The United States.
Most Native Americans responded to the restrictions placed on them by the United States government through revolting. This action was the start of the Indian War in the 1800s.
In the Organizations to show their levels, which was the practice of Native Americans
They ignored the restrictions.
The Native Americans were angered by what the US government was doing and they began to fight back and rebel against them.
Ohio River valley
Native Americans often placed the thunderbird at the top of the totem pole because it symbolizes power, protection, and strength. As a revered figure in many Indigenous cultures, the thunderbird is believed to be a spiritual being that can control the weather and bring rain, essential for agriculture. Additionally, its placement at the top signifies its high status and connection to the heavens, serving as a guardian for the clan or family represented by the totem.
Death, for a simple answer. Native Americans learned very quickly that these crazy people from Europe placed value on a small lump of yellow metal (quoting John Locke) and that these crazy people would kill over it.
The policy of the Native Americans was one of genocide, and removal. The unwritten policy was a " good Indian, was a dead one" and everything was done to make sure that was true. Native Americans were removed from homelands, killed in raids on villages, given blankets with smallpox on them, starved, walked to death, hung, placed in camps and reservations, taken to schools away from families, and lied to.
The Appropriations Act of Congress
In 1876, many Native Americans were forcibly relocated to reservations as part of U.S. government policies aimed at controlling their movements and assimilating them into American society. The most notable event of that year was the Battle of the Little Bighorn, where Native American forces, led by leaders such as Sitting Bull and Crazy Horse, defeated the U.S. Army. This conflict highlighted the ongoing struggle between Native Americans and the U.S. government over land and sovereignty. Despite their victories, Native Americans continued to face increasing pressure to surrender their lands and way of life.
Originally, the Kickapoo, a tribe of Native Americans, lived in areas of Michigan and Ohio. They ceded their lands and were placed in reservation in Kansas and Oklahoma by the American government.
The Indians suffered the loss of civil rights and were placed on reservations. The adaptation to change was very hard for the Native Americans.