The Disappearance of the Plains Indian culture

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The Disappearance of the Plains Indian culture ‘It was the lack of buffalo that killed off the Plains Indian culture in the 20th century’. In some respects this traditional historical statement is true; however, I believe that many views which revisionist historians believe also contributed greatly to the disappearance of the Plains Indian culture in the 20th century. The traditional historian’s view that the lack of buffalo did contribute severely to the Plains Indian culture is true, because their lives revolved around and depended on the buffalo. As source 2 shows the Indians used the buffalo for everything from tools and food storage to shoes and actual food, but then the white settlers came and because of conflict between the two races, the white settlers killed the buffalo so the Indians would starve and have no tools or weapons, or even energy and eventually starve to death or get killed in conflict. In the 1880’s the white settlers reduced 6,000,000 buffalo to just over a few thousand in an extremely short space of time which destroyed the Indians, and on top of that another 2,000 buffalo were killed during the building of the railways. Also as source 1 states, their spiritual culture was being affected as their ‘great factor’ was being wiped out. These factors contributed severely to the disappearance of the Indian culture during the 20th century. It is clear that the elimination of the buffalo by the white settlers did contribute massively to the disappearance of the Indian culture during the 20th century. However it seems that the Indians culture was also wiped out by the conflict between them and the white settlers. ... ... middle of paper ... ... diseases…measles, chicken pox, typhus, typhoid fever, dysentery, scarlet fever, and after 1832, cholera…were devastating to the American Indian. Lumped together, these diseases did not equal the havoc of smallpox in terms of number of deaths, realignment of tribal alliances, and subsequent changes in Plain Indian Culture. In 1837 a smallpox outbreak killed just over 4/5 of the Indian nation which changed the chances the Indians culture surviving into the next century. At first the 1837 smallpox outbreaks were initially confined to the Indian tribes that lived by or had come to trade at the upper Missouri River trading posts. The Mandan, Blackfeet, and the Assiniboine nations suffered the highest number of deaths. The 1837-40 smallpox outbreaks were said to have a ninety-eight percent death rate among those infected.

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