The American Indian Experience

  • ABOUT
  • ADVISORY BOARD
  • SKILLS CENTER
  • HELP
  • HOME
  • BROWSE
  • RESOURCES
  • INDEX
  • BLOG

Browse

For information on and instructions for the browse, click here.
Advanced users: try our Index.


ADVANCED SEARCH

Categories
Skip Navigation Links.
Expand Arts and MediaArts and Media
Expand Business and LaborBusiness and Labor
Expand Children and FamiliesChildren and Families
Collapse ContactContact
Abuse
Addictions
Contact
Diseases
Massacres
Relations with African Americans
Slavery
Starvation
Sterilization
Trade and Commerce
Expand CultureCulture
Expand EducationEducation
Expand Governance and LawGovernance and Law
Expand Health and EnvironmentHealth and Environment
Expand HistoryHistory
Expand IconsIcons
Expand Indian Nations and TribesIndian Nations and Tribes
Expand LiteratureLiterature
Expand Migration and RelocationMigration and Relocation
Expand MusicMusic
Expand OrganizationsOrganizations
Expand PlacesPlaces
Expand Social IssuesSocial Issues
Expand SpiritualitySpirituality
Expand Warfare and ResistanceWarfare and Resistance
Expand WomenWomen
Sub-Categories
Skip Navigation Links.
Collapse Boston Massacre, 1770Boston Massacre, 1770
Illustrations
Fort Dearborn Massacre, Chicago, Ill., 1812
Fort Dearborn Massacre, Fort William Henry, N.Y., 1757
Gnadenhutten Massacre, Gnadenhutten, Ohio, 1782
Expand MassacresMassacres
Sand Creek Massacre, Colo., 1864
Spirit Lake Massacre, Iowa, 1857
Expand Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890Wounded Knee Massacre, S.D., 1890
Results

Majority Culture Borrowings from Native American Peoples and Cultures
From: The Native Peoples of North America

The bloody massacre perpetrated in King Street, Boston, on March 5, 1770. (Courtesy of the Library of Congress.)

All Rights Reserved. © ABC-Clio
130 Cremona Drive, Santa Barbara, CA 93117, (800) 368-6868, GWTechsupport@abc-clio.com
Contact Us