Tag Page NativeAmericanHistory

#NativeAmericanHistory
Hatter Gone Mad

History remembers moments of power, resistance, and courage. At the Battle of Little Bighorn (June 25–26, 1876), warriors of the Lakota, Dakota, Cheyenne, and Arapaho Nations stood united to defend their land, their people, and their way of life. This battle marked one of the most significant Native victories in U.S. history, where Indigenous warriors overcame a heavily armed U.S. cavalry force. It was not just a military confrontation—it was a declaration of sovereignty, unity, and survival. These nations fought with strategy, bravery, and deep connection to their ancestors and territory. Their legacy continues to remind the world that history is not only written by empires, but also by those who resist them. Honor the past. Remember the truth. Respect Indigenous history. #NativeAmericanHistory #BattleOfLittleBighorn #Lakota

LataraSpeaksTruth

Phase Two. Codification. As colonial systems expanded across the Americas, enslavement shifted from practice to law. What had once been enforced through custom and violence was formalized through statutes, court rulings, and inherited status. By the late seventeenth century, slavery was increasingly defined as permanent, racial, and transferable by birth. African ancestry became a legal condition rather than a circumstance. Colonial governments codified labor, movement, marriage, punishment, and property rights. Enslaved Africans were stripped of legal personhood, while freedom for Black people became restricted and conditional. Laws varied by colony, but their direction was consistent. Status followed bloodlines. Children inherited bondage. Escape no longer altered classification. Identity became assigned, recorded, and enforced. Indigenous nations were pulled deeper into this system as European and later American expansion intensified. Treaties, land seizures, and survival pressures forced tribes to navigate slave economies imposed by colonial powers. Some Native nations resisted participation. Others adopted chattel slavery under coercion, economic pressure, or promises of political recognition. These decisions occurred within systems designed to limit Indigenous sovereignty. Codification narrowed earlier possibilities. Where proximity once allowed shared labor, refuge, or informal belonging, law demanded rigid classification. African ancestry was separated from Indigenous identity in legal terms, even when families and communities told a different story. Written records began to override lived reality. This phase marked the moment slavery became self perpetuating. The system reproduced itself through law, reshaping citizenship, land ownership, and recognition, and laying foundations for exclusion and erasure that followed. #Codification #SlaveryBecomesLaw #ArchivalSeries #HistoricalRecord #ColonialHistory #AfricanAmericanHistory #NativeAmericanHistory

Hatter Gone Mad

“…. if I am hungry, no one is safe.” In 1862, as the Dakota people were starving during a man-made famine, trader Andrew Myrick mocked their suffering. He told them to “eat grass—or their own dung.” 🌾 It was a moment that exposed the cruelty of power and the depth of injustice faced by the Dakota Nation. When the Dakota War began, Myrick was among the first to die. His body was later found with grass stuffed into his mouth—a grim, symbolic answer to his own words. This is not a tale of revenge glorified, but a stark reminder: when human dignity is stripped away and hunger is used as a weapon, history answers with consequences. Remembering these truths honors those who endured, resisted, and survived. 🪶 #NativeAmericanHistory #DakotaWar1862 #IndigenousTruth #RememberThePast #VoicesUnforgotten #facebookrepost

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