When were the last native "American" Indian people subdued in the USA?
Answer:
Have you ever read "Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee" ?
I'm not sure, but Wounded Knee is generally viewed as the last contest in that fight.
1971 (Alcatraz)
Ha...still hasn't happened.
Although there were incidents before and after, generally speaking the "Indian Wars" were from 1864 to 1890. Beginning with the "Sand Creek Massacre" when U.S. Militiamen slaughtered 150 unarmed men, women and children of the Cheyenne and Arapaho nation - to 1890 when U.S. soldiers attacked the Lakota settlement of Wounded Knee and, once again, killed over 100 old men, women and children.
There were "Indian Wars" almost from the time the first invaders came to the continent. After the Wounded Knee massacre, there were several small skirmishes, mostly in the Southwest for several more years. The Apaches practiced "guerilla" warfare and they were tough to subdue.
Our nation sure has a bloody history, doesn't it?
Typically there are no "native American Indian" people in the USA. The terms are either Native American or American Indian, both are somewhat ambiguous.
The Asians from around the area of the steppes that migrated across the Bering Strait Ice Bridge from 14,000 to 10,000 BCE and settled in the North American Continent are now believed to have massacred or bred out the peoples who originated from Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Northern Europe. Genes found in all American Indians are also found in Europeans but not in Asians.
I guess that the White's in this country are very closely related to the Native Americans, much more so than any other race. It was a shame that the we didn't realize this sooner, we could have educated them rather than killing them in battle.
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