Similarities Between Colonists And Indians

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Cows, pigs, horses, deer, and dogs. Those are just a few examples of common livestock. When one pictures American colonial times, he likely sees great big plains with teepees and Indians, as well as small colonial villages full of English colonists. He probably pictures those animals roaming around, but he almost certainly does not realize the importance they played in the events that unfolded between the colonists and the Indians. Many people may not imagine that the colonists and the Indians had very much in common. Those people, however, are wrong. The colonists and the Indians had very much in common and were able cooperate with each other and live without conflict; for a while, at least. These similarities eventually gave way to rising tensions …show more content…

Because of this, problems arose due to the colonists’ animals trespassing on Indian land. The two argued over problems caused by the fast-growing livestock population, mainly due to loss of crops when the colonists’ livestock would destroy Indian crops. The expansion of English livestock also resulted in some Indians losing their homes. Many conflicts, such as the war between the Jamestown colonists and the Powhatans from 1609 to 1614, were either caused by livestock or involved livestock. In this instance, Indians targeted English livestock as a way of destroying their source of food. Livestock became so important in the colonial societies that “depredations against livestock came to be seen by both sides as acts of war, and their cessation a condition of peace” (Anderson, 178). Unfortunately, the short periods of peace would not last. As tensions continued to rise, colonists started deliberately forcing Indians out of their homes by moving their livestock in. The Indians continued to murder the colonists’ livestock in response, and the fighting continued until the Indians were finally forced from their home

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