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left-of-center2012

(34,195 posts)
Sat Nov 13, 2021, 10:15 AM Nov 2021

Santa Fe Trail, Part 4: The pain of Native life on the trail

James Riding In doesn’t pull punches about the impact the Santa Fe Trail had on Native American communities. “It was devastating,” said the recently retired professor and co-founder of the American Indian Studies program at Arizona State University. For American merchants crossing the trail from its start in Missouri to its end in Santa Fe, the trail offered profit and promise. For Native Americans, it meant buffalo corpses, played-out beaver streams, conflict, disease — and often, death.

It’s a story few modern day historians seem to be telling when reviewing the history of the trail, Riding In said. It’s why he put together a nearly 750-page study, “American Indians and the Santa Fe Trail,” in 2009 for the National Park Service. Modern history seems to have wiped out the Native American point of view. Riding In’s report includes a lengthy list of historically reported accounts of encounters between traders and members of various tribal entities along the 800- to 900-mile trail, which ran from 1821 to 1880.

According to Riding In’s research, the trail cut through land belonging to at least a dozen distinct Indian nations, including the Osages, Pawnees, Comanches, Kiowas, Plains or Kiowa Apaches, Utes, Jicarilla Apaches and Pecos Pueblo.

While noting not all interaction between the travelers and the Native people was hostile, Riding In said more often than not the treaties led to Native Americans being “put on lands unfit for white civilization to settle.” Meanwhile, the caravan members often killed buffalo for sport, decimating the herds. And they sometimes brought illness and disease with them, said State Historian Rob Martinez.

https://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/local_news/santa-fe-trail-part-4-the-pain-of-native-life-on-the-trail/article_ef142978-3690-11ec-873c-57db5cd8c8c9.html

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Santa Fe Trail, Part 4: The pain of Native life on the trail (Original Post) left-of-center2012 Nov 2021 OP
This is also a part of critical race history that America buries under its mountains of shame. Alexander Of Assyria Nov 2021 #1
PBS World is honoring Deuxcents Nov 2021 #2

Deuxcents

(19,695 posts)
2. PBS World is honoring
Sat Nov 13, 2021, 11:26 AM
Nov 2021

Native American History Month. I’ve been watching as much as I can and learning a lot. Last night it was the Cherokee elders and talkers teaching the kids to read n write their language. A different Tribe is highlighted every time. A very good one about the Indian Vets on Thursday. We should all step back and learn about these First Americans who have been here for thousands of years n how we wanted their lands n brought genocide to them. So infuriating the mind set we had and some still have.

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