Settling the West: Guided Reading: Lesson 3 Native Americans
Guided Reading Activity
Settling the West, 1865–1890
Lesson 3: Native Americans
Review Questions: Using Headings and Subheadings DIRECTIONS: Locate each heading below in your textbook. Then use the information under the correct heading and subheading to help you write each answer.
1. Nomads are people who roam great distances rather than living in permanent communities.
2. The main source of food of the Plains Indians was buffalo.
3. The Sioux agreed to live on reservations in exchange for annuities, annual payments from the government.
4. The Lakota were a nomadic Sioux tribe that fought hard to protect their hunting grounds from both other tribes and settlers from the East.
5. The U.S. Army was defeated in Fetterman’s Massacre in 1866 and abandoned its posts along the Bozeman trail in 1868.
6. Sand Creek was in Colorado, near Fort Lyon, and it was the location of the Sand Creek Massacre, in which a group of Cheyenne who had come to negotiate were attacked and slaughtered by the Colorado volunteers.
7. The Indian Peace Commission failed because their plans relied on pressuring Native Americans into agreements and because the reservation system resulted in poverty and corruption.
8. Reservations were intended to separate Native American tribes from one another and encourage them to assimilate into the dominant culture.
9. The Battle of the Little Bighorn occurred in 1876 and resulted in the overwhelming defeat of the U.S. Seventh Cavalry by Native Americans.
10. George A. Custer was the commander of the U.S. Seventh Cavalry at the Battle of the Little Bighorn.
11. Chief Joseph spoke those words.
12. The Lakota Ghost Dancers and their families died in battle with the U.S. government at Wounded Knee Creek.
13. The Dawes Act gave Native Americans a lot of land and citizenship if they lived on them for 25 years.
14. The Dakota Sioux rebelled out of frustration from being starved and impoverished, while the Lakota Sioux were overrun by settlers looking for gold. The Sand Creek Massacre involved failed negotiations. Most of the uprisings boiled down to Native Americans and settlers competing for the same land and resources.