indian wars of montana

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Indian Wars of Montana Indian Education for All Grade 5

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Indian Wars of Montana. Indian Education for All Grade 5. Battle of the Rosebud. One of the largest confrontations of the Montana Indian Wars 1876 Army trying to round up Sioux and Cheyenne tribes to place on the reservation. Battle of the Little Bighorn. Custer Has 1050 soldiers - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Indian Wars of Montana

Indian Wars of Montana

Indian Education for AllGrade 5

Page 2: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Rosebud One of the largest confrontations of the

Montana Indian Wars 1876

– Army trying to round up Sioux and Cheyenne tribes to place on the reservation

Page 3: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

– Custer Has 1050 soldiers Has 260 Crow and Shoshone scouts Is in Montana Territory in Rosebud Valley Scouts report a large concentration of

Lakota Sioux and Cheyenne tribes Crook led one of three columns of soldiers

Page 4: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Rosebud June 17, 1876

– Crazy Horse and Crook Have equal number of fighters Fight battle over uneven ground Separate into three skirmishes Brave deeds were witnessed on both sides

– Cheyenne girl saves her brother after his horse is shot out from under him

– Skirmishes last 6 hours Lakota and Cheyenne call off fight Battle has come to a standstill Crook’s army

– 10 killed; 21 wounded Indians suffer similar losses

Page 5: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Rosebud Crook withdraws to Goose Creek

– Near Sheridan, Wyoming– His troops are out of any further campaigns

for two months Different views of the battle

– Crook blamed for the defeat 8 days later of Custer because he didn’t route the Indians at Rosebud

– Crook felt victorious because Indians left battlefield

– Lakota and Sioux felt victorious because they defended their land

– Crow and Shoshone (scouts) felt victorious because they helped fight the Lakota and Cheyenne who were encroaching on their lands

Page 6: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

Known as “Custer’s Last Stand” 1874

– Discovery of gold in Black Hills– Prospectors entering Native American

Territory– Lakota Sioux – Chiefs Sitting Bull,

Crazy Horse and Gall Led assaults on

prospectors

Page 7: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

1875– U.S. tries and fails to acquire Black Hills

Territory– Indians refused to sell because they

considered it sacred ground

Page 8: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

1876– Army launches expedition against

Lakota and Cheyenne 1876

– Army plans to gather Sioux and Cheyenne tribes and force them onto reservations

– Custer joins the expedition– Commander is General Alfred Terry

Page 9: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

George A. Custer– Chief army officer in battle– One of the youngest general in U.S.

army– After Civil War was given the rank of

captain– 1866 Custer joins the 7th Calvary and

becomes a Lieutenant Colonel– Acquired fame as an Indian fighter in

the Southwest, Dakota and Montana territories

Page 10: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

Soldiers enter Montana Territory– Scouts see

Campfire smoke Signs of Indians encampments

Custer– Ignores orders from Terry– Decides to attack Indian encampment before

infantry and support arrive– June 25, 1876 spies Indian village 15 miles in

the distance on Little Bighorn River– Believes there are 1000 Indians

Scouts say signs point to much larger population of Indians in the village

Page 11: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

Custer– Feels his 647 men could easily defeat 1000

Indians (Actually Indian village has 2,500 to 5,000

people instead of 1000 as Custer thought) This village was the largest assembly of tribes

in Western history– Custer orders immediate attack on village

He splits his regiment into 3 columns:

– Captain Benteen– Major Reno– General Custer

Page 12: Indian Wars of Montana

Eyewitness Battle Account

ONE BULLMinneconjou Sioux, Nephew of Sitting Bull, Describing Reno's Charge on the Indian Village

"I was sitting in my teepee combing my hair....I saw a man named Fat Bear come running into camp and he said soldiers were coming on the other side of the river....We could hear lots of shooting. I went to [the] teepee of my uncle, Sitting Bull, and said I was going to take part in the battle."

Page 13: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

Captain Benteen– Ordered to search the valleys for Indians

Major Reno– Ordered to charge across the river and attack

the village General Custer

– Will advance to the higher ground to the right and attack the village from the rear

Page 14: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

Major Reno– Encountered bloody fighting in the

valley– Retreats across the river and up the

bluffs– Joins Captain Benteen’s men and take

up defensive positions– Benteen and Reno hold this position for

two days until General Terry arrives on June 27

Page 15: Indian Wars of Montana

Battle of the Little Bighorn

General Custer– Is 5 miles away attacking the village– Troops are completely wiped out by Chief

Crazy Horse and Chief Gall’s warriors– Not one of Custer’s men survived

U.S. Army retaliated swiftly– Lakota Sioux scattered– Crazy Horse capture

Murdered while in army custody

Page 16: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Five bands of Nez Perce begin 1700 mile

trek to try to reach Canada– Tribe hopes to have peaceful trip– Trying to avoid going to reservation

General Howard has orders to bring the Nez Perce Tribe to a reservation in Idaho

Nez Perce Tribe– Arrives in Big Hole Valley on August 7

Page 17: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877

Nez Perce– Chief Looking Glass

Is a trail chief for tribe Sets up camp using an old camp site Doesn’t place guards Feels safe

Page 18: Indian Wars of Montana

Eyewitness Account of the Battle

"We came to that place in the afternoon, towards evening. We stayed that night and next day. Evening came on again, and it was after sundown — not too late — lots of us children were playing. It was below the camp towards the creek that we ... boys played the stick or bone game. They were noisy, having lots of fun, and I was with them. We were only having a good time." White BirdNez Perce Child

Page 19: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Colonel Gibbon

– Is in charge of secondary army force– Has 163 men– Have orders to catch up to Nez Perce– Attacks Nez Perce camp

Shoot women and children along with warriors

60 to 90 people killed– Mostly women, children and old people

Page 20: Indian Wars of Montana

Eyewitness Account of Battle

"The women, all scared when the soldiers charged the camp, ran into the water, the brush. Any place where they could hide themselves and children. Many were killed as they ran. They had no guns. Those two brave women must have run for shelter, but seeing so many women and children falling, got guns, maybe from dead soldiers, and helped drive the enemies from the camp." Red WolfNez Perce Warrior

Page 21: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Nez Perce Indians

– Divide tribe into 3 bandsOne band withdraw to help Chief

JosephOne band stays to care for injured

and bury the deadOne band keeps battle going with

soldiers so tribe members can go south

Page 22: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Nez Perce

– Indians continue to fight until August 10– Remaining warriors slip away to rejoin

the main part of tribe– September 30

Near Bear Paw Mountains of Montana 40 miles south of Canadian border Nez Perce are surprised by Colonel Miles Battle lasts five days Tribe hungry and cold

Page 23: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Four major chiefs of the tribe are killed

including Looking Glass– Looking Glass

• Is Chief Joseph’s brother• Is killed in this battle

Tribe has no reserve food supply of food Old people are dying of cold and hunger

Page 24: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Chief Joseph surrenders Nez Perce tribe is sent to Oklahoma

Page 25: Indian Wars of Montana

Nez Perce War of 1877 Chief Joseph’s Surrender Speech

“I am tired of fighting. Our chiefs are killed…..The old men are all

dead. He who led the young men is dead. It is cold and we have no blankets. The little children are freezing to death. My people—some of them have run away to the

hills and have no blankets and no food. No one knows where they are—perhaps

freezing to death. I want to have time to look for my children and

see how many of them I can find. Maybe I shall find them among the dead. Hear me, my chiefs, my heart is sick and sad…From where the sun now stands I will fight no

more forever.”

Page 26: Indian Wars of Montana

Directions for Jeopardy Game The following slide is a review of facts done in a Jeopardy

game format. Divide the class into teams.

– The teams will take turns selecting a question The first team contestant will pick a category and an amount

– Make sure to click in the center of the button when you select.

The question appears– When you want to check the answer, select anywhere on

the screen.– Push the home button to get another question.

Keep track of the team scores

Page 27: Indian Wars of Montana

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Battle of the Rosebud

Battle of the Little

Bighorn

Nez Perce Battle of

1877

Battles and their

Leaders

Battles and their

Outcomes