Indians 101: Lenni Lenape Migrations
( – promoted by navajo) When the Europeans first arrived in North America the Lenni Lenape were living on the east coast near Chesapeake Bay. … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) When the Europeans first arrived in North America the Lenni Lenape were living on the east coast near Chesapeake Bay. … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) A new religious movement began in England in the late 1640s. The Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as Quakers, … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) The Plateau is the area between the Cascade Mountains and the Rocky Mountains. It is bounded by the Fraser River … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) When the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) was organized in 1670, it was granted a charter by the British Crown giving … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) One of the important features of Pueblo Indian cultures is the existence of clowns and clowning societies. The clowns often … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) Religion and state have united to assimilate the American Indian in the past, such as with Ulysses S. Grant’s Peace … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) The Indian nations along the Northwest Coast area of Washington, British Columbia, and Washington were very different than other Indian … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) For many centuries the traditional Cherokee tribal government-a government focused on the town-had served the people well. It was not … Continued
( – promoted by navajo) Long before the Europeans arrived on this continent there was born to the Huron people a man who had a … Continued
The Sand Creek Massacre and the Washita Massacre both led to the Wounded Knee Massacre. The Sand Creek Massacre brought the realization that “the soldiers … Continued