The goal was to pressure Indians into becoming farmers or ranchers, thereby helping to assimilate them. The Allotment Act, better known as the Dawes Act and passed by Congress in 1887, ended the general policy of granting land parcels to whole tribes by instead granting small parcels of land to individual tribe members. Toward the end of the nineteenth century, reports about the poor quality of life on reservations led the federal government to change to a new policy based on forced assimilation instead of concentration and isolation onto reservations. The term remained in use even after the federal government began to forcibly relocate tribes. Early treaties for land also designated parcels which the tribes, as sovereign nations, "reserved" for themselves, and those parcels came to be called reservations. The term "reservation" comes from the belief that tribes were independent, sovereign nations at the time the U.S. The Indian Appropriations Act of 1851 authorized the creation of the first Indian reservations. As white population grew in the United States and people settled further west towards the Mississippi in the late 1800s, there was increasing pressure on the recently removed groups to give up some of their new land, and on Western nations, such as the Dakota, to enter into treaties. Indians who didn't leave faced concentration onto smaller parcels and were pressured to sign treaties ceding larger amounts of land. Most Indians living east of the Mississippi were relocated west of the river to what is now Oklahoma. The first legal justification for the removal and isolation of American Indians occurred as a result of the Indian Removal Act of 1830. In addition to controlling trade, the Bureau was responsible for settling disputes between Indians and European-Americans, as well as for appropriating funds from Congress to fund efforts by the Indian agents to acculturate American Indians into European-American society.
Calhoun created the Bureau of Indian Affairs to replace the Indian Trade Office, officially placing responsibility for working with Indian communities under the control of the U.S. In 1806 the Federal office of the Superintendent of Indian Trade was created, specifically to monitor and control economic activity between Indian nations and the U.S.
government throughout the first half of the 1800s, and its effects continue to be felt today. This paternalistic attitude influenced interactions between American Indian nations and the U.S. government believed that if American Indians did not adopt European-American culture they would become extinct as a people. Many historians have argued that the U.S. government adopted policies aimed at acculturating and assimilating Indians into European-American society. The policy of assimilation was an attempt to destroy traditional Indian cultural identities. "It gives me pleasure to announce to Congress that the benevolent policy of the Government, steadily pursued for nearly thirty years, in relation to the removal of the Indians beyond the white settlements, is approaching to a happy consummation."Īndrew Jackson, address to the 21st Congress, 2nd Session, 1830-31ĭuring the early 1800s the U.S.