The process used by Europeans to colonize America, like many other colonial projects, is left up to the scrutiny of later historical analysis. During which, many located the striking impact the Colonials had upon that of the innocent Native American Tribes. John Axtell, a historian on European and Native encounters writes in his piece Natives and Newcomers, “While Natives shared certain characteristics, with the rest of mankind known to Europe, their cultures were so strange, so numerous, and so diverse that Invaders found it hard to predict their behavior.” In addition colonizers in America found themselves wanting to control more and more land, pressing back the boundaries they had set forth for the Indians. This was of course, in order …show more content…
Being so, Puritans and many other European pioneers sought to “civilize” the Natives. Violence could of course be a simple tactic, but it did not meet with many Christian tenants. Instead, the first charters in America planned to “save” Natives by means of missionaries and other forms of Christianization. In doing so, Europeans hoped to relinquish Native Americans of their own culture, and indoctrinate them with the teachings of Christianity. From there, missionaries and colonizers alike hoped to completely alter Native American life, thus rendering more helpful members of a growing European society. However, at the same time, colonizers also applied more brute forms of persuasion, violence. King Philip’s war, the Pequot war, the second Indian war and many others exemplify the tensions between newcomers and Native Americans. So why then, did any Natives accept the Christian doctrine? Colonist attempts were cold, calculated attempts to indoctrinate a new way of life. Those attempts would destroy what little cultural stronghold Indians had left, leaving a people to suffer in tragedy, grabbing hold of any belief that could bring …show more content…
It depicts a Native American posing on a small island. He is portrayed with a bow in one hand, an arrow in another, undergarments made of leaves, and a speech bubble reading, “come help us.” The drawing shows the native raising his arms, almost in a confusion. Although equipped with weapons, the illustration labels him as helpless, holding them in uncertainty. From the image, one can surmises that the newcomers felt it their duty to convert Indians. Yet, one may also surmise that the image was merely a ploy. The new charters in America were an expensive investment. One must pay for the supplies, ship, and food to reach the new world. To receive the sponsorship, it would be quite useful to spin the investment into a call to missions, promising to save all the “savages.” Yet, the mission failed miserably. The incoming Europeans could not rid themselves of prejudice or need for land, which would later overcome intentions to save the original
As all authors are undeniably guilty of, James Axtell has a bias, and not one shamefully swept underneath the rug. The enlightening article Axtell has published remains not only as informational; it stands convicting in a sense. Unfortunately, the reader may find themselves lumped into the assemblage of Americans that regard the Native Americans as “pathetic footnotes to the main course of American History” (Axtell 981). Establishing his thesis, Axtell offers plentiful examples of how Native Americans contributed to Colonial America,
During westward expansion, the Native Americans got kicked to the side. The settlers coming west often saw the Indians as a threat to them and their families. However, this was not the main reason the Indians were pushed aside. The settlers saw the Indians had fertile land and wanted it for themselves. The Indians were the opposite of what the settlers thought they were. The Indians often helped the people moving west across the plains; giving them food, supplies, and acting as guides. However, the U.S. Government did not see this side of the Indians, instead they forced the Indians onto reservations. During the time of the expansion of the United States to the present, the Native Americans went through many things so that the United States could expand; they were pushed onto reservations, and forced to give up their culture through the Ideas of Manifest Destiny and Social Darwinism.
American history frequently centers on the issues of ethnic diversity and resource allocation. In the contemporary, we begin to see the experiences of the Native inhabitants of the Americas in contrast to European settlers and colonizers, is a prime example of this process in motion. When European settlers first arrived to the New World in the 15th century, firstly the Spanish, they brought with them a material cultural based upon an economic standard of resource exploitation, which in a sense was hostile to most of the Native peoples of the Americas. For instance, as Blackhawk notes that, Europeans built permanent settlements consisting of immovable structures, whereas many of the Great Basin peoples were semi-migratory in nature. Additionally, as Europeans claimed possession over the land, its resources, and began a process of territorial delimitation, Native peoples whose lives
In the first Chapter of Occupied America by Acuna we get an introduction and learn about the evolution of Mesoamerica and the people who lived there before other began to discover what was already there. In this chapter we also get to learn about the Native Americas who lived in the settled areas that were later conquered and colonized by the Spanish Conquistadors. Learning about these different tribes and cultures that coexisted with one another gives the reader a new perspective on the colonization showing the true ways in which this hurt the tribe and culture. One of the common misconceptions about the Native Americans and Indian tribes were that they were uneducated, improper savages that needed saving however when expressed in our history books they fail to mention
Spain, England, and France led the colonization of the Americas having distinct missions, and using different approach. By the mid 1960’s, all these great nations were in a race to establish American colonies. Like in every expedition, the primary purposes were to gain wealth and riches, which was the main reasoning behind all of the colonization’s. On their way to building these settlements, the colonials encountered the Native Americans and had to deal with them in very different ways.
The appearance of Europeans in the Western Hemisphere created a major change in the Native Americans’ lives. We know this because, “As historian James Merrel has described, the invaders created a “new world” for Native Americans…” (2). We can tell that their lives had changed because before they came, they didn’t have to worry about giving their land away or other people taking it. The invasion caused the Native Americans to suffer a lot because they couldn’t live like how they did before the Europeans came. They had to try their best to
The Europeans settlement had a vast impact on the Native Americans. When the Europeans arrived in the new world they were disappointed in what they had found. The most significant changes were the Europeans domination of large plots of land called “manors”. The controlled the system that was called feudalism, this is where the lords were given control over land, vassals and who ever inhibited the land. These laborers were servants called Serfs, who were protected by the vassals.
American western expansion made the conflict with Native Americans practically inevitable. Henry Clay even went as far as stating that their complete “disappearance from the human family would be no great loss to the world”. The westward movement and territorial expansion from the Louisiana Purchase created a devastating loss to the indigenous peoples. The settlers were ignorant and mistreated the natives and their entire culture. It was assumed by the settlers that any land they may stumble upon that seemed “empty” or “unsettled” by their own colonized standards was up for the taking and now theirs to have. They forced their religious beliefs
In the early 1800’s, The United States and Spain had continuously argued with the Native people. The Louisiana Territory was purchased from France in the year 1803, Americans continued to push farther west for fertile land that could be used for farming. Due to overcrowding of eastern cities like New York City and Boston many settlers moved out west for a new start. It allowed for colonists to spread out and own untouched fertile land. When white settlers arrived they had realized that most of the land acquired from the territory was occupied by Native Americans for thousands of years. For decades Americans had thought that the land west of the Appalachian Mountains were unoccupied, but they were wrong. There were many tribes that had occupied this land. This included tribes like, The Choctaw, Cherokee, and The Chickasaw. In a sense, Americans had violent outbreaks with the Natives the minute the colonists’ had arrived in the United State. As the colonists’ tried to establish complete dominance and superiority over the Indians, ongoing heated debates over land ownership, and demanding requests to satisfy greed made forceful attacks between the groups unavoidable.
Imagine a person bought something that the person valued. The person was the owner of the product and took good care of it.Then, all of a sudden, a stranger comes and takes that product and declares it “discovered”. Now since the stranger “discovered” it, the product now has to be shared among them. This is similar to what happened to Native Americans in North America. Native Americans owned and lived in North America for several thousand years. Then, all of a sudden, European explorers came to North America and claimed the land “discovered”. Europeans started moving into the land and later, started sharing the land. Encounters between Europeans and Native Americans in the colonial era led to the exchange of diseases with Native Americans,
Native American’s greeted the new colonists in a friendly, welcoming manner from the start. The new colonists considered this a sign of weakness, stating how easy it would be to dominate the native people. When Columbus arrived, there were 12-15 million Native Americans in the Americas, in 1890 there was under 250,000, with 98% of the population gone. With the belief in Manifest Destiny, the colonists forced the Native American’s off their own land, farther and farther from where they originated from, and eventually onto reservations, removing them from their way of life and their culture. During the transition from their homeland to reservations, many of the Native American’s died due to disease, cold, hunger, and the hardships of travel. Along with the annexation, the colonists demanded assimilation.
Whether by means of seizures or monetary acquisition, colonists procured the lands of Native Americans, which furthered their demise. With the European arrival at Jamestown, colonists simply established a settlement on Indian land without giving them any consideration. Over time, as colonists’ population
Before Europeans ever ventured to North America, the land had been populated by Native American nations that had their own distinct cultures and social structures. Native Americans had trade routes and established complex relationships between tribes. They were not merely heathens waiting to be civilized by the Europeans. Yet, Europeans would use those justifications to lay claim on their land.
When thousands of new and strange people came pouring in from on boats, Native Americans thought little of it. Bringing in foreign diseases, destructive animals, and powerful weapons was only the beginning of Native American suffering. Even as immigrants were strongly disturbing their way of life, they helped the strangers survive through freezing winters and famine. As the invaders prospered, they began moving in all directions, conquering land as they travelled. All throughout this wide expansion, skirmishes between the settlers and the Native Americans began to become more and more evident. Fighting back against the immigrants was pointless and it only left the Native Americans with lost people as well as lost land. Settlers had more firepower, more of everything that was all but unknown to the Native Americans at the time. As the settlers pushed, the Native Americans had nothing else to but move one step ahead of the permanent tourists. Finally, once the new residents of almost all of North America were happy, they began to, which can’t be said better in any other words, “feel
Most colonists that came in the early 1600’s were Christians, a religion that has very specific rules and rigid regulations that must be followed to be a “saved” person destined for a paradisiacal after life. Within these restrictions were the directions to “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mark 16:15). It seems clear that from the first the Christian religion was telling the colonists to “help” the natives by making them conform to the culture of the colonists and destroying their own. This was always done with a sense of Native American natural inferiority. In most cases, the Native Americans were not told the entire nature of their conversion. A Jesuit described the tactics used in converting Native Americans, “The outward splendor with which we endeavor to surround the Ceremonies of the Church…with a magnificence surpassing anything that the eyes of our savages have ever beheld – all these things produce an impression on their minds” (Le pays reneverse by denys delage 168). For those truly religious souls, coming to the New World meant a chance to bring salvation and Christianity to new