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Mitaku Oyasin ![]() Below you will find a list of various Web sites which may be of interest to students of History. We are slowly adding URLs. Please, bear with us. Native American History and Culture Please note: Recently the creator of the American West webpages, with their links to Native American resources, died. A notice has been posted that the pages will not be updated for the forseeable future. We have tried to bring you some of the same links on this page, so that work to provide information will not be lost. We have made some visual changes and reformatted much of the page, but the information should be pretty much intact. We have coded the information so that it is in a different form, lest anyone think that we are trying to rip-off someone else's work. (WDB) LINKS TO NATIVE AMERICAN WEB-SITESOrganizations and Government SourcesLegal resources & library - Press releases - Treaties info. - Searches. Names, addresses, email, URL (when available) to Tribes, Leaders & ReservationsStart here! Searches - Departments & Agencies - Committees - Representatives - Documents - Speaches and more...Enter your zip-code and find your representative. Address, phone and email info will pop up for quick communication! Just click on the email address and you're ready to send your repr. a message! List of email addresses and web-sites to Congressional repr. in other districts (including your own). Use Zip-Search for easy access. EducationIndian Resource Development (IRD) helps Native American students build an awareness of education in agriculture, business, engineering, math, and other science-related fields through summer enrichment programs and its annual science fair. IRD also encourages students to obtain baccalaureate and post-baccalaureate degrees where they will then be able to contribute to the development and management of tribal and state resources, government, and the private sector. IRD is a statewide non-profit program headquartered at NMSU and administrated by the College of Agriculture and Home Economics. General Native American ResourcesLinks to Organizations, Schools and Scholarships, Law programs, Environment, Studies and Media This site links to 170 (!) Native American oriented web-sites. Enjoy! Government - Art & Culture - Academic - Organizations & Networks Native American - Scientific - Historical - Environment - Art & Humanities - General The "information superhighway" running through Indian Country This is a must to see! You start at a large U.S. map, clickable down to smaller regions, then ending up with an actual journey to Native American's landscapes with a lot of colorful pictures (by using "tribe finder")! Another wonderful journey through Indian land with beautiful color pictures. Clickable map providing info on tribes. Also, Native American Affairs Forum Discussion Group. Native American Links Galore! Also, interesting section on Tribal Languages and Indian contributions of cultivated plants. A site created by IWMC (International Webmasters of California) with a rich flora of links. Excellent job by Paula Giese. Very impressive site with detailed maps covering a variety of subjects of interest to the Native American. Excellent material for schools (printouts can be used in the classroom). Essays on Native American Life and Relations with Non-Natives 1600 - 1850 by Longtrail Snowbird. "Buffalo as a Food Source" and other essays related to Trappers, Traders and the Fur Trade. Also, there is a Poetry and Stories menu by Longtrail Snowbird and Nunya Ageya. Dateline starting 1774. Fur trade and more. Native American Nations HomepagesThis is perhaps the most comprehensive information on Indian Tribes available at one source. Excellent job by Lisa Mitten at the University of Pittsburgh. We designed this web-page for the Navajo Nation. The Navajo Office of Tourism in Window Rock, AZ., submitted the content. LEADERS OF THE PASTSITTING BULL (TATANKA YOTANKA) 1834 - 1890.Leader of the Sioux tribe (Hunkpapa), born in the region of Grand River in present-day South Dakota. Under his leadership, the Sioux resisted efforts of the U.S. government to annex their lands and force them to settle on reservations... GERONIMO (GOYATHLAY) 1829 - 1909Leader of the Chiricahua tribe of North American Apache Indians, born in present-day Clifton, Arizona. After his wife, children, and mother were killed by Mexicans in 1858, he participated in a number of raids against Mexican and American settlers, but eventuallysettled on a reservation. Later in life he adopted Christianity and took part in the inaugural procession of President. CRAZY HORSE (TASHUNCAHUITCO) 1849 - 1877.Leader of the Oglala tribe of the Sioux, known for his part in the Sioux uprising of 1875 - 1877. In 1875 he joined forces with Sitting Bull. Both leaders defeated a column of the 7th Cavalry commanded by Col. George A. Custer in the Battle of the Little Bighorn. OTHERSA list prepared by Glenn Welker. "The Earth does not belong to man; man belongs to the Earth" - Article February 1996 in the Wild West Magazine. Link to The History Net. "One Real American", a lifelong friend and trusted aide of Ulysses S. Grant. Link to The History Net. She was the daughter of a Shoshone Chief and she was an indispensible part of the Lewis & Clark expedition the year 1804. More on Sacagawea (By Julia White). He was a religious leader that organized and led the most successful Indian uprising in the history of the American West. The father of the "Ghost Dance". He was a friend of the Indians. Otherwise, Sitting Bull would not have performed with him in hisWild West Show. Near the end of his life he wrote "All my interests are still with the west - the Modern West". He used his fame and public attention as a soapbox for western causes, for the rights of Indians and women, and for conservation. As early as 1879 he cautioned the government to "never make a single promise to the Indians that is not fulfilled". All frontier scouts respected the Indian, he said. "Every Indian outbreak that I have ever known has resulted from broken promises and broken treaties by the government." America was the Indian's heritage, and the Indian had only fought for what was his. He was also critical of the hide-hunters of the 1870s and 1880s for slaughtering the buffalo "cruelly, recklessly". FRIENDS OF THE INDIANS...(Biographies presented by THE WEST TV Series)A pioneer Ethnologist and friend of the Zuni Pueblo Indians, one of the most important white observers of Native American culture in the 19th century. A pioneer Ethnologist and a leader in the movement to bring Native Americans into the mainstream of white society. IMAGES...This picture will take some time to upload (JPEG image 1890 x 400 pixels). Unspecified site, presumably in California. Picture link to NARA. Text: "H.A. Brooks, June 1916. The best Indians I have ever (indecipherable) in pictures." This is a 3D reconstruction of a Great Kiva (a ceremonial hall), found in many prehistoric Anasazi communities in S.W. USA. The images show the Chetro Ketl Great Kiva in Chaco Canyon, located in N.W. New Mexico. Best to view with a large monitor and a late version browser. A series of water colors of the foremost 19th century pictorial historian of the American Indian. American History Feature. Link to The History Net. California State University, Long Beach - Contributed by Professor Troy Johnson. Images arranged chronologically from prehistory to 1990. MOVIES...This is a list of, at present, 43 movies (Hollywood-style) that to various extent presents Native Americans, some films provides a respectful image of the Native American, some less so. Quality varies, but I have tried to put the best movies first. Since I have not seen all of them, I cannot guarantee a list in quality order. Each film is connected to a database that provides a lot of detailed information on each film, such as actors, directors, etc. Sometimes, a plot summary is provided. When available, I am using another database (where indicated - "Filmstory Database") with a longer description of the plot. Suggestions to include other films are welcome.Kevin Kostner. Won Oscar for Best Picture. 4-stars (maximum) acc. to Leonard Maltin's Annual Movie and Video Guide. PLOT Summary. Dustin Hoffman. 4-stars (maximum) acc. to Leonard Maltin's Annual Movie and Video Guide. PLOT Summary. 3 1/2-stars by Leonard Maltin. PLOT Summary. 3-stars by Leonard Maltin. 3-stars by Leonard Maltin. Monument Valley has been used for many western movies. The movies listed below were partially filmed at Navajo Nation's Monument Valley. These films do also appear on The Navajo Nation Main Home Page, as follows: GHOSTS FROM THE PAST...The Indian Removal Act of 1830 - The Trail of Tears Note: The Indian Removal Act empowered by president Andrew Jackson allowed the U.S. Government to move eastern Indians west of the Mississippi, mainly Cherokees. The purpose was to put pressure off arising conflicts since the flawed thinking was that the white settlements would never penetrate that part of the continent. The project was ill-conceived and culturally chauvinistic. Even the staunchest defenders of this act were admitting defeat at the time. In the spring and summer of 1838, more than 15,000 Cherokee were removed by the U.S. Army from their ancestral homelands in North Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee and Alabama. They were held in concentration camps through the summer and fall then forced to travel nearly 1,000 miles during an extremely harsh winter to Indian Territory in Oklahoma. It is estimated that almost 4,000 died of hunger, dysentery, exposure and other causes during the trek. Members of the tribe call the forced evacuation of their homelands and the horrendous journey "Nunahi-Duna-Dlo-Hilu-I", which translates to "Trail Where They Cried". The infamous removal concept was later refined into the reservation idea. Wounded Knee (1890) Note: Wounded Knee Creek, Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, South Dakota December 29, 1890. For the Plains Indians this was the last act of defiance ending in a massacre carried out by Colonel James Forsyth's Seventh Cavalry. There would be no more battles but this 100+ years old memory is still a wound in many hearts. Perhaps the most famous Indian-fighting general in the U.S. Army at the time, General Nelson A. Miles, accused Forsyth of "blind stupidity or criminal indifference" and relieved him of command. General Miles called this "a useless slaughter of Indian women and children". But the war department, determined to portray this finalconfrontation of the Indian wars in a heroic light, stopped any further investigation of the incident. Link to The History Net, original article appeared in Wild West Magazine, June 96 issue. The Army's greatest Indian fighter, but he may have contributed to Custer's defeat at Little Bighorn. However, during his last years he campaigned vigorously on behalf of the Lakota Indians. Cheif Red Cloud once said: "Crook never lied to us. His words gave people hope". Officer in charge of the only unit to survive the battle of the Little Bighorn.
Infantry Commander with General Custer at the battle of Little Bighorn and commander at other battles. Your questions and suggestions are welcome. Please include your e-mail address so that we can contact you directly. |