 A Diverse Church |
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Native Americans near Ft. Keogh, Montana, 1881-1890
Taken by an amateur photographer, Father Eli Washington John Lindesmith.
In the 1880s, Lindesmith served as a chaplain for the Fifth Army Regiment at Fort Keogh in
Montana and a missionary to the Crow, Northern Cheyenne and Sioux peoples of Montana.
The Catholic University of America
E.W.J. Lindesmith Collection
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Native Americans
Missions to Native Americans extended back to the earliest days of the French and Spanish
settlements in North America. In the nineteenth century several missionaries, among them
Bishop Frederic Baraga, Rev. Samuel Mazzuchelli, Rev. Pierre De Smet, and Rev. John
Brouillet, carried on missionary work with native peoples from the Chippewa in Michigan to
the Yakima in Washington state. In the last quarter of the nineteenth century, Catholic
missionary activity expanded enormously, from twenty priests, seven small schools and
25,000 Catholic Native Americans to 140 priests, 60 schools and 50,000 Catholic Natives
Americans.
If the Catholic missions prospered at the end of the nineteenth century many Native
Americans did not. Encroaching white settlement touched off the wars between the United
States and the Native American peoples from the Sioux in the north to the Nez Perce in the
West to the Apache in the southwest. By the 1890s virtually all Native American resistance
had been broken. In 1887, the government passed the Dawes Act, which allowed whites to
take up the 'surplus' reserved lands of Native Americans. The act, historian Jacqueline
Peterson suggests, resulted in an estimated loss of 500 million acres by tribes of their
reserved lands.
Most American Catholics, like most Americans, believed that Native Americans would best be
served by casting off old customs and assimilating into the American mainstream. Catholic
'Indian' schools in the west carried out this assimilationist policy. Catholic
missionaries were often caught between the government and Native Americans as lands were
stripped away from native peoples. Rev. Pierre De Smet was a good example. In the 1850s
and 1860s he helped the United States
government negotiate treaties with the Sioux. Noting the seemingly inexorable waves of
white settlers flooding the west, he believed that native peoples had no recourse but to
seek the protection of the American government. Yet as De Smet grew older he became more
and more disillusioned with the government as it supported further and further
encroachments on the
territories of the peoples he loved.
In 1891, the Salish people were forced from their longtime lands in Montana's Bitterroot
Valley. Before leaving they conducted an all night prayer vigil at St. Mary's mission
there. On the march to their new reservation they chanted the Dies Irae, "the Days of
Wrath."
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