Lakota Struggles Essay

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Lakota Struggle
Sometimes as a nation we forget how we acquired the land we live on today, and take it for granted. Before the founding fathers, pilgrims, and even Christopher Columbus there was already a nation occupying North America. This nation was unique because it was not just one sovereign state, it was thousands of unique tribes that co existed in North America. One of the most prominent tribes was the Lakota tribe. The Lakotas were not only one of the greatest tribes, they also suffered the most at the hands of the new Americans who wished to occupy their land, simply because they had the most to lose compared to other tribes. Throughout futile attempts on the behalf of the natives to grasp onto their way of life and ancestry these Native Americans have been forced into small reservations scattered around in unappealing sections of the United States, usually no where near where they originated.
The Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in Lakota, also known as the Pine Ridge Agency is an Oglala Sioux Native American reservation located in South Dakota. Originally included within the territory of the Great Sioux Reservation, Pine Ridge was established in 1889 in the southwestern region of South Dakota on the border of Nebraska. Currently it consists of 3,468 square miles of land and is the eighth largest reservation in the United States, Delaware and Rhode Island combined are not even as large as this reservation.
Pine Ridge contains all of Shannon County, along with the southern half of Jackson County and the Northwestern portion of Bennett County. Of the 3,143 counties in the United States, these three counties are among the poorest of the poor. About 84,000 acres of land are usable for agriculture and cattle raising, along w...

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“There are no other instance in history where a great nation has so shamefully violated its oath. The United States must forever bear the disgrace and suffer the retribution of its wrongdoing. Our children's children will tell the sad story in hushed tones, and wonder how their fathers dared so to trample on justice and trifle with God.” Henry Benjamin Whipple, chairman of Bureau of Indian Affairs, on the taking of the Black Hills; statements made in official Bureau of Indian Affairs report as stipulated in the Fort Laramie Treaty of 1868, the U.S. government built Indian agencies for the various Lakota and other Plains tribes. These were forerunners to the modern Indian reservations. The Red Cloud Agency was established for the Oglala Lakota in 1871 on the North Platte River in Wyoming Territory. The location was about one mile west of the present

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