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       #Post#: 5638--------------------------------------------------
       The history of US National Parks
       By: 90sRetroFan Date: April 17, 2021, 11:56 pm
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  HTML https://archive.is/chDbS
       [quote]The Mariposa Battalion had come to Yosemite to kill
       Indians. Yosemite’s Miwok tribes, like many of California’s
       Native peoples, were obstructing a frenzy of extraction brought
       on by the Gold Rush. And whatever Bunnell’s fine sentiments
       about nature, he made his contempt for these “overgrown, vicious
       children” plain
       ...
       When the roughly 200 men of the Mariposa Battalion marched into
       Yosemite, armed with rifles, they did not find the Miwok eager
       for battle. While the Miwok hid, the militiamen sought to starve
       them into submission by burning their food stores, souring the
       valley’s air with the smell of scorched acorns. On one
       particularly bloody day, some of the men came upon an inhabited
       village outside the valley, surprising the Miwok there. They
       used embers from the tribe’s own campfires to set the wigwams
       aflame and shot at the villagers indiscriminately as they fled,
       murdering 23 of them. By the time the militia’s campaign ended,
       many of the Miwok who survived had been driven from Yosemite,
       their homeland for millennia, and forced onto reservations.
       Thirty-nine years later, Yosemite became the fifth national
       park.
       ...
       Many of the landscapes that became national parks had been
       shaped by Native peoples for millennia. Forests on the Eastern
       Seaboard looked plentiful to white settlers because American
       Indians had strategically burned them to increase the amount of
       forage for moose and deer and woodland caribou. Yosemite
       Valley’s sublime landscape was likewise tended by Native
       peoples; the acorns that fed the Miwok came from black oaks long
       cultivated by the tribe. The idea of a virgin American
       wilderness—an Eden untouched by humans and devoid of sin—is an
       illusion.
       The national parks are sometimes called “America’s best idea,”
       and there is much to recommend them. They are indeed awesome
       places, worthy of reverence and preservation, as Native
       Americans like me would be the first to tell you. But all of
       them were founded on land that was once ours, and many were
       created only after we were removed, forcibly, sometimes by an
       invading army and other times following a treaty we’d signed
       under duress. When describing the simultaneous creation of the
       parks and Native American reservations, the Oglala Lakota
       spiritual leader Black Elk noted darkly that the United States
       “made little islands for us and other little islands for the
       four-leggeds, and always these islands are becoming smaller.”
       Many of the negotiations that enabled the creation of these
       islands took place in English (to the disadvantage of the
       tribes), when the tribes faced annihilation or had been weakened
       by disease or starvation (to the disadvantage of the tribes), or
       with bad faith on the part of the government (to the
       disadvantage of the tribes). The treaties that resulted,
       according to the U.S. Constitution, are the “supreme Law of the
       Land.” Yet even despite their cruel terms, few were honored.
       Native American claims and rights were ignored or chipped away.
       ...
       When Yellowstone was established, the Plains Wars were raging
       all around the park’s borders. It was as though the government
       paused mid-murder to plant a tree in the victims’ backyard. The
       Dakota War had erupted 10 years earlier, just east of the Great
       Plains. By the time it was over, dozens of Dakota had been
       hanged, and more than 1,600 women, children, and elders had been
       sent to a concentration camp at Fort Snelling. Eventually, all
       of the treaties between the Eastern Dakota and the U.S.
       government were “abrogated and annulled.”
       In 1864, on the Plains’ opposite edge, at Sand Creek in Colorado
       Territory, Colonel John Chivington massacred and mutilated as
       many as 500 Native Americans. In 1868, just four years before
       the creation of Yellowstone, Native Americans, led by Red Cloud,
       fought the U.S. government to a standstill, then forced
       concessions from the Americans at the treaty table, though
       these, too, were eventually unmade.
       War came to Yellowstone itself in 1877. Chief Joseph’s band of
       Nez Perce had been shut out of their homeland in the Wallowa
       Valley and embarked on a 1,500-mile journey that would end just
       south of the Canadian border, where they would surrender to the
       U.S. Army. The Nez Perce did their best to avoid white people on
       their way. But they were attacked on the banks of the Big Hole
       River, in August 1877, by soldiers in Colonel John Gibbon’s
       command. Gibbon’s men approached the camp on foot at dawn,
       killing a man during their advance. Then they began firing into
       the tepees of the sleeping Nez Perce, killing men, women, and
       children. The Nez Perce counterattacked. Their warriors kept
       Gibbon’s soldiers pinned down while the others escaped. Although
       they defended themselves well, they lost at least 60 people.
       Reeling from these deaths, the Nez Perce passed into
       Yellowstone, where they ran into tourists from Radersburg,
       Montana, enjoying the “pleasuring-ground” created at the expense
       of Indians.
       ...
       America’s national parks comprise only a small fraction of the
       land stolen from Native Americans, but they loom large in the
       broader story of our dispossession. Most of the major national
       parks are in the western United States. So, too, are most Native
       American tribes, owing to the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which
       attempted to eject all tribes east of the Mississippi to what
       was then Indian Territory. The reservation period likewise
       began, for the most part, in the West, in the mid-19th century.
       Even after we were relegated to reservations, the betrayals
       continued. Beginning in 1887, the Dawes Act (also known as the
       General Allotment Act) split much of the reservations up into
       small parcels of land to be granted to individual Indians, while
       the “surplus” communal land was opened for white settlement. In
       blunt terms, Thomas Morgan, the commissioner of Indian affairs,
       said in 1890 that the goal of federal policy at the time was “to
       break up reservations, destroy tribal relations, settle Indians
       upon their own homesteads, incorporate them into the national
       life, and deal with them not as nations or tribes or bands, but
       as individual citizens.” This land grab bled at least another 90
       million acres away from the tribes—roughly equivalent to the 85
       million acres that comprise America’s 423 national-park sites.
       ...
       Not long after a harsh winter that killed as many as 600
       Blackfeet, the tribe signed away land that would become Glacier
       National Park. The deal was brokered by George Bird Grinnell,
       the naturalist founder of the Audubon Society of New York.
       Grinnell had joined George Armstrong Custer on his expedition
       into the Black Hills in 1874 in search of gold. The trip was in
       direct violation of the treaty guaranteeing that the Black Hills
       would remain in Native control. Grinnell was often called a
       “friend of the Indian,” but he once wrote that Natives have “the
       mind of a child in the body of an adult.” In 1911, a year after
       Congress approved the creation of Glacier, Montana ceded
       jurisdiction of the park to the U.S. government.
       So many of the parks owe their existence to heists like these.
       Apostle Islands National Lakeshore, in Wisconsin, was created
       out of Ojibwe homelands; the Havasupai lost much of their land
       when Grand Canyon National Park was established; the creation of
       Olympic National Park, in Washington, prevented Quinault tribal
       members from exercising their treaty rights within its
       boundaries; and Everglades National Park was created on Seminole
       land that the tribe depended on for food. The list goes on.
       ...
       Roosevelt’s attitude toward Indians is manifest in his treatment
       of the Apache leader Geronimo. Born in 1829, Geronimo lived the
       first three decades of his life in the peace and security of his
       Apache homelands, in what is now New Mexico and Arizona. In the
       second half of the 19th century, he rose to international fame
       for fighting the American and Mexican governments in an attempt
       to preserve his tribe’s piece of the Southwest.
       ...
       Geronimo was shipped east and spent the rest of his life in
       captivity, and his tribe’s land was whittled away. Around the
       same time, Native children were also being shipped away from
       their homelands, to government-sponsored boarding
       schools—removed from their families and their culture so as to
       mainstream them. Attendance was sometimes mandated by law and
       sometimes coerced, but it was rarely strictly voluntary. For
       speaking in their own language, the children were sometimes
       beaten or had soap put in their mouths. Of the 112 Apache
       children from Geronimo’s band sent to the Carlisle Indian
       Industrial School, in Pennsylvania, 36 died—most of them likely
       from tuberculosis—and were buried there.
       For his part, Geronimo did get out (under guard) once in a
       while, including a stint in 1904 as part of the “Apache Village”
       at the St. Louis World’s Fair, where he was made to play the
       role of the savage. In 1905, he and other Native leaders were
       asked to be part of Roosevelt’s inaugural parade.
       ...
       Geronimo met with Roosevelt afterward. “Take the ropes from our
       hands,” he begged, in a desperate appeal to be allowed to
       return, along with other Apache prisoners, to his homeland.
       Roosevelt declined, telling him, “You killed many of my people;
       you burned villages.” Geronimo began to gesture and yell but was
       cut off. Four years later, he died in captivity at Fort Sill,
       Oklahoma.
       In 1903, Roosevelt had let himself be drawn back west. In April
       of that year he embarked on a 14,000-mile train journey that
       took him through 24 states and territories in nine weeks. He
       traveled to Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, and California, where
       he enjoyed a three-night camping trip with John Muir.
       Along the way, Roosevelt gave speeches—at the Grand Canyon; at
       Yellowstone, where he laid the cornerstone for the Roosevelt
       Arch; near some redwoods in Santa Cruz. He said much about the
       majesty of nature. Regarding the Grand Canyon: “I want to ask
       you to do one thing in connection with it in your own interest
       and in the interest of the country—to keep this great wonder of
       nature as it now is … I hope you will not have a building of any
       kind, not a summer cottage, a hotel or anything else, to mar the
       wonderful grandeur, the sublimity, the great loneliness and
       beauty of the canyon.” And Yellowstone: “The Yellowstone Park is
       something absolutely unique in the world, so far as I know … The
       scheme of its preservation is noteworthy in its essential
       democracy … This Park was created, and is now administered, for
       the benefit and enjoyment of the people.”[/quote]
       NEVER FORGIVE. NEVER FORGET.
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