Nonfiction
Book
Availability
Details
PUBLISHED
DESCRIPTION
47 pages : illustrations (some color), color map ; 25 cm
ISBN/ISSN
LANGUAGE
SERIES
NOTES
Incident at White Bird Canyon: A brief history : Unkept promises -- One with the Earth: the land its people : Abundance of Appaloosas -- Religion, spirits, and stories : First missionaries -- Chief Joseph and the long flight : "From where the sun now stands" -- Betrayal and renewal: The Nez Perce today : Two chiefs named Joseph -- Ten fascinating facts about the Nez Perce
The Nez Perce were once the largest group of Native Americans in the western United States. Their number once exceeded 6,000 in over 50 separate tribes. Except for occasional clashes with neighbors, the Nez Perce lived peacefully in lush homelands on the Snake River in central Idaho, western Oregon, and western Washington. They welcomed Lewis and Clark and the Corps of Discovery in 1804. The Nez Perce coexisted peacefully with whites for decades. However, a series of treaties in the mid-1800s greatly reduced their territory to make room for white settlers. In 1877, federal authorities ordered all Nez Perce to move within the boundaries of a reservation. A handful of Nez Perce warriors attacked and killed some white settlers in protest. Their hostile acts led to the Nez Perce War of 1877 and changed the lives of the Nez Perce forever
1100L