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Neither Empty nor Unknown: Montana Neither Empty nor Unknown: Montana

Neither Empty nor Unknown: Montana - PowerPoint Presentation

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Neither Empty nor Unknown: Montana - PPT Presentation

at the Time of Lewis and Clark An Introduction to An exhibit of the Montana Historical Society Are the original inhabitants of a region Are not immigrants from a foreign landor descendants of immigrants ID: 801010

tribes montana montana

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Slide1

Neither Empty nor Unknown: Montana at the Time of Lewis and Clark

An Introduction to

An exhibit of the Montana Historical Society

Slide2

Are the original inhabitants of a region. Are not immigrants from a foreign land…or descendants of immigrants.Tribal histories reveal thousands of years of use and interaction with the Montana landscape.

Indigenous Peoples…

Slide3

When Lewis and Clark journeyed across “Montana” in 1805, they were traveling through the homelands of many different indigenous nations—not through an empty wilderness or an unknown land. Many of these tribes still reside in Montana—some on the same lands that their ancestors have inhabited for thousands of years.

Slide4

Using the map legend above, you will be able to read the maps pictured in the following slides, locating each tribe’s original homeland along with the location of its additional tribal use area.

Slide5

Northwestern Montana – Kootenai and BlackfeetThe Kootenai (Ktunaxa) Nation’s ancient homelands extended from northwestern Montana into Idaho and British Columbia, overlapping to the east with those of the Blackfeet. The Kootenai language is unrelated to any other language in the world.

The

Blackfeet (

Niitsitapi

Pikuni

)

historically inhabited much of northern Montana and hunted as far south as the Yellowstone River. Their relatives lived, and continue to live, across the border in Canada.

Slide6

Western Montana – Nez Perce, Shoshone, Pend d’Oreille, and SalishThe heart of Nez Perce (NiMiPuu) and Shoshone (Akidika) tribal homelands lay to the west (in present-day Idaho), but both tribes hunted and traveled extensively in southwestern Montana. Shoshone cave paintings in central Montana indicate that this tribe once inhabited a larger territory here than it did in 1800.

The

Pend d’Oreille (Qlispé)

and their allies, the

Salish (

Séliṡ

)

have lived in southwestern Montana for thousands of years. Both tribes frequently traveled east of the Rocky Mountains, where they hunted bison and clashed with the Blackfeet.

Slide7

South-Central Montana –Crow, Cheyenne, and SiouxWith its plentiful game, central Montana was a popular hunting, raiding, and trading ground among all of Montana’s tribes. After 1600, the Crow (Apsáalooke) tribe dominated the region from the Missouri River to the Bighorn Mountains, pushing the Shoshone west. They shared their eastern range with their relatives, the

Hidatsa (Hiraacá). Their enemies, the

Cheyenne (

Tsetsêhesêstâhase

/

So’taahe

)

and

Sioux

(Lakota, Dakota)

tribes, neighbored them to the southeast.

Slide8

Northeastern Montana – Gros Ventre, Assiniboine, and Plains Cree

North-central Montana is home to the Gros Ventre

(

A’aniniin

)

tribe, whose range overlapped with the Blackfeet to the west, the Crow to the south, and the Assiniboine and Cree tribes to the east.

By the late 1600s, the

Assiniboine

(Nakoda)

and

Plains Cree (

Nehiyawak

)

bands extended their range into what is now northeast Montana. As the fur trade pushed westward in the mid-1700s,

Chip-

pewa

(

Annishinabe

and Metis)

bands also moved into this region.

Slide9

Extensive intertribal trade ensured the exchange of goods, people, and raw materials from one region to another. Tribes met to trade, intermarry, renew alliances, and share news.

Slide10

Plateau Tribes Hunted and FishedThe Kootenai, Salish, and Pend d’Oreille tribes traveled east over the Continental Divide to hunt bison during the summer and fall. However, like other tribes of the Columbia Plateau, they also fished for salmon and trout, which were plentiful west of the Rocky Mountains.

Slide11

Seasonal RoundsEach tribe followed its own seasonal round—moving from place to place according to the natural resources available during different seasons of the year. Hunting, fishing, harvesting, trade, and ceremonies had their own proper time and place. Families might go their separate ways in summer, but come together again as a tribe in the fall for bison hunting.

Slide12

Bison Cultures of the PlainsEast of the Rocky Mountains, bison formed the cornerstone of the economies and ways of life for Montana’s indigenous peoples. Plains tribes—like the Blackfeet, Crow, White Clay, and Lakota—depended on bison for food, shelter, tools, and many other aspects of their survival.

Slide13

Today’s Indian reservations represent only a small fraction of the tribes’ original homelands. The reservations’ distance from one another confuses the reality of tribes’ historical interactions and shared hunting territories. Some indigenous nations who do not have reservations in Montana—such as the Nez Perce and Shoshone—retain their right to hunt here through treaties signed with the U.S. government. For all of Montana’s indigenous peoples, cultural and historical ties to these lands remain.

Slide14

Shared Landscapes, Diverse Cultures Each of Montana’s indigenous nations has its own language, unique history, and distinct customs, even though they share some cultural traditions.By 1805, Montana’s tribes were already beginning to experience the influences of America’s westward expansion, but their cultures and way of life remained mostly intact until the 1850s.

The exhibit, “Neither Empty Nor Unknown,” provides a glimpse into the daily lives of Montana’s indigenous peoples before their lives and landscapes were forever changed by Euro-American settlement.

Slide15

When you tour the exhibit, you will be learning more about traditional lifeways through stories from two Crow people—Plenty Coups and Pretty Shield—along with an original Blackfeet story.YOUR TOUR

Slide16

Slide17

Pretty Shield (1855-1944)was a Crow woman who grew up during the buffalo days. During her childhood and early adulthood, the Crow tribe hunted bison, moved among seasonal camps, gathered roots and berries, and traded with and raided other tribal nations. Her stories are important today because they tell of a time before white Americans came to the West and forever changed the ways of life, economies, and cultures of indigenous peoples.

Slide18

Plenty Coups (1848-1932) was a prominent Crow leader. He saw the transition from the buffalo days to the early reservation years. During his lifetime, and still today, Plenty Coups was/is regarded as one of the greatest Crow chiefs ever. He was a skilled hunter, warrior, leader, and diplomat. His home is now a state park in Pryor, Montana, that you can visit to learn more about this great man and his people.

Slide19

Even in his old age, Plenty Coups worked hard to protect his people and their way of life and made several trips to Washington, D.C., to speak on their behalf. He had no children of his own, but regarded all Crow people as his children.

Slide20

Historically, the Blackfeet and Crow tribes were enemies and often raided one another’s hunting camps between the Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers.

Slide21

All of the stories we hear have been preserved in the oral traditions of the tellers’ tribes or were written down as they were told to other writers.

Slide22

“How did indigenous people live before non-Indian settlers moved into what is now Montana”?That is our essential question. We will find answers through:Artifacts (objects) indigenous people used.Stories from the lives of Pretty Shield, Plenty Coups, and others.

Slide23

Contact the Montana Historical Society to schedule school-group tours:call (406) 444-4794or email mhsEducation@mt.gov

This PowerPoint and accompanying lesson plans were created by Laura Ferguson for the Montana Historical Society, © 2016.

Additional resource:

Introducing the First Nations of Montana to the World

(video). Montana Department of Tourism, 2012.

https://vimeo.com/49771618