π Displacing Indigenous Peoples
This chapter covers the history of native peoples of America and Australia and how European settlers displaced them from the 18th century onwards.
π European Colonisation β A Quick Map
Their Way of Life
- Lived in bands and villages along river valleys
- Ate fish, meat; cultivated vegetables and maize
- Hunted bison but only as many as needed β no surplus
- Traded goods as gifts, not for profit
- Did not feel the need to "own" land
- Oral traditions β history passed from generation to generation
- Skilled weavers and craftspeople
βοΈ Two Different Worldviews
Types of Colonisation
| Region | European Power | Method of Control |
|---|---|---|
| South Asia (India) | Britain (East India Co.) | Defeated rulers, collected taxes |
| Africa (interior) | Multiple European nations | Divided Africa among themselves |
| America / Australia | Britain, France, Holland | Settler colonies β pushed out natives |
| China | Britain, France, USA, Japan etc. | Semi-colony β meddled without taking over |
π Key Events β North America
- 1776 β US Declaration of Independence
- 1803 β Louisiana Purchase from France
- 1825β58 β Natives in USA moved to reserves
- 1832 β Chief Justice Marshall rules Cherokees have sovereignty
- 1838 β Trail of Tears: 15,000 Cherokees forcibly moved; over 3,750 die
- 1849 β Gold Rush; thousands of Europeans pour into California
- 1865β90 β American Indian Wars
- 1867 β Confederation of Canada formed
- 1870 β Transcontinental railway completed (USA)
- 1890 β Bison almost exterminated; native way of life destroyed
- 1892 β American frontier declared "ended"
- 1934 β Indian Reorganisation Act (right to buy land, take loans)
- 1982 β Canada Constitution Act recognises aboriginal rights
How Natives Lost Their Lands
- Forced to sign treaties selling land at very low prices
- Pushed into small "reservations" β often unconnected to their original land
- Moved again whenever gold, oil, or minerals were found on their land
- Justified by calling natives "lazy", "primitive", and "uncivilised"
- Wild bison hunted to near-extinction by 1890, destroying native hunting life
Key Facts
- 350β750 native communities, each with its own language (200 still spoken today)
- Torres Strait Islanders are another indigenous group in the north
- Together, they form 2.4% of Australia's population (2005)
- Most Australian towns are along the coast; the interior is desert
π Europeans in Australia β Timeline
- 1606 β Dutch sight Australia
- 1770 β Captain James Cook reaches Botany Bay (New South Wales)
- 1788 β British penal colony formed; Sydney founded
- 1850 β Self-government granted to Australian colonies
- 1901 β Federation of Australia (6 states)
- 1911 β Canberra established as capital (from Aboriginal word meaning "meeting place")
- 1968 β Anthropologist Stanner's "The Great Australian Silence" lecture
- 1974 β Multiculturalism becomes official policy; White Australia policy ends
- 1992 β Mabo Case: High Court declares terra nullius legally invalid
- 1999 β "National Sorry Day" β apology for stolen children
Winds of Change in Australia
- From the 1970s, Aboriginal cultures began to be studied, respected, and recorded
- University departments set up to study native cultures
- Natives began writing their own histories ("oral history")
- 1974: Multiculturalism policy gives equal respect to all cultures
- 1992: Mabo Case ended terra nullius β recognized native land rights
- 1999: National Sorry Day β public apology for children forcibly separated from families
Terms for Native Peoples
| Term | Meaning / Use |
|---|---|
| Aborigine / Aboriginal | Native peoples of Australia (Latin: from the beginning) |
| Native American / Amerindian | Indigenous people of the Americas |
| First Nations | Organised native groups in Canada (from 1980s) |
| Indigenous People | People belonging naturally to a place |
Includes all Exercise questions + in-text Activity questions
Q1. Comment on any points of difference between the native peoples of South and North America.
North America: Natives lived in small bands and villages. They did not produce surplus, had no kingdoms, and relied on hunting, gathering, and simple farming. They were displaced mainly from the 18thβ19th centuries by British, French, and later American settlers. Their key difference from South Americans was their rejection of land ownership and their gift-based economy.
Q2. Other than the use of English, what other features of English economic and social life do you notice in nineteenth-century USA?
Social: Class distinction (only white men had democratic rights and property rights), concept of "civilisation" defined by literacy and religion, practice of slavery, persecution of minorities, the idea of "progress" and "development" of land.
Q3. What did the 'frontier' mean to the Americans?
β’ Opportunity β new land to own and develop
β’ Progress β expansion of "civilisation"
β’ Escape β from poverty in Europe
The frontier "ended" in 1892 when the entire continent was divided into states. After that, the USA began expanding overseas (Hawaii, Philippines).
Q4. Why was the history of the Australian native peoples left out of history books?
β’ Australian history was written as if it began with Captain Cook's "discovery" in 1770.
β’ Aborigines had oral traditions β no written records, which Europeans did not value.
β’ The government called Australia terra nullius (land belonging to nobody), denying Aboriginal existence.
β’ This changed only after anthropologist W.E.H. Stanner's 1968 lecture on "The Great Australian Silence."
Q5 (Essay). How satisfactory is a museum gallery display in explaining the culture of a people?
β’ Preserves artefacts, tools, clothing, art of native cultures
β’ Gives visual understanding to visitors
β’ The new National Museum of the American Indian (USA) is curated by Indians themselves β more authentic
Limitations:
β’ Displays objects out of context β loses their meaning
β’ Cannot capture oral traditions, music, or spiritual practices
β’ Often shows culture as "frozen in time" β ignores how cultures evolve
β’ May reflect the outsider's view, not the community's own perspective
Museums are a starting point, but must be supported by oral history, community participation, and living cultural practices.
Q6 (Essay). Imagine an encounter in California in about 1880 between four people: a former African slave, a Chinese labourer, a German who came in the Gold Rush, and a native of the Hopi tribe. Narrate their conversation.
African Slave (freed): "I was brought here in chains, made to work on plantations. They said we were property. Now I am free, but they still treat us as less than equal."
Chinese Labourer: "We built the railways with our sweat and blood. But they ban us from citizenship, from owning land. They use us and then throw us away."
German (Gold Rush immigrant): "I came for a better life. I was poor in Germany. Here I found opportunity β but now I see the price others have paid. This land's wealth came at a great cost to others."
All four were marginalized in different ways by the same system of white European power that built the USA.
IN-TEXT ACTIVITIES
Activity 1: Discuss the different images that Europeans and native Americans had of each other, and the different ways in which they saw nature.
Europeans saw Native Americans as: "Uncivilised" (because they had no literacy, organised religion, or cities). Some romanticised them as "noble savages" (Rousseau). Jefferson called them unfit to survive.
View of Nature:
β’ Natives: Land, water, animals are sacred. One takes only what is needed. No one can "own" nature.
β’ Europeans: Nature is a resource to be cleared, farmed, and exploited for maximum profit.
Activity 2: Comment on the population data (USA 1820 vs Spanish America 1800).
In Spanish America (1800), natives (7.5 million) were still the largest group, and mixed Europeans (5.3 million) were significant β showing intermarriage was more common in Spanish colonies. Whites (3.3 million) were fewer than in the USA.
Key observation: In the USA, natives were reduced to a tiny minority due to brutal displacement, disease, and warfare. In Spanish America, more mixing occurred, but native numbers were still greatly reduced from pre-colonial times.
Activity 3: Comment on Howard Spodek's statement: "For the indigenous people the effects of the American Revolution were exactly opposite to those of the settlers."
β’ Expansion β Contraction: Their land shrank as settlers moved westward
β’ Democracy β Tyranny: They had no voting rights or citizenship
β’ Prosperity β Poverty: Their resources (bison, land) were taken away
β’ Liberty β Confinement: They were locked into reservations
The same Revolution that freed the settlers enslaved and marginalised the original inhabitants.
Activity 4: Compare the political situations of native peoples in British India and Australia in 1911.
Australia (1911): Aborigines had virtually no political rights. The "White Australia" policy was in force. They were not recognised as citizens and had no land rights. Their cultures were being systematically ignored. It would take until 1974 for multicultural policies and until 1992 for land rights recognition.
In both cases, native/local peoples were treated as inferior, but Indians had a stronger, organised movement for rights.
| Fact | Detail |
|---|---|
| Earliest North American inhabitants | Came from Asia 30,000 years ago via Bering Straits |
| Trail of Tears | 1838, forced march of Cherokees; 3,750+ died |
| Chief Seattle's letter | 1854 β "How can you buy or sell the sky?" |
| US Gold Rush | 1849, California; triggered railway building with Chinese labour |
| Australian Dreamtime | Aboriginal concept where past and present are not separate |
| Terra Nullius | "Land of nobody" β used to justify taking Aboriginal land; invalidated in 1992 (Mabo case) |
| National Sorry Day | 26 May 1999 β Australia apologises for stealing Aboriginal children |
| Indian Reorganisation Act | 1934, USA β gave natives right to buy land and take loans |
| Canberra | Means "meeting place" in Aboriginal language |
| Canada Constitution Act | 1982 β recognised Aboriginal and treaty rights |
