The objective of the Dawes Act was to assimilate Native American Indians into mainstream US society by annihilating their cultural and social traditions. The land allotted to the Indians included desert or near-desert lands unsuitable for farming. In addition, the techniques of self-sufficient farming were much different from their tribal way of life. Many Indians did not want to take up agriculture, and those who did want to farm could not afford the tools, animals, seed, and other supplies necessary to get started. There were also problems with inheritance. Often young children inherited allotments that they could not farm because they had been sent away to boarding schools. Multiple heirs also caused a problem; when several people inherited an allotment, the size of the holdings became too small for efficient farming.
Answer:
No
Explanation:
Native Americans actively resisted the development and expansion of the United States. The aligned themselves with the British and Spain. Their intervention made it more difficult to find stability in the early years and affected the relations between the different parts of the union.
However, there were crucial victories for the US early on, as the treaties with the Iroquois and the Creek Indians.
As the 19th century advanced, and the US moved west, the relations became even tenser.
This would be immigration.
The first and only president of the Confederate States of America was "Jefferson Davis", since he came to power at the very beginning of the Civil War, and after the Civil War the Confederacy ceased to be.