The 10 Best Places To Live In Indiana (USA)
Indiana may be best known for its obsession with sports (and limestone) but what may not be in the public domain is that the Midwestern state has one of the lowest cost of living in the United States.
A dollar stretches a long way here, longer than it would in 41 states.
Anyone looking to relocate to the Hoosier State will also be happy to know home prices in Indiana are among the most affordable in the country.
As well, the state boasts a strong economy that is about the size of Norway, according to the American Enterprise Institute.
It is the 16th largest state economy in the United States and this, coupled with the sixth lowest unemployment rate in the nation, makes for very interesting reading, or living rather.
The state’s economy is mainly flanked by agriculture, manufacturing and automotive industries.
Also of notable importance is healthcare and education, not forgetting the two prestigious universities based here: Purdue and Notre Dame.
A report by the Indiana Business Review notes that in 2010, Indiana’s economy grew twice as fast as the rest of the nation, with similar results experienced in the subsequent three years.
With things going so swimmingly in this state, perhaps it didn’t come as a surprise when Money Magazine named Fishers, Indiana the No.1 best place to live in America in 2017.
If you are planning to make an in-state move or put down roots here, below, we reveal the 10 best places to live in Indiana for 2019.
1. Carmel.
2. Fishers.
3. Zionsville.
4. Munster.
5. West Lafayette.
6. Fort Wayne.
7. Westfield.
8. Dyer.
9. Columbus.
10. Indianapolis.
Thanks for watching this video. I hope it's useful for you.
(This article is an opinion based on facts and is meant as infotainment).
Music by: Nicolai Heidlas
Top 5 Waterfalls in Indiana
We searched the State for the very best waterfalls, and we certainly found them! Here is our Top 5 Waterfalls in Indiana!
#5 McCormick's Creek State Park
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#4 Anderson Falls
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#3 Clifty Falls State Park
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#2 Cataract Falls
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#1 Williamsport Falls
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Are Blacks Indigenous To America?
The Washitaw were direct descendants of the Olmecs who mixed in with the Malian Moors. The name Washitaw comes from the Washita River which flows along Northwest Texas and Oklahoma to the Red River, where the Cheyenne Native Americans lived with the Chawasha, meaning Racoon People . The Washo were a tribe of Negroids who lived above the New Orleans Bayou and were of Tunican linguistic stock. The name Washitaw is a derivative of the term Ouachita or what is now Wichita. The term is a Choctaw term which means Big Arbor which represented the Grass thatched arbor homes that the people lived in.
The Washitaw was originally from lower Mississippi, Louisiana, and Alabama (named after Nubian-Sudanese Ali Baba). The tribe was officially named Wichita by the U.S. Government in the Camp Holmes Treaty of 1835. This tribe were unmistakably a Negroid tribe! The Wichita were also known as Paniwassaha or by the French Panioussa which means Black Pawnee. French traders from Illinois called them Pani Pique which means Tattooed Pawnee. The Washitaw or Racoon People were called Racoons because of their black faces. When describing the Washitaw, the French describes the blacks who lived in large grass houses. The Washitaw called themselves Kitikitish which is an interpretation of Raccoon Eyed. The term was later shortened to Coon which became a term used in reference to blacks in America. The Washitaw were an offshoot of the Pawnee Confederation. When the Moors came to America, they mixed in with the Washitaw Native Americans and became known as Washo. So the Washitaw Moors are the so-called Lost tribe of Indians that are spoken of in the history books? Yes! They are the hidden tribe that were the descendants of the Olmecs and Toltecs of Mexico. The Washitaw tribe are also the ancestors to such tribes as Pawnee, Osage, Creek, Seminole, Cherokee, Catawba, Comanche, Nez Perce, Tuscarora, Gingaskin, Mattaponi, Powhatten, Micmac, Lumbi, Mandan, Blackfoot, Natchez, Chickasaw, and many more tribes.
The misconception is that Black Indians were never taken into slavery. This is not the case. Black Indians were also captured and sold into slavery along with their African cousins. The land of the Black Indians were taken. Louisiana, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Illinois, Florida, Delaware, Tennessee, Kansas, Iowa, Indiana all belonged to the Washitaw Moors. The land was invaded by the French and British. The women were sold as sex slaves and the men were sold into slavery as Negros. The U.S. Government even persuaded the red Indian tribes to own slaves. The Cherokee, Choctaw, Creek, and Chickasaw tribes all agreed to slave holding of black Indians and Africans. The only tribe to resist the idea of slavery was the Seminole tribe. The Seminoles rejected the idea because they were the descendants of African explorers who settled in Florida and mixed with Muskogee refugees who had mixed in with the Spanish. They called themselves Runaways. These black Seminoles who settled in the swampy terrain of Florida established cultivation methods that were identical to that of the methods of Sierre Leone in Africa. Georgia slave holders were soon invading Florida looking for runaway slaves and were soon met with opposition with Seminoles.
The Seminoles tried to live a peaceful life in their own territory but Georgia militias were preparing to raid Florida looking for African slaves (many whom had already sought refuge with the Seminoles and blended in perfectly since both Africans and Seminoles were black.) The Seminoles, African runaways, and the Spanish all aligned with each other to fight off the slave holders. In 1739 slave fugitives in St. Augustine built a fort to protect themselves and the British. Black Seminoles led the coalition against slavery in the North. Black Seminoles even planted spies posing as African slaves being sold by Creeks to the British just to gather information. Eventually the red Seminoles began to join the resistance. This is when the U.S. Government became worried. The government never anticipated the well working relationship between the reds and blacks. Georgia slave holders soon realized that the Seminole Nation could put an end to slavery. This caused the first Seminole War. Seminoles struck U.S. slave plantations. When the St. Augustine blacks joined in the Seminole raids were destructive and the Seminoles could not be stopped. General Andrew Jackson of the U.S. Military vowed to wipe out the Seminoles. The Seminoles took control of a British fortress and re-named it Fort Negro which was manned by black Seminole officers. The Seminole army consisted of 300 Seminole men in which only 34 were red Indians.
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Columbus, Indiana part 1 - travel destination video
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SC EP:504 Mill Race Monster
ave writes “I had an experience while canoeing. It happen from an area where an event happen 40 to 50 years earlier. You can google the Mill Race Monster in Columbus, Indiana. I knew nothing about big foot before my experience…..changed my life.”
Spoke to the witness and he was canoeing on the Flat Rock River when he got stuck in a wood jam in the river. He pulled the canoe out of the river. The witness said “I was dragging the canoe when I started smelling something terrible. It smelled like a dead animal and rotting garbage. It was so bad I almost started dry heaving. The forest erupted, it sounded like king kong was breaking trees and screaming at me. I had no clue what was going on. I grabbed the canoe and started dragging it back to the river. That is when all hell broke loose…..”
MILL RACE MONSTER:
On November 1, 1974, the Columbus Police Department received a series of panicked reports from no less than two sets of eyewitnesses, all of whom claimed to have seen (and even been attacked by) a huge, bipedal, green-skinned monstrosity that took to skulking near the waterways inside Indiana’s 83-acre Mill Race Park.
These encounters would alarm locals and lead to what some consider to be the biggest “monster hunt” in the history of the United States.
My second guest tonight is Shane. Shane writes “when I was about sixteen or seventeen years old, I had my first encount with this creature. I was coon hunting with two older friends in Barrow County, Georgia. At this time I had been hunting on this 3,000 acre tract of land for about two months.
It was about 9 o’clock at night when the incident took place. It was a fairly cold night and very dark in those woods. We had smelt a terrible odor to which, at first, we had contributed to that of a skunk. After we passed through the area and out of the odor, we began to hear movement in the brush off of the trail behind us. We kept moving deeper into the woods some distance behind the hounds which had , by this time, was trailing a raccoon. The noises behind us kept getting closer and louder. We had first thought it was one of the dogs that had come back in to us for some reason. This was unusual to us as all of the hounds we had were champion coonhounds and would rather die than give up on running a raccoon.
We began to curse and swear as we thought it was one of our hounds. We soon discovered that it was not one of our dogs. We could plainly hear each dog’s voice in the front of us as they were bawling away in pursuit of the raccoon. My friend Hubert, jokingly said that it must be the “Werewolf” that was following us. He told Ray and myself to turn off our hunting lights and wait for a signal from him. At his signal we were to point our lights in the direction of the noise moving ever closer to us. Hubert had a .22 rifle that he carried that was for shooting the coon out of the tree after our dogs treed it. Hubert made the comment that if he didn’t like what he seen in the beams of our lights that he was going to start shooting. At the signal Ray and I turned our lights on high and shined the beams in the direction of the noise. There in the light was a tall dark figure that ran off as soon as the lights were upon it. It was huge and ran upright on two legs just like a man. This stunned all three of us and Hubert never fired a shot as he was not sure as to what we had just seen. This was not a man nor was it a bear. It was too large and bulky to be a man and was too large to be a black bear. Besides, a bear only walks on it’s hind legs a short distance and awkwardly at that.
This thing was sprinting away, leaning slightly forward as it moved. It was breaking branches and tree limbs as it ran away up a wooded hillside. It was soon out of hearing distance. We did not care to investigate it as we were too scared and shocked to do so. We then, after we calmed down, made our way to get the dogs and get back to the truck. Ater hurriedly putting the dogs in the dogbox and putting away our gear, we were soon on the old logging road getting out of there.
One the way home, Ray and Hubert began to talk about more experiences as well as footprints that they had seen on this tract of land. I continued to hunt here for many years afterwards. I never again saw or heard anything again. We did continue to smell that same odor that we smelt when we had the encounter. It always unnerved me a little everytime we hunted in that area. Was what we saw a Bigfoot? I think so and will continue to believe so till my dying day.”
'America is a stolen country'
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Alcoholism, unemployment and suicide are problems associated with Native American reservations in the US. But a new generation of young activists are dedicating themselves to a brighter future. Benjamin Zand from the BBC's Pop-Up team is on a reservation in South Dakota -- in the heart of America's midwest.
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La Plata, Missouri USA - Virtual Railfan LIVE
This is a live stream of La Plata, Missouri, USA, for people who enjoy watching trains.
Actual start date: May 19, 2017
The 360º camera is sponsored by Duane & Curt Lundgren in memory of their hometown Great Northern Railroad
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ABOUT THIS FEED:
La Plata, MO, in Northern Missouri, is located on BNSF Railway's Marceline Subdivision at milepost 312.7, part of their Southern Transcon, the former Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railway (AT&SF) mainline between Chicago and Los Angeles.
Amtrak’s Southwest Chief passenger train stops here twice a day; the eastbound train #4 in the morning and the westbound train #3 in the evening.
The typical BNSF freight train volume is between 50 and 70 trains per 24 hours. There are 2 cameras available.
There is an ATCS layout available, as well as a radio feed for the western part of the BNSF Marceline Sub, listening to AAR road channel 30, 160.560 (also includes Norfolk Southern's Kansas City District, on road channel 22, 160.440):
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There’s no schedule for freight trains, but some of our more knowledgeable members will provide real-time information when it’s available. Please refrain from asking.
ABOUT VIRTUAL RAILFAN:
Virtual Railfan currently has 77 cams at 47 locations in 22 states and 4 countries. Visit our website for memberships, more free cams, and our own live chat. Thanks for stopping by, we’re glad you’re here!
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America's Great Indian Nations - Full Length Documentary
#indiannations #lakotasioux #seminoles #shawnee #navajo #cheyenne #ushistory #americanhistory
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This is the first comprehensive history of six great Indian nations, dramatically filmed on location at their native tribal lands across America, using reenactments, archival footage, maps and original music. The story of the Iroquois, Seminole, Shawnee, Navajo, Cheyenne, and Lakota Sioux nations unfolds in their struggle to protect their lands, cultures, and freedoms. Stirring reenactments. - Booklist Magazine.
The Indian Removal Act Explained in 5 Minutes: US History Review
An introductory lecture to the basics of Andrew Jackson's Indian Removal Act. Subscribe to HipHughes to keep the universe aligned for free here
Where Did The First Americans Come From?
At some point, humans made their way to America. When did this happen, and how can we confirm the date?
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Evolution of Modern Humans
“All people today are classified as Homo sapiens. Our species of humans first began to evolve nearly 200,000 years ago in association with technologies not unlike those of the early Neandertals.”
Genome analysis pins down arrival and spread of first Americans
“An international team of researchers compared the genomes of 31 living Native Americans, Siberians and people from Oceania with 23 ancient Native American genomes to establish a timeline for the arrival and spread of Amerindian populations.”
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Comfort Inn & Suites Columbus in Columbus IN
Reserve: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Comfort Inn & Suites Columbus 2485 Jonathan Moore Pike Columbus IN 47201 The Comfort Inn & Suites hotel is located with access to Interstate 65 and State Road 46. Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Louisville are all within a one-hour drive. Renowned for its concentration of unique buildings and businesses designed by nationally recognized architects, Columbus is ranked sixth in the nation for architectural innovation and design by the American Institute of Architects. Daily guided tours are available and originate at the Columbus Area Visitors Center. This Columbus, IN hotel is close to local attractions that include Indianapolis Museum of Art's Miller House and Garden, Blues Canoe Livery outdoor recreation center, Brown County Winery, Simmons Winery, renowned Otter Creek Golf Course, kidscommons and Anderson Falls. Enjoy browsing the shops at Edinburgh Premium Outlets, Fair Oaks Mall and Exit 76 Antique Mall, located within six miles from the hotel. Plan a day of hiking or biking at nearby Brown County State Park or Columbus People Trails. Visit Little Nashville, a historic artist colony featuring more than 200 shops, which provides the perfect backdrop for antiquing and art collecting, and is nearby. Corporate travelers will appreciate our convenient access to Camp Atterbury, Atterbury-Bakalar Air Museum, Bartholomew County Historical Society, Indiana University-Purdue University Columbus and Cummins Engine Corporate Headquarters. The hotel is 45 minutes away from Indianapolis International Airport, Indianapolis Motor Speedway, Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis Zoo, Conseco Fieldhouse, Children's Museum of Indianapolis, Riley Hospital for Children and Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI). Several restaurants are within walking distance from this Columbus, IN hotel; Starbucks, IHOP, Subway, Culver's, Snappy Tomato Pizza and several fast food establishments. Dive into local cuisine at Smiths's Row, Bistro 310, Power House Brewing Company, Zaharako's Ice Cream Parlor and Museum, The Garage Pub & Grill, and many more! Local and chain restaurants include Buffalo Wild Wings, Applebee's, Texas Roadhouse, Grindstone Charley's, Red Lobster and Chili's. Be sure to ask about our specials and packages. Your Morning Breakfast is full of hot and delicious options, making breakfast at the Comfort Inn & Suites the perfect way to start your day. Enjoy our free hot breakfast featuring eggs, meat, yogurt, fresh fruit, cereal and more, including your choice of hot waffle flavors! This hotel offers many fine features and amenities, including free wireless high-speed Internet access, business center and meeting space, fitness center and laundry facilities, an outdoor heated pool and barbecue area and one- and two-room suites with in-room hot tubs and kitchen facilities All spacious guest rooms and suites come equipped with 37-inch flat-screen televisions, coffee makers, hair dryers, irons and ironing boards. All king rooms feature fully equipped kitchens.
Episode 4 - United Way Day of Caring - Jackson County, Indiana
These are the kinds of stories that really made me want to start this journey. Local companies and businesses making it possible for 1600 people to go out and help those in the community.
I am so excited to share this story. Justin and his team from Cummins are coming together to build the Gottfried's a wheelchair ramp. Esther has been unable to leave her home for almost 2 years. This ramp is going to help her get to church and help her son come visit.
This was United Way's 23rd annual Day of Caring and with 1600 volunteers and 190 projects across the county it has grown to one of the largest Day of Caring events in the area.
Thank you to the Gottfrieds for sharing their story and helping others realize is ot ok to ask for help. Thanks to Justin and his team for letting follow along. Thank you to Tonja, Bonita, and the entire United Way team for making this awesome community project possible.
The Indian Problem
As American power and population grew in the 19th century, the United States gradually rejected the main principle of treaty-making—that tribes were self-governing nations—and initiated policies that undermined tribal sovereignty. For Indian nations, these policies resulted in broken treaties, vast land loss, removal and relocation, population decline, and cultural decimation.
The Indian Problem was produced to serve as the central video in the exhibition Nation to Nation: Treaties Between the United States and American Indian Nations, on view at the National Museum of the American Indian in Washington, DC. This video introduces visitors to the section of the exhibition titled Bad Acts, Bad Paper.
Places to see in ( Indianapolis - USA )
Places to see in ( Indianapolis - USA )
Indianapolis is in the Nine-County Region of Indiana, right at the center of the state. It is the state capital and largest city of Indiana, United States, and is in Marion County. The population within city limits is approximately 830,000 people, making it the 12th largest city in the US. The metropolitan area has about 2 million (23rd in the US). Indianapolis is also known as the Racing Capital of the World due to the proximity of the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home of the Indy 500 and Allstate 400 at the Brickyard (formerly known as the Brickyard 400).
The name Indianapolis is simply Indiana joined with polis, the Greek word for city. The founders of Indianapolis expected it to be the Great Inland Port, but they neglected to consider the fact that the White River is impossible to navigate most of the year; other than during the spring, it is a melange of sandbars and temporary islands. However, this port-desire left the city with a beautiful, if useless, canal district.
The tallest building in Indianapolis is the Salesforce Tower, standing at 830 feet. The second is the One America Tower standings at 533 feet, and the third is the One Indiana Tower standing at a height of 504 feet. The fourth and fifth are the Market Tower (421 feet) and 300 North Meridian (408 feet). The sixth and seventh tallest are the M&I Plaza (401 feet), and the seventh tallest is the JW Marriott Indianapolis (376 feet): the JW Marriott Indianapolis is the tallest hotel in the state and the largest JW Marriott in the world.
Clean-cut Indy is the state capital and a perfectly pleasant place to ogle race cars and take a spin around the renowned speedway. The art museum and White River State Park have their merits, as do the Mass Ave and Broad Ripple hoods for eating and drinking. And fans of author Kurt Vonnegut are in for a treat. A swell walking and biking trail connects it all.
Indianapolis is called the Crossroads of America. The city is warm in the summer, with average highs in the mid-80s in June, July, and August. Indianapolis has a typical mid-western winter. January is the coldest month, with an average high of 34 degrees.
A lot to see in Indianapolis such as :
The Children's Museum of Indianapolis
White River State Park
Indianapolis Motor Speedway
Indianapolis Zoo
Indiana State Museum
Broad Ripple
Conner Prairie
Fort Harrison State Park
Eagle Creek Park
Eiteljorg Museum
Soldiers and Sailors Monument
Canal Walk
Holliday Park
Garfield Park
Monument Circle
Fountain Square
White River Gardens
Monon Trail
Indiana World War Memorial
Downtown Indy
Indianapolis Canal Walk
Indiana State Capitol
Crown Hill Funeral Home and Cemetery
Broad Ripple Park
Garfield Park Conservatory
THE VIRGINIA B. FAIRBANKS ART & NATURE PARK: 100 ACRES AT NEWFIELDS
The Indianapolis Cultural Trail
Massachusetts Avenue, Indianapolis
Sky Zone Fishers Trampoline Park
Splash Island (Indoor Pool)
Eagle Creek
The Waterpark at the Monon Community Center
Go Ape Zip Line & Treetop Adventure - Eagle Creek Park
Indiana State House
Indiana Central Canal
Greatimes Family Fun Park
Sky Zone Trampoline Park
Southeastway Park
Flowing Well Park
Military Park
Indiana Historical Society
Geist Reservoir
Freedom Springs Greenwood Aquatics Park
Indiana Medical History Museum
Hummel Park
Flat Fork Creek Park
Ritchey Woods Nature Preserve
Oldfields–Lilly House & Gardens
Circle Of Lights
Tarkington Park
( Indianapolis - USA ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Indianapolis . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Indianapolis - USA
Join us for more :
Untold History Of The Aborigines Of America - African Americans Are Indigenous To America Not Africa
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Checking out INDY area for our FIRST home! Finding Home Episode #3
Indianapolis and the suburbs of Indianapolis was great to explore! We again, drove a lot and saw a lot on our third day exploring Indiana.
We explored the cities of Lafayette, Kokomo, Noblesville, Carmel, Lebanon, Princes Lake, Nineveh, Edinburgh, Columbus (again), Shelbyville, Greenwood, Breech Grove, Downtown Indy, Warren Park, Lawrence and Fishers - phew.
We searched across the United States to find the best place for us to buy a home. In February 2019 we visited our top 2 states that we were interested in.
(1st day exploring Indiana -
2nd day exploring Indiana -
The top 5 search criteria for us when looking to buy a house was:
1. Fast, reliable WiFi
2. Low housing cost
3. Close to an international airport
4. Low property tax
5. Low income tax
DISCLAIMER: All opinions expressed are in no way meant to disrespect the cities or towns or the people in them... everyone has to find the best place for their family :)
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The History Of The Trail Of Tears: African-Americans Are The Real American Indians
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USGS Director Emphasizes Earthquake Preparedness at IU
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Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women. How you can help Native Americans.
Please visit these sites for more information:
How you can help Native Americans:
Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls
This video is an appeal on behalf of all the missing American Indians, particularly the women.
Before I explain in more detail, let’s have a brief summary of why the plight of American Indians, or Native Americans if you prefer, deserves special attention.
In Europe, it’s often said that Jews are the canaries in the coal mine, meaning of course that if Jews are once again subjected to suspicion, discrimination, and abuse then it’s a sign that our collective moral integrity has declined to the point where we have to take urgent action to restore basic standards of decency.
You could say the same about Jews in the USA but I think a more accurate measure is the way in which American Indians are treated.
The history of the United States of America is widely known, but what is less well known is the fate American Indians after the massacre at Wounded Knee in the winter of 1890 which marked the end of the Indian Wars.
The events that occurred between the arrival of Columbus in 1492 and Wounded Knee in 1890 (and 1973) are long and complex, involving hundreds of tribes, many of whom have been wiped out completely.
You might have seen films like Dances With Wolves and while saddened by the story and its outcomes you might assume that there is nothing more to be said.
You may have heard of broken treaties, like the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868.
This was drafted after an alliance of Lakota, Northern Cheyenne, and Northern Arapaho under the leadership of the Oglala Lakota leader Red Cloud, successfully forced the US Army to abandon its forts along the Bozeman Trail.
The forts had been built illegally on Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho land to protect settlers travelling through Indian territory to the gold fields of Montana.
Eventually, through sheer weight of numbers and pressure to protect settlers as opposed to treaty rights, more land was seized by force.
The Indian Wars continued, and eight years later a certain general by the name of George Armstrong Custer discovered that the Lakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho were as strong as ever.
He met his fate at the Battle of the Greasy Grass, more commonly known as the Battle of the Little Bighorn, or simply Custer’s Last Stand, in June of 1876.
This military defeat and humiliation of the US Army was the catalyst for a chain of events that ultimately lead to the abandonment of all treaties and the total, and merciless subjugation of all native tribes.
The wars came to an end but the genocide turned into ethnocide.
For example, in the early 20th Century children on reservations were forcibly taken from their parents and put through a brutal boarding school system in which they were beaten for speaking their own language, wearing any sign of traditional clothing, or showing any sign of the culture of their ancestors and relations.
How ironic then that the Navajo language saved the lives of so many U.S service personnel in World War II by virtue of its complexity and code.
During the 20th Century, on the reservations, poverty, unemployment, and the inevitable consequences of social deprivation set in and took root.
The Indian days of long ago are gone and the few indigenous tribes that exist today are those whose ancestors survived the wars, introduced diseases, murder, and deliberate starvation.
Today, many American Indians exist in a state of limbo on reservations that are a small percentage of the land they were promised in perpetuity by treaties signed and subsequently dishonoured by those who saw themselves as the upholders of civilised Christian values.
As if all this injustice and ongoing suffering was not enough American Indians, both men and women, are subjected to an alarmingly disproportionate amount of kidnapping and murder.
Native women are subjected to far higher instances of sexual assault and rape than non-native women.
Continued in the video...
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Ohio's Early Pioneers | NewsDepth: Know Ohio
Ohio's early European settlers took on a big challenge in moving to the untamed wilderness of Ohio. Mary shares their story!
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