Move them at all costs
They went from making a deal to forcing them off the land.
It didn't change. Washington was dead long before the Civil War so he had no knowledge of the war.
The federal government had passed an act that designated the entire Great Plains as one enormous reservation, or land set aside for Native American tribes.
The goal of the federal government's policy towards Native American Indians was to rid them of land wanted by the U.S. in order to proceed with territorial expansion. They wanted to relocate the Indians to reservations much smaller than where they were now. They started the Indian Removal Act in order to do so.
The Northwest Ordinance of 1787 stated the original policy of the U.S. federal government toward the Native Americans.
Because you touch yourself at night. c:
Jefferson's policy toward American Indians was not proactive. His policy was to let the settlers expand and take away more and more of the Native American's area. This would force the Native Americans to turn to farming.
how did the british officials change their policy toward the indians after the french and indian war
assimilation
By 1850 some 75,000 native americans lived on the plains. The u.s government promised to pay for any damages to indian lands.
he was helping.
the us government changed its policy toward Japananese Americans serving in the military by sucking all mens PEN13
In 1867 the federal government appointed the Indian Peace Commission to develop a policy toward Native Americans. The commission recommended moving the Native Americans to few large reservations. Moving them to reservations was not the new policy and the government then increased its effort in that way
hi
the us government changed its policy toward Japananese Americans serving in the military by sucking all mens PEN13
President Ulysses S. Grant's peace policy toward Native Americans followed the ideas of assimilation and reservation. He sought to assimilate Native Americans into mainstream American society by encouraging them to adopt a sedentary, agricultural lifestyle. Additionally, Grant supported the establishment of reservations as a means of isolating and controlling Native American populations.