.
It was not a specific event. Resistance appeared where there was oppression.
The Spanish-American war took place approximately half a century before the Cuban revolution, so do not combine these two events.