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Eick, Gretchen Cassel – Great Plains Quarterly, 2008
This article lays out U.S. Indian policy in the Great Plains during the twenty-five years after the Civil War by examining chronologically specific "players" that shaped and reshaped that policy: the U.S. Army, the President and Interior Department, Congress, religious organizations, whites in the Indian reform movement, settlers surging…
Descriptors: Federal Indian Relationship, United States History, American Indian History, Land Settlement
Ritterbush, Lauren W. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2002
Popular images of the Great Plains frequently portray horse-mounted Indians engaged in dramatic bison hunts. The importance of these hunts is emphasized by the oft-mentioned dependence of the Plains Indians on bison. This animal served as a source of not only food but also materials for shelter, clothing, containers, and many other necessities of…
Descriptors: American Indians, Wildlife, American Indian History, United States History
Clough, Josh – Great Plains Quarterly, 2005
Nebraska's Indian population exploded in the summer of 1898, but it was not due to natural increase. More than 500 Indians representing twenty-three tribes came to Omaha as part of the United States Indian Bureau's exhibit at the Trans-Mississippi Exposition. During their three-month stay at the world's fair, Indians engaged in dancing, feasting,…
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Tribes, American Indians, American Indian Education
Ritter, Beth R. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2002
The Ponca Tribe of Nebraska, terminated in 1965 and restored to federally recognized status in 1990, is exploring the limits of self-governance, economic development opportunities, and cultural revitalization initiatives. The Ponca recognize they have experienced profound cultural loss over the past three centuries, yet the definition of what it…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Community Development, Cultural Maintenance, Tribes