4. They were forced to live on reservations.
They were forced to live on reservations.
Yes they were forced to live on reservations. The Americans still made them move even after that.
to make room for expanding white settlement in the eastern U.S.
Native Americans were forced to learn English. Their children were taken away from their parents and sent to boarding schools so the children did not have a chance to learn culture from their parents. Also many Native Americans were forced to move to reservations which had different plants, animals and even climate from what they were used to.
The US forced Native Americans to live on reservations.
Many groups of Native Americans were forced to leave their ancestral lands and were moved to reservations in the 1800's.
The Indian Removal Act forced the Native Americans to move on to reservations, while their children were taken and forced to abandon their religion, culture, and language.
Most Native Americans were practically forced to relocate to reservations.
When the Europeans arrived, thousands of Native Americans died of smallpox. Not only that, but Europeans slaughtered thousands of Natives under the order of President Andrew Jackson. The surviving Native Americans were forced on to reservations.
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
They forced to moved west or north or to live on reservations
There was not a "king" that banished Native Americans. Native Americans were not ever "banished," because though they were often forced on to reservations by treaties with the U.S. government. Presidents of the United States did this.
They were forced to move west or north or to live on reservations
They were forced to move west or north or to live on reservations