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They served in Indian Territory and Arkansas during the war and 21 of them never came home—a large loss to the already diminished numbers of the tribe. [18] Allegawaho, head chief of the Kaws [19] in the 1860s and 1870s, in a photo from 1867. After the war, European-Americans in Kansas agitated for removal of Indians, including the Kaw ...
Fort Larned (central Kansas) was established in 1859 as a base of military operations against hostile Indians of the Central Plains, to protect traffic along the Santa Fe Trail and after 1861 became an agency for the administration of the Central Plains Indians by the Bureau of Indian Affairs under the terms of the Fort Wise Treaty of 1861.
View history; General ... American Indian reservations in Kansas (6 P) S. ... Wyandot (5 C, 21 P) Pages in category "Native American tribes in Kansas"
Kansas Territory was established on May 30, 1854, by the Kansas–Nebraska Act.This act established both the Nebraska Territory and Kansas Territory. The most momentous provision of the Act in effect repealed the Missouri Compromise of 1820 and allowed the settlers of Kansas Territory to determine by popular sovereignty whether Kansas would be a free state or a slave state.
Native American tribes in Kansas (12 C, 24 P) O. ... Texas–Indian Wars (65 P) Pages in category "Native American history of Kansas" ... Pawnee Indian Museum State ...
1852: Wyandots attempts to establish a Territorial government in their section of Indian territory. 1854: Nearly all the tribes in the eastern part of the Territory cede the greater part of their lands prior to the passage of the Kansas territorial act and are eventually moved south to the Indian Territory (the future state of Oklahoma.)
In the 19th century, the Osage were forced by the United States to move from modern-day Kansas into Indian Territory (present-day Oklahoma), and the majority of their descendants live in Oklahoma. In the early 20th century, oil was discovered on their land.
The Organic Act of 1890 reduced Indian Territory to the lands occupied by the Five Civilized Tribes and the Tribes of the Quapaw Indian Agency (at the borders of Kansas and Missouri). The remaining western portion of the former Indian Territory became the Oklahoma Territory .