Why did reformers consider the Indian reservation system a failure? What did they want to put in its place?

What will be an ideal response?


Answer: The ideal answer should include:



  • Reformers pointed out that life on the reservation was incompatible with traditional Indian life.


  • At the same time, the reservation system kept Indians isolated and unprepared to join mainstream American society.


  • In 1879 reformers began to call for the assimilation of Native Americans into American life.


  • Reformers believed that Indians should adopt white middle-class Protestant values.


  • Reform also received support from people who simply wanted to claim Indian land.


  • The Indian boarding school movement sought to convert Indian children to Christianity and to force them to abandon their Native culture and learn literacy skills.


  • The Dawes Severalty Act of 1887 allowed reservation land to be divided into separate farms for individual Native American families.

History

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