At first it was to make deals and treaties with them, but they kept breaking those deals, and eventually they just wanted to move them to specific lands, away from where other settlers wanted to go so that their original lush and rich lands could be given to colonists.
To move them to specific lands
To move them to specific lands
To move them to specific lands
The termination policy, enacted in the 1950s by the U.S. government, aimed to assimilate Native Americans into American society by terminating the federal government's recognition of tribal sovereignty and ending its responsibilities for Native American reservation land. This policy led to the dissolution of tribal governments and the transfer of land to individual Native Americans, often resulting in loss of communal resources and identity. The intent was to integrate Native Americans into mainstream society, but it resulted in significant socioeconomic challenges for many tribes. Ultimately, the policy was largely viewed as a failure and was reversed in the following decades.
You are asking the wrong question. It should be how did American policy affect Native Americans.
To move them to specific lands
to move them to specific lands
to move them to specific lands
to move them to specific lands
To move them to specific lands
To move them to specific lands
To move them to specific lands
to move them to specific lands
The termination policy meant that state governments would become responsible for overseeing Native American reservation land.
To move them to specific lands
The government's policy of assimilation of the Native Americans was a failure because the government wanted to eliminate them. The government wanted the Native Americans to remain powerless.
state goverments