Monday, October 21, 2013

Issues Regarding Tribal Sovereignty Over the Past Five Hundred Years



After researching about the Native Americans over the past couple of weeks, I was plagued with several questions. Did the Native Americans ever exercise the power of sovereignty before the federal government recognized their tribal sovereignty in the 1900’s? How did the colonists demonstrate that they didn’t accept the idea of tribal sovereignty? Were there any European leaders that recognized the Native Americans as being sovereign nations? Did the Native Americans face injustice even in the late 1900’s?
With these questions in mind, I decided to search the website American Indian Issues: an Introductory and Curricular Guide for Educators. I found this site to be extremely fascinating and informative. I was introduced to the concept of sovereign tribal nations and how they were affected by federal policies that were executed from the 1500’s until present day. Not only does this website allow people to gain insight into the lives of the Native Americans throughout the centuries, but it presents a series of lesson plans as well.
 
At the time when Native Americans first came into contact with the Europeans, the tribes would form treaties and establish military alliances with other Indian nations.[i] This demonstrated that the Native Americans practiced the power of sovereignty. When the British began to relocate to America, sovereign Native Americans tribes implemented comparable agreements. Signing such treaties, both the colonists and the Indian nations acknowledged each other's sovereignty.[ii]

 

(The painting demonstrates a treaty that took place between William Penn and the Delaware Indians in the year 1682.)[iii]






Unfortunately, as time progressed, the colonial governments began to reveal that they didn’t fully accept tribal sovereignty.[iv] For instance, they would remove the Native Americans from their land, force them to assimilate, and wage war against different Indian tribes when they refused to relocate to reservations.[v]
 
Fascinatingly, the king of Great Britain in the mid 1700’s, believed that the colonists acted unfairly towards the Native Americans and he decided to “protect” the tribes from the Europeans. Hence, he established a resolution known as the Proclamation Line of 1763 which prohibited British settlers to migrate to the western part of the Appalachian Mountains.[vi] However, it wasn’t long before the colonists began to move to this region.

During the 19th century, the federal government passed different laws that stated they would maintain negotiations with sovereign Indian nations. Yet, their actions contradicted their declarations. After several famous court cases, such as Worchester V. Georgia, the Native Americans realized that they were demoted to a limited sovereignty and subjugated to the American government and Supreme Court.[vii] Then, in the year 1871, Congress declared that they would no longer make treaties with the Native American tribes.



(This image depicts the incident known as the Trail of Tears. This was a consequence of Worchester V. Georgia’s verdict. This event was proof that the federal government eroded the sovereignty of American Indian nations).[viii]





Finally, in the 1920’s, several politicians began to acknowledge the plight of the Native American nations. Several laws were passed to alleviate the repercussions of federal Indian policies. For instance, voting rights and citizenship were finally extended to Native Americans.[ix] In the year 1946, Congress decided to compensate the Native American tribes for stolen land. Although the federal government began to admit to their injustices towards the tribes, between the years of 1953 and 1964, Congress ended federal recognition of a total of 109 tribes and bands as sovereign dependent nations. Finally, in the 1990’s, the government fully acknowledged tribal sovereignty. 

I am entirely pleased that I read the contents of the website American Indian Issues: an Introductory and Curricular Guide for Educators. All my questions were answered. Additionally, this website allowed me to glean a wealth of knowledge in regards to the sovereignty status of the Native American tribes over the course of history.  


Work cited:


[i]American Indian Issues: An Introductory and Curricular Guide for Educators, “Historical Overview,” http://americanindiantah.com/history/nar_colonial_legacy.html (accessed October 21, 2013).

[ii] Ibid.
[iii] Colonial Williamsburg, “Primary Source of the Month,” http://www.history.org/history/teaching/enewsletter/volume6/nov07/primsource.cfm?showSite=mobile (accessed October 21, 2013).
[iv] Ibid.
[v] Ibid.
[vi] Ibid.
[vii] Ibid.
[viii] Cherokee Community of the Inland Empire, “Trail of Tears,”
[ix] American Indian Issues: An Introductory and Curricular Guide for Educators, “Historical Overview,” http://americanindiantah.com/history/nar_colonial_legacy.html (accessed October 21, 2013).