The second paragraph from the http://ushistoryscene.com text on "Indian Policy" and Reconstruction (for the full text, click here):
The decline of Native
American political autonomy in the second half of the nineteenth century was
one of the results of increasing national authority that also irrevocably
changed the character of the American West. With its powers invigorated by the
demands of war, the federal government, having abolished slavery, turned in the
post-war period to address its remaining, and largely western, racial and moral
problem groups: the Mormons, the Chinese, and Native Americans. Native American
populations, living at various stages of what nineteenth-century Americans
called civilization, proved a particularly tricky segment of the population to
integrate into the American body politic. The nineteenth century’s Indian
“Problem” or “Question” took many forms; American policymakers had to determine
what was to be done about hostile tribes still vigorously resisting relocation,
how reservations would be managed, and how to “kill the Indian but save the
man” through various civilizing projects. Preparing Native Americans for the
new social and political order of the postwar United States necessitated new
approaches to Indian policy, producing a massive and multifaceted
Reconstruction program that forever altered Native American life and the
contours of the American West.
(image: John Gast. American Progress, 1872)
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