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Native American history essay
Native American history essay
Native American history essay
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The Karankawa Indians lived along the Gulf of Mexico in the coastal bend. Their
territory ranged from the west end of Galveston bay southwestward to Corpus Christi bay.
Contrary to popular belief the Karankawa were not cannibals. They did like many other Texas
Indian tribes eat their captured enemy warriors and leaders to gain their strength or courage but
never for food. The name Karankawa was given to many bands of Indians in the area including
the Cocos, Copanes, Cujanes, Guapites, Carancaguases (the source of the name Karankawa).
In 1528 a survivor, named Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca, of the failed Spanish expedition
of Panfilo de Narvaez and some others landed on the west end of Galveston Island. The
Karankawa gave them food and shelter. Cabeza de Vaca gave us the first recorded accounts of
the Karankawas. Cabeza de Vaca lived with the Indians for several years and eventually joined
them. He talks about what it was like living with them and how the different bands interacted
with one another. During the winter they would move near the water because of large schools of
fish would stay in shallow waters making them easier to catch. They caught fish such as red fish
and drum. There were also lots of oysters and clams that were easy to get and could only be
safely eaten during the winter months. During the summer they would move in land because the
fish would move back to deeper waters that their canoes were not suited for and shellfish were
no longer safe to eat. They would hunt many types of animals such deer, rabbits, turtles, turkeys,
alligators and other edible animals. They would also split up into smaller bands to gather plants
and roots. Cabeza de Vaca tells of how sometimes food was hard...
... middle of paper ...
...pus Christie before settling. In the mid 1840s the
surviving Karankawas moved to Tamaulipas, Mexico to escape the Texans. Accused of raiding
settlements they were attacked by Mexican authorities and in the late 1850s they were back in
Texas. In 1858 Juan Nepomuceno Cortina attacked and killed all the members of the last band.
The Karankawa had become extinct.
For three centuries they fought to survive the invasive Europeans never letting go of their
ways. They remained as their ancestors did and refused to give up their culture of hunters and
gatherers to the end of their existence. They were victims as so many others of colonization and
xenophobia. That ultimately lead to what was genocide in it’s purest form. They were the Hitlers
and Stalins of their time, doing everything they could to wipe out a whole race and culture. An
entire ethnic group.
that Cabeza had great respect for the Indians and wanted to help them as much as he could so he would be respected back. “That we cured the sick, and that (The Spaniards) killed those who were well.”(Doc D) Cabeza was set to cure those in need but the Spaniards were already killing those who were well so his goal was very hard to set but he managed to heal a great amount of people. “And was therefore allowed to serve as a trader among Indian bands.”(Doc B) Throughout Cabeza’s journey, he learned lots of ways to stay alive such as being accepted to trade with lots of Indians and make money to find more ways to escape
The stories of each fish flow together as each story shows how humans have pushed to gain more control over the ocean and the delicious animals that swim in it’s depths. Greenberg starts in the free-flowing rivers where salmon are commonly found. It is there that early humans of the Northern Hemisphere most likely began their infatuation with fish. Greenberg puts it as, “It(salmon) is representative of the first wave of human exploitation..” (170) Once Europeans learned to fish, they had the ability to fish in shallow ocean water which is where sea bass are usually found. Later, fishermen s...
... hardships he must face. Differing from other Spanish explorers Cabeza does not use violence as a means of spreading his word and eventually gains utter respect from the Indians he interacts with and even the respect of Indians that he has never met. Toward the end of the sixteenth century, Spanish explorers spread a wave of bloodshed and disease through the New World killing almost all of the natives indigenous to the land. Cabeza de Vaca stands apart from his counterparts in the fact that he used peace and kindness to win the hearts of the natives and successfully converted the Indians he met into Christians.
Milanich, Jerald T. and Susan Milbrath., ed. First Encounters: Spanish Exploration in the Caribbean and the United States1492-1570. Gainesville: U of Florida P, 1989.
In conclusion Native Americans were lead close to extinction after the discovery of the New World. They suffered damages from diseases and injuries the europeans brought. They had to relocate their tribes only to fulfill european demands. As well as to change their belief for the ones the europeans brought with them in order to survive and avoid the risk of extinction.
In the early 1900s people from Italy started to arrive on ship. They first arrived in Detroit, Michigan and later immigrated to Gloucester, to fish like they did back in the old country. Children, as young as ten years old went fishing to make a living for their family. When they first came the fishing industry was booming. There was no limit to how long you could fish or how much you could catch. Many men went fishing for weeks at a time. When Italian fishermen came upon the Atlantic off what is now Cape Cod, the waters churned with schools of fish. When they came nearly 800 of them in Boston and Gloucester combined became fishermen. In New England, cod was king. Enriched by a West Indies trade of fish for molasses, boat owners were referred to as the "codfish aristocracy. Sadly in the late 1990s the fishing industry went downhill and changed for the worst. (.)
other animals. They were able to do this because they told all the animals that, since they
ways of technology to survive in there environment. They used many different farming tools in
plant life grow. Then the settlers grew crops, and to solve the issues of droughts and floods,
The Yoruba and Lukim people were enslaved, shipped to the New World and forced by Spanish
Using their wooden ships, they raided, traded, explored and settled in Europe, Asia and the North Atlantic islands. They developed different kinds of ships to help them navigate the ocean, seas and even narrow, shallow rivers. One kind of ship was the “knarr.” The knarr was a short, sturdy cargo ship that was mainly used for long ocean voyages and hazardous trips. It mainly used sails, but also had oars in the event that there was no wind on the open water. Another ship was known as the “karve”. They were very similar to the knarr, but had shallower h...
rats and fleas. They had no running water, so bathing was every once in a while.
The young men of the family assisted their father in hunting for the family's next meal. They usually caught cod, shrimp, crabs, oysters, sausage, pigeons, ducks, blackbirds or anything else they could find before meal time. (Marzalek "Life") The younger boys often ran around picking up feathers to fill pillows and mattresses.
1. When you are in freshwater you pretty much know what you will catch where in