

(see if you can discover the names the men in this picture as you work through this DIG)
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #1 - How many Native Californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived ?
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Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #2 - How many remained by the beginning of the Gold Rush?
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Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #3 - How many remained by the Civil War period of the 1860s?
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Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #4 - Name this famous Native American who was the last of his tribe to survive. What happened to him in his life and who did he turn to for protection? button
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #5 - In North Eastern California, the Modoc Indian War took place and was a shame felt by the US Military, citizens, and government. Why was this war fought, who wanted it and why? button
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #6 - Name this author who was so outraged by the poor treatment of the Indians that she petitioned the US Congress for better treatment? And then when that failed, wrote a famous book to help all Americans better understand the Indian Issues at the end of the 1800s. Who does she say made a promise to protect the Native Peoples that Americans were obligated to uphold ? button
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #7 - This author, relatively unknown, wrote a book that contains some of the most satirical and revealing insights into how even the US Government Agencies established to help solve the Indian Issues ended up employing men who stole land, food, and money that should have gone to the Native Peoples. What is satire? How is it used to help people deal with difficult issues? And what does this author say came of the treaties made with the Indians ? button
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE # 8 - Sometimes the Indians rebelled when treated so poorly they just could bear it no longer. Tell us about this uprising of Channel Islands region Chumash – what caused it, what happened, and how was it resolved? Eventually this specific Mission, where the trouble began, gave the Indians land that was the reason they were able to later establish a protective reservation and not end up homeless. button
Your Camp Guides: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 7:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #9 - Today, the Indian tribes of California are regaining independent economies through casino attractions, and they in turn are funding better health, education and cultural resources that benefit their own people and visitors to their land. Camp Internet encourages classrooms in the region to visit this beautiful preserve owned by which tribe of Native Peoples? button
Garrett/Mr.Bartlett's: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 9:59AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 When the explores arive ther was 300,000 thousand native americans in Indian population.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:00AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 californians.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:00AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1. When the explorers and settlers arrived, there were 300,000 Native Californians.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 300,000 native amiericans were there.
Garrett/Mr.Bartlett's: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There was about 100,000 Native Americans when the gold rush started.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 100,000 remained after the gold rush
: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There was 3oo,ooo native Americans when the settlers arrived.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1When the explorers arrived there were 13000 californians.
Justin/Travis/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 native Americans left when the settlers arived.
matthew/austin/Mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1
Brian/Josh/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The number of setelers was 300,000.
: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There was ten native amaracans when the setalers arived.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1there were 300,000 indan's
Garrett/Mr.Bartlett's: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 There was only 30,000 people when the 1860's came around.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. By the beginning of the Gold Rush, 100,000 Native Californians remained.
austin&mathew mr Bartletts class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 there was 300,000 setlers when the native americns arived.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 Thirty thousand were still alive after the civil war in 1860.
robert/eaven/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There where 10 native califnians when the setllers and explores arived.
Justin/Travis/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 30,000 native Americans left when the gold rush begain.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:04AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 30,000 were the remainers of the gold rush.
matthew/austin/Mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:04AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1
David/Matt/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:04AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 people there when the selters arived.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:04AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 there 100,000in1848
austin&mathew mr Bartletts class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 100,000 reamaned after the gold rush.
Brian/Josh/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 The number of setlers that remained was 100,000.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi hid in canyons.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 100000 people remained.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 there 100,000in 1848
chynna in Mr.Bartlett`s class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.there was 30,000 when the gold rush began.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3. In the Civil War period, there were only 30,000 left.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 1 out of 10 in the indians lived
austin&mathew mr Bartletts class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 30,000 were still alive after the sivle war.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2In the gold rush 100,000 remained.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 30000 people were left in the 18600s
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 1 out of 10 in the indians lived.
Jonathan Mr.Bartlet's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were30,ooo nitive Americans left
austin&mathew mr Bartletts class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:07AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 they lived in canyons.
Garrett/Mr.Bartlett's: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:08AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishe had a family that all died he was the last one left a sherrif put him in jail not to punish him but to keep him from all the cruel people outside.
Brian/Josh/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:09AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 30,000 people remined after the Civil War.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:09AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3In the civil war about 30,000 people remained.
Natalie and Christina Mr. Bartlett class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:09AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1. There were 300,000 Native Califorian's when the explor's and Setteler's arived.
Justin/Travis/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people left.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The white men wanted the war because they wanted the indians land and that's how the war started.
Kari / Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1. There were 300,000 Native California's when the settler's arrived.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 30,000 peoplelived.
chynna in Mr.Bartlett`s class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.there was 30,000 when the gold rush began.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 his name is ishi. He turned to Dr.kreober.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi was his name. his parents died.
Jonathan Mr.Bartlet's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 30000 people were left in the 186oos.
austin&mathew mr Bartletts class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 the white wanted the war
Justin/Travis/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 There were 30,000 Native Americans at the begining of the civil war.
matt/david/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 people there when the selters arived.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4The native american lived in a cayon.
matthew/austin/Mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 ishi hid in canyns.
Kari / Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.There were 100,000 remaining in the Gold Rush.
Natalie and Christina Mr. Bartlett class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2. 100,000 remaind by the beginning of the gold rush.
Jonathan Mr.Bartlet's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 They lived in the canyons.
Sarah & Natalie/ Mr. Bartlett's Class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1- There where 100,000 Native Americans when the settlers and explorers arrived.
Brian/Josh/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:12AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 The name of this fsamous Native American is Ishi.
Alex/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said it to the king.
matt/david/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people at the end of the gold rush.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 the white wanted the war.
Jonathan Mr.Bartlet's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The white wanted the war.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The Modoc war was foght for the captin john.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The white men wanted to go to war so they could get new land.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The wite me stared the war.
Garrett/Mr.Bartlett's: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The war was fought because the white settelers wanted to steal thier land. Captin Jack was the person who wanted the land.
Natalie and Christina Mr. Bartlett class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3. 30,000 people reimaind by the Civil War in the 1860's.
Kari / Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.There were 30,000 people remainding in the Civil War in the 1860's.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:15AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 the girl said it to the king.
Jonathan Mr.Bartlet's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:15AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said to the king.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:15AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4. The name was Ishi who survived longest in his family. When Ishi was wandering, the sherrif of the town locked him up to keep him from prying. Ishi turned to A. L Kroeber for help.
matt/david/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:15AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 There were 30,000 left.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said it to the king.
TravisJustin/Mr.Barttlet: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 His name was Ishi in his life he went into manhood on Mt.Lassen.
Christan/etham-Mr. barrtlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 THe girl said something to the great king.
Brian/Josh/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 They fought this war because the U.S.Government wanted the Indians land.
robert/evan/bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 The
matt/david/Mr.Bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 His name was Ishi. His family died and the whites took his home.
Paul/Mr.Bartlett.: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 she says that the spainish guy made the promise.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land.
Natalie and Christina Mr. Bartlett class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was the last to surive and he turned to seven survier's that learned to live on the land hiding away in cave's.
Kari / Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was the last person to survive and he turned to seven survivers for portection.
Sarah & Natalie/ Mr. Bartlett's Class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1- There where 300,000 Native Americans when the explorers and settlers arrived.
TravisJustin/Mr.Barttlet: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 His name was Ishi in his life he went into manhood on Mt.Lassen he had to run away from whites a shereff from a town to keep him safe.
Ellen &Amber/ Mr. Bartlett's class: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The war was fought because the indians wouldn't give up their land. The governers wanted the war so they could have the land for their own.
richie&todd mr.bartlett: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 10:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 the indansstole stuf.
Paula/Macias/Tulsa: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 2:13PM PST (-0800 GMT)
5. Ishi was the last of his tribe. His mother died and the rest of his family. Dr. Kroeber was the person that Ishi turned to for protection.
Paula/Macias/Tulsa: . . . . Tue, Jan 22, 2:20PM PST (-0800 GMT)
4. Ishi was the last of his tribe. His mother died and the rest of his family. Dr. Kroeber was the person that Ishi turned to for protection.
5. The white people wanted the indians land.
L.Walker: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 9:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Emma and Valerie.Palm View
1.300,000
L.Walker: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 9:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Emma and Valerie.Palm View
1.300,000
L.Walker: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 9:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Emma and Valerie.Palm View
2.100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush.
L.Walker: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 10:15AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Emma and Valerie.Palm View
3.To about thirty by 1860 at the end of the first mission style Reservation system.
L.Walker: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 10:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Angelique & Angelica Palm View School
Overview in 1872 a war was broke out between peaceful California Modoe Indians who were enplpyed and
befriended by white settlers and the U.S. Government.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 10:58AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Angelique & Angelica Palm View School
The government was acting in the iterests of a small group
of white settles who wanting to seal the Indians land.
Elizabeth V. @Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
"1 There were 300,000 Native Americans when the Mission System began.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1How many Native Californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived ?These California Indians were people who owned no jewels to steal, built not a single castle to over take, held not one famous paintings or exotic treasure.
Francis Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.300,000 natives were there.#2.30,000 were there.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1How many Native Californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived ?These California Indians were people who owned no jewels to steal, built not a single castle to over take, held not one famous paintings or exotic treasure.
Susan Wong at nightingale M.S : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 1 is the native california population was 300,000
Karina Moran at Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:08AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #1 -For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:08AM PST (-0800 GMT)
"1" native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769,
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:08AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Andrea Morales Nightingale For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning
Elizabeth V. @Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:08AM PST (-0800 GMT)
A. #2 tere was about 30,000 native americans that remained in 1680
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
"1"How many remained by the beginning of the Gold Rush? about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
"2"How many remained by the beginning of the Gold Rush? about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination.
Susan Wong at nightingale M.S : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:10AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 2 About 100,000 remain in the Gold Rush
Karina Moran at Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #2 -For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale. This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 Andrea Morales about thirty thousand
Chan Mi Kim: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. By the beginning of the Gold Rush, 100,000 Native Californians remained.
Chan Mi Kim: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:14AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 There were 30,000 left.
Susan Wong at nightingale M.S : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For #3 This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive.
Chan Mi Kim@NgaleM,S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 His name was Ishi in his life he went into manhood on Mt.Lassen he had to run away from whites a shereff from a town to keep him safe.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:17AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 - How many remained by the Civil War period of the 1860s? Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale.
Chan Mi Kim@NgaleM,S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:17AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 californians.
Elizabeth V. @Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
A #3 About 30,000 Native Americans were left by the Civil war period.
Chan Mi Kim@NgaleM,S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:18AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Question 1= How Many Native Americans were there when the explores and settles arrived? There were 300,000 Native Ameriacans that arrived.
Mario Hernandez: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 - How many Native Californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived ? There where 100,000 Native Americans when the settlers and explorers arrived.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 Indians
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Hat whats up?
Chan Mi Kim@NgaleM,S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 the girl said it to the king.
Karina Moran at Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #3-Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale. This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive. Why were they nearly exterminated? For one thing only: LAND.
Mario Hernandez: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 - How many Native Californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived ? There where 100,000 Native Americans when the settlers and explorers arrived.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Andrea Morales Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale.
Chan Mi Kim@NightingaleMS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:21AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 the indansstole stuf.
Susan Wong at nightingale M.S : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 4 Ishi is one of the surive Dr. Kroeber rescued Ishi.
Elio Vega: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4
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Ishi, Last of His Tribe
Who was Ishi ?
Ishi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen. His tribal group were the Yaha and lived for generations in relative isolation, with only infrequent contact with their neighboring tribes, who included the Maidu to the south. The Yahi had lived in seclusion in their region long before the first white settlers arrived, and continued to live there until the early 1900s. During the Gold Rush of the mid 1800s, they were able to survive the first influx of white people by retreating to the more remote canyons of the backcountry, and did not set out to make war on the invaders. When they did have contact with the whites, they drew maps in the earth to show them where they could find the gold dust they sought, and sent them on their way to more profitable mining elsewhere.
Yana style house built by Ishi behind the museum in San Francisco. Ishi appears to be flintknapping in the doorway.
Eventually the whites did come upon the Yahi with irreversible violence and slaughtered all but seven of the tribe without any provocation. These seven survivors included Ishi, then a young boy, his young female cousin, his mother and grandparents, his uncle, and an older boy. The seven learned to live invisibly on the land, hiding away in shelters and caves, making sure no arrowhead or trap, not even a footprint was left out where a white man might find it. For many years they were invisible. And eventually the grandparents passed on from old age, while the older boy was killed when he decided to blow up a white man's munitions pile.
But one year, white men working on a logging project did find their cave and stole all of the family's baskets and goods. In their efforts to escape, the female cousin and uncle were lost in the river. For a short time Ishi remained hidden with his sickly mother until she too passed away, leaving Ishi alone in the world. After a period of terrible grief and loneliness, Ishi became so feverish and distraught that he somehow wandered down out of the mountains and was found crouched in a coral in Oroville.
The Sheriff of the town locked Ishi up in the jail - not to punish him, but to keep him safe from the prying and cruel local people who treated him like a curiosity or a freak. The Sheriff let a foremost anthropologist, A.L. Kroeber ( whose works we use in the Camp as resources ), know that a native man from the wilderness had stumbled into the town, and Dr. Kroeber soon came and rescued Ishi. He offered Ishi the choice of going to live with others of his language group who were on reservations, or to come with him and help record the ways of his people for Kroeber's University of California Museum, then housed in San Francisco.
Ever since Ishi was a little boy, he had been watching the railroad's black smoking monster wind its way along the Sacramento Valley from his hide-outs in the foothills and mountains of the Sierras. He also had had dreams that one day he would visit the land at the edge of the world where California met the oceans he had heard about. Dr. Kroeber was able to communicate this choice to Ishi because he had lived with another Indian tribe in the past and learned enough of their language to be able to speak with Ishi.
Ishi gave the choices serious thought, and selected to go with Dr. Kroeber who spoke his language, and was a man he found he could trust. Once living in the Museum, Ishi began to recreate the tools and begin to practice many of the ways of his people. He had the free run of the Sutro forest next to the museum, and taught a young friend of Dr. Kroeber's how to make a bow and arrow and hunt. Ishi was eventually reunited with baskets and blankets that had been stolen from his last home, and was deeply moved when an anonymous source mailed back his lost quiver and sacred bundle to him.
After a few years of quietly asking Ishi if he would consider taking Kroeber and the young apprentice back up to the mountains to show them his homeland, Ishi was finally ready to return to the rivers, canyons and mountains of the backcountry he had loved as a boy and hidden in as a young man. During this journey, the three lived the Yahi way, and visited many of the sites that were etched in Ishi's memory. It was a wonderful trip for the three friends - one of freedom, exploration and reverence for a way of life that would no longer be.
Producing a bow on Deer Creek, 1914
The friends returned to San Francisco, and Ishi continued to be a figurehead at the museum, showing visitors how to make bows and arrows, and helping Kroeber to better record the Yahi story. Ishi lived his last days at the museum, and considered it his men's meeting house, a place where he was safe and could discuss the sacred aspects of life with people who understood and respected his people, and who felt a true tenderness for Ishi as the last man of his tribe.
Ishi,last of his tribe, was written in 1964 by Theodora Kroeber, wife of Dr. Kroeber. She intimately understood the cultural exchange that took place between her husband and Ishi, and using first hand accounts and resources, wove a story of Ishi's life into this 200 page book, now available in a small paperback version. We recommend this book for anyone interested in the lifeways of Native Americans in the California Backcountry, and who is aware of the unspeakable tragedies and enduring beauty inherent in the history of the early Californians.
From the left: Sam Batwi (Northern/Central Yana Indian), Dr. A.L. Kroeber (University of California Anthropologist) and Ishi (Yahi or Southern Yana Indian), 1911. Photo Credit: University of California Berkeley,Phoebe Hearst Museum of Anthropology
Elizabeth V. @Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
The last native American's name was Ishi. He went through manhood in Mt. Lassen also he had to run away from the White folk. He turned for protection to a town's Sherrif
Llamil Castillo@ Nightingale/ Mason: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:23AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 native Americans when the settlers arived.
Llamil Castillo@ Nightingale/ Mason: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:24AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. By the beginning of the Gold Rush, 100,000 Native Californians remained.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:24AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 100,000 remained after the gold rush
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:25AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Andrea MoralesIshi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen. His tribal group were the Yaha and lived for generations in relative isolation,
Karina Moran at Nightingale MS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:26AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #4-His name was Ishi. His friends returned to San Francisco, and Ishi continued to be a figurehead at the museum, showing visitors how to make bows and arrows, and helping Kroeber to better record the Yahi story. Ishi lived his last days at the museum, and considered it his men's meeting house, a place where he was safe and could discuss the sacred aspects of life with people who understood and respected his people, and who felt a true tenderness for Ishi as the last man of his tribe.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:27AM PST (-0800 GMT)
..
Llamil Castillo@ Nightingale/ Mason: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 His name was Ishi in his life he went into manhood on Mt.Lassen he had to run away from whites a shereff from a town to keep him safe.
Marco Baca at N.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1#. There were 300,000 people there when the selters arived.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About 30,000 Native Americans were left by the Civil war period.
Llamil Castillo@ Nightingale/ Mason: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 Indians.... =)
Marco Baca at N.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. By the beginning of the Gold Rush, 100,000 Native Californians remained.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
# 4 Ishi is one of the surive Dr. Kroeber rescued Ishi.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land.
Mario Hernandez: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 - How many remained by the beginning of the Gold Rush?100,000 remained after the gold rush
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5Andrea Morales The American's govarnment wanted the Indian's land
Marco Baca at N.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About 30,000 Native Americans were left by the Civil war period.
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769.
#2For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush
#3Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale
#4IshiIshi, and using first hand accounts and resources, wove a story of Ishi's life into this 200 page book, now available in a small paperback version.
#5
Mario Hernandez: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
# 4 Ishi is one of the surive Dr. Kroeber rescued Ishi.
Llamil Castilloaz: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said something to the great king
Henry Zhu: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 Indians........
: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Marlene Mayorga For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning.
#2 In the Gold Rush, ther wher about thirty thousand by 1860
#3 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000.
#4 Ishi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen. His tribal group were the Yaha and lived for generations in relative isolation.
cesar felix : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land
Llamil Castillo : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said it to the king.
Jennifer, Mr. Torres, laacad.: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 11:57AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1There are 3,000,000 Mission System began in 1969.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:09PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 For a native populution to go from 300,000 when the Mission Systom began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush.
Miguel ,Stephanie ,Mr.Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:09PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There was about 30 thousand Indians.
Alondra,E lsa,Mr.Torres,LAAMP: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:12PM PST (-0800 GMT)
1# There were 300,000 Californians explorers and settlers .
Alondra,E lsa,Mr.Torres,LAAMP: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:13PM PST (-0800 GMT)
1# There were 300,000 Californians explorers and settlers .
Jennifer, Mr. Torres, laacad.: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:15PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Gold Rush.
Alondra,E lsa,Mr.Torres,LAAMP: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:15PM PST (-0800 GMT)
1# There were 300,000 Californians explorers and settlers .
Jennifer, Mr. Torres, laacad.: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:15PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Gold Rush.
Jennifer, Mr. Torres, laacad.: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:15PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Gold Rush.
Jennifer, Mr. Torres, laacad.: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:15PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Gold Rush.
Victor,Araceli,Mr.Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:16PM PST (-0800 GMT)
How many native californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived? There were 10 people there
Victor,Araceli,Mr.Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:17PM PST (-0800 GMT)
How many native californians were there when the explorers and settlers arrived? There were 10 people there.
Alondra,Elsa,Mr.Torres,LAAMP: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:19PM PST (-0800 GMT)
2#There were 100,000 peoplo remained by the begining of the gold rush.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:19PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About thirty thousand by 1860.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:24PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About thirty thousand by 1860.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:24PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About thirty thousand by 1860.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:26PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:28PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Michelle, Felipe, Mr. Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:28PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Viicky, Kimberlyn, Mr . Torres LAAMS : . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:29PM PST (-0800 GMT)
For a Native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission system began in 1769 ,100,000 in 1848 at the begining of theGold Rush to about thirty thousand by 1860.
Victor,Araceli,Mr.torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:34PM PST (-0800 GMT)
How many remined by the begining of the gold rush?
There were 3,000 people
Victor,Araceli,Mr.torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 0:34PM PST (-0800 GMT)
How many remined by the begining of the gold rush?
There were 3,000 people
Mayra-Mr. Torres ,L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:47PM PST (-0800 GMT)
1#There were 300,000 californians explorers and settle.
Joanna A, Amparo C -Mr.Torres , L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:48PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1. There were 300,000 Californians explores and Settler.
Vanessa,Guadalupe,mr.Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:50PM PST (-0800 GMT)
For a native poplation to go from 300,000 when the system began in 1769.
Marvin R,Bryant H,Mr. Torres G: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:54PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The California native peoples lived simple lives, close
to native, and in total, substainable, logical harmony
with their natural surroundings for thousands of years.
Sandra B, Denia C - Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:57PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 neative californians when the explors and settlers arrived.
SandraSalas, Cristina Ortega, Mr.TorresG: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 2:57PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The California native peopels lived,closed to nature,and
in total,sustainable logical harmony with their natural surroundings for thousan ds of years.
Joanna A, Amparo C, -Mr. Torres , L .A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:00PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1. There were 300,000 Californians explores and Settler.
Joanna A, Amparo C, -Mr. Torres , L .A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:00PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1. There were 300,000 Californians explores and Settler.
Mayra- Mr.Torres-L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:02PM PST (-0800 GMT)
2# In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Golf Rush.
Joanna A, Amparo C, -Mr. Torres , L .A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:06PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. There was abaout 100,000 Native Americas when the gold rush started.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:08PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Laams.Guadalupe,vanessa,MR. torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
This means that for every 10 people in their population only one was left alive.
Denia C, Sandra B - Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:11PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 100,000 remained by the beginning of the gold rush.
Joanna A, Amparo C, -Mr. Torres , L .A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:12PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2. There was abaout 100,000 Native Americas when the gold rush started.
Mayra-Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:14PM PST (-0800 GMT)
3# About thirty thousand
Mayra-Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:14PM PST (-0800 GMT)
3# About thirty thousand
Mayra-Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:14PM PST (-0800 GMT)
3# About thirty thousand
Luis,Eleno,Mr.Torres: . . . . Wed, Jan 23, 3:17PM PST (-0800 GMT)
There were 10 people.
Miramonte/Chris: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The native population was 300,000 when the Mission System began.
Danny tulsa ms popetrio: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
there were 300,000 californian exploers there.
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were about 300,000 native californians.
Krystina Tulsa Ms.Papitro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:16AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.There were 300,000 Californians.
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination.
Francis Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:19AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4.Ishi was the indian.He was protected by a young boy, his young female cousin, his mother and grandparents, his uncle, and an older boy.#5.This war was fought because the whites wanted to steal the Modac's islands.The whites wanted a war.It happened because the Modac refused to give the whites the islands.
rocio tulsa ms. papietor: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.From 10 people there was 1 left alive.
Danny tulsa ms popetrio: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
there was about 100,000 native americas when the gold rush stared
Janette Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
There were only 10 people.
Seung Tulsa MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:20AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were 300,000 Californians was at the Mission System.
Krystina Tulsa Ms.Papitro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.100,000 people remaind.
Danny tulsa ms popetrio: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
about thirty thousand.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapletro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:22AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were 300,000 Californians explores and Settler.
rocio tulsa ms. papietor: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:23AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.There were 100,000 people left in the Gold Rush.
Arturo: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:24AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were about 300,000 native californians.
Seung Tulsa MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:25AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.The Gold Rush started 1849.
Arturo: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:26AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:27AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale. This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive. Why were they nearly exterminated? For one thing only: LAND.
KrystinaTulsa Ms.Papitro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.30,000 remained.
Arturo: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.There was only 30,000 soilders left.
Danny tulsa ms popetrio: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:28AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Daisy/Tulsa/Mpapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were 300,000 native Californians.
Arturo: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen.
c /]: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
.There where 300,000 californias in the Mission sistem.
Janette Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were 300,000 Natives Californias before the Explores and Settlers arrived.
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen.
rocio tulsa ms. papietor: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.From 300,000 it went down to 30,000 in less than 100 years.
Omar/tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There where 300,000 Native Californians.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapletro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2. In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Golf Rush.
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5.They needed land for farming.
KrystinaTulsa Ms.Papitro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.His name is Ishi.
Arturo: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:33AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5.They needed land for farming.
Seung Tulsa MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:33AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.Thirty thousand people were still alive from Civil War.
Janette Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
There were only 100,000 by the gold rush days.
Christina/Mrs.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 Native Californians when the explorers and the settlers arrived.
carlos-Tulsa-M.PApietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.There where 1 peaple still alive
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1#When the explorers arrived there was 300,000 thousand native americans in Indian population.
Ariel/M.Papretro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There where 300,000 Native Califonias.
Omar/tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.Only one was alive.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapletro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.About thirty thousand by 1860
Daisy/Tulsa/Mpapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.There were 100,000 at the beginning of the gold rush.
Alfonso Ms Papietro tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1/300,000 natives and 30,000 explorerers and settlers2/100,000 people remained3/Only 30,000 were left4/It was ishi and he was protected by dr. Kroeber5/The war was fought for land the government wanted it6/It was Helen Hunt Jackson And she wrote it so it can help natives
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2#There was about 100,000 native americans when the gold rush started.
Danny tulsa ms popetrio: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
The war was fought because the indians would not give up their land.
KrystinaTulsa Ms.Papitro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.His name is Ishi and he survived by hideing in caves.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapletro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:38AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was the last in his tribe
Alyssa&kirstin: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.There were about 300,000 Native Californians.
Omar/tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.From 300,000 it whent down to 30,000 in less than 100 years.
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3#There was only 30,000 people when the 1860's came around.
Christina Mrs.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:41AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 By the beging of the gold rush there were 100,000 remained
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:41AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4#His name was Ishi,he was a Yahi Indian.
Francis Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:42AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6.Helen Hunt Jackson.she said it to Spain.#8.There was a fight on Feb 21, 1824.Two indians died.
Omar/Tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:43AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Talal-Tulsa-Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:43AM PST (-0800 GMT)
6.The spanish made a promise to the Indians and the person who protected the Indians was Helen Hunt Jackson.
Arturo MsPapietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:43AM PST (-0800 GMT)
6.The spanish made a pro mise to the Indians and the person who protected the Indians was Helent Hunt Jackson.
TUL: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:44AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.100,000 people remained.
Janette Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
There were only about thirty thousand by 1860.
carlos-Tulsa-M.PApietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.There where 300,000
Francis Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9.It was the Taquitz.
Rocio Vanessa Tulsa Ms. Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4. Ishi he was a Yahi Inian who was born and grew were the Yahi and lived for genertions in relative isolation, with only in frequent contact with their neighboring tribes.
Alfonso Ms Papietro tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:46AM PST (-0800 GMT)
8/ A fight started with two indians alot of spaniards and the indians died plus the mission was set on fire
Kirstin&AlysssaMPapietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:47AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.100,000 people remained.
Carlos-Tulsa-M.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.In the 1860's there were 30,000 Natives left.
Ariel/M.Papretro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2.There were 100,000 Native Califonias remained.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5.Andrea Morales The American's govarnment wanted the Indian's land.
Carlos-Tulsa-M.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:52AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4.Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Daisy/Tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:52AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.About 30,000 by 1860 at the end of the first mission -style reservation system.
Rocio Vanessa Tulsa Ms. Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:53AM PST (-0800 GMT)
4. They needed land for farming.
KrystinaTulsa Ms.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:54AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5.A small group of white settlers wanted indian lands but the Modoc refused to sell the lands or move off them to go to a reservation.The white settlers wanted it for farm land.
Ariel/M.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:56AM PST (-0800 GMT)
3.There where 30,000 Cilver War soilders left.
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:57AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5#The white men wanted the war because they wanted the indians land and that's how the war started.
Kirstin&AlysssaMPapietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:57AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.There where 30,000 cilver war soilders left.
Flakron-Tulsa-MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 9:58AM PST (-0800 GMT)
6. The girl said it to the king
Christina Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:00AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 About 30,000 remained by the Civil War of 1860.
Omar/Tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:00AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5.The white men wanted the war because they wanted the indians land and that's how the war started.
Carlos-Tulsa-M.Papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:00AM PST (-0800 GMT)
5.The white men wanted the war because the wanted the indians land and thats how the war started.
Janette Ms.Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:01AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Ishi and family died was the last of his tribe.His mother
Courtney Ms. Papietro Tulsa: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.There were olny 300,000people in a group that survived in there papulation.#2.There were 100,000 people left for the Gold Rush.#3.In the Thirty Thousand atthe beginning of the Gold Rush 1860's at the end of the first mission style reservation system,there must have been a public polikcy of extermation that today seems barbarous and cruelb beyond imagination.#4.The name is Ishi,he turned to Dr.Kerober.
Guillermo and Alex-Tulsa-Ms.papietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:05AM PST (-0800 GMT)
6#Her name was Helen Hunt Jackson.Her book's title was Mission Indians in Southern California.
Julio Rodriguez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 Therewere 100,000 that stood after the gold rush
cesar felix: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:31AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6.The spanish made a promise to the Indians and the person who protected the Indians was Helen Hunt Jackson.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
9
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:32AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 Andrea Morales Helen Hunt Jackson
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
i don't know the answer.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
ERIC
#1 300,000 to 30,000
#2 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush
Francisco Arellano: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:34AM PST (-0800 GMT)
About 300,000 Native
Mario Hernandez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 - How many remained by the Civil War period of the 1860s?.In the 1860's there were 30,000 Natives left
Karina Moran at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #5-In 1872, a war broke out between peaceful California Modoc Indians who were employed and befriended by white settlers, and the U.S. Government. The Government was acting in the interests of a small group of white settlers who wanted to steal the Indians lands. The Modoc refused to sell their lands, refused to be moved off them to a reservation, and therefore the white opponents found war the only way to gain ownership.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
I'm dumb
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
ERIC
#3 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale.
Llamil Castillo@ Nightingale: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 the indans stole stuff.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Do you know the answer?
Elizabeth NIghtingale MS: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 The war was wanted by the White men. They wanted it because they wanted the Modocs land and they did no want to give it up.
Marco Baca @N.M.S: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5-In 1872, a war broke out between peaceful California Modoc Indians who were employed and befriended by white settlers, and the U.S. Government. The Government was acting in the interests of a small group of white settlers who wanted to steal the Indians lands. The Modoc refused to sell their lands, refused to be moved off them to a reservation, and therefore the white opponents found war the only way to gain ownership.
Francisco Arellano: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:38AM PST (-0800 GMT)
About 300
Chan Mi Kim@Nightingale MS: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9.It was the Taquitz.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9 What's up, what do you call a cow with no leg's?
Marco Baca @N.M.S: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
I know you are
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:40AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#10 Ground Beef.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:41AM PST (-0800 GMT)
ERIC
#1 there were 3,000 natives left.
mMario Hernandez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:42AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 - Name this famous Native American who was the last of his tribe to survive. What happened to him in his life and who did he turn to for protection?.Ishi was a Yahi Indian who was born and grew into manhood on the eastern slope of Mount Lassen.
Elio Vega: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:42AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5In North Eastern California, the Modoc Indian War took place and was a shame felt by the US Military, citizens, and government. Why was this war fought, who wanted it and why? Nearly 1,000 army men, at a cost of half a million dollars, were held off by no more than 55 Modoc warriors for over 6 months
Vicky Gomez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:42AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9: it was the Tahquitz Canyon.
mMario Hernandez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:43AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5-In 1872, a war broke out between peaceful California Modoc Indians who were employed and befriended by white settlers, and the U.S. Government. The Government was acting in the interests of a small group of white settlers who wanted to steal the Indians lands. The Modoc refused to sell their lands, refused to be moved off them to a reservation, and therefore the white opponents found war the only way to gain ownership.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:43AM PST (-0800 GMT)
hi
Henry Zhu: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:44AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5. The white men wanted the war because they wanted the indians land and that is how the war started..........
Eric: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
ERIC
#2 1,000
Nightingale: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
# 6 Helen Hunt was the one. And it Was a young girl that said it to the king
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:46AM PST (-0800 GMT)
a cow with no legs
cesar felix: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:46AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#6 The girl said it to the king.
Francisco Arellano: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:47AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1: There were 300,000 Native Americ
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:47AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#11 What would you do if you where Lock in a car and there was a bat?
juan chavez: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1There where 300,000 people when the settlers arrived.
cesar felix: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9: it was the Tahquitz Canyon.
Karina Moran at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #6-Indians in Southern California, by Helen Hunt Jackson, first published.Helen Hunt Jackson notes the following about Spain's good intentions:
"We command," said the Spanish king, "that the sale, grant and composition of lands be executed with such attention that the Indians be left in possession of the full amount of lands belonging to indians.
Francisco Arellano: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:48AM PST (-0800 GMT)
a
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:49AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#12 I would braek the window.
Elizabeth @ Nightingale ms: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 The natives stole things
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Mission Santa Inez
Mission Santa Inés was the nineteenth mission to be founded in the mission system, and was named after St. Agnes. Completing the chain between San Francisco and San Diego, the Mission was dedicated in 1804 by the Father-President Estévan Tápis. Construction was finished right before the earthquake of 1812 destroyed most of the church and damaged the buildings, and the church was rebuilt by 1817 and re-dedicated. A campanario ( bell tower ) of three bells was also erected. Although both of the churches as well as the water system were designed by Father Francisco Javier de Uría, another man; Joseph Chapman, also assisted in the mission’s second construction. Chapman, who had once served with the pirate Hipployte de Bouchard, was employed as a general handyman, and helped to plant vineyards and erect buildings.
Mission Santa Inés was known for it’s rich crops and large herds of cattle, as well as the memorable way the Mission greeted visitors. Being off of the highway and more difficult to access than other Missions, the inhabitants there were grateful for those willing to travel to the semi-secluded mission. When visitors were spotted, the bells of the Mission were rang, and everyone greeted the guests at the front door.
Prosperity ended for Mission Santa Inés in the 1820’s. After Mexico declared her independence from Spain in 1821, the Missions were cut off from supplies and pay for the soldiers, and the Missions had to sustain themselves as well as the military. This resulted in the Indians having to work hard and support the Missions themselves, all the while being abused by the soldiers and the Spaniards. On February 21st 1824, a guard flogged a neophyte corporal visiting from Mission La Purísima, and all of the Indians at the Santa Ines Mission rebelled. In the fight that followed, two Indians were killed, and most of the Mission was destroyed by fire. Although the Indians were rebelling, it is recorded that they rushed to put out the fires at the Mission during the struggle. Military reinforcements from Santa Barbara arrived, and the rebels fled to Mission La Purísima, where they fought severely with the Spaniards, and into the Sierra Madre Mountains, as far as the foothills of the Eastern Sierra Nevadas seeking refuge.
Repair of the Mission was finished in 1832, and secularization took place in 1834. Until 1843, the Mission was divided in half between the padres and the other residents, and an actual physical barrier; the "father’s wall", was erected between them. The Indians gradually left the mission, and between 1844 and 1846, the site was used as temporary quarters for the first educational institution in California: The College of Our Lady of Refuge of Sinners. In 1846, Mission Santa Inés was sold for $7,000 to Mexican business men, Carrillo and Covarrubias. In the same year California was seized by the United States, and all Mission transactions were suspended, until some of the property was later returned to the church.
The Mission was neglected until the new pastor of the Mission; Father Alexander Buckler, started the twenty-year restoration process in 1904. During the restoration process, the campanario was destroyed in 1911 by a storm, and rebuilt with concrete and four bell niches instead of three. This campanario was replaced again in 1948 by the original three bell design so as to look more original. The mission is located in the town of Solvang on State Highway 150, and holds one of the most important art collections in the Mission system.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
are what
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1: Nightigale M.S For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale. This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive. Why were they nearly exterminated? For one thing only: LAND.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:51AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769, to 100,000 in 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush, to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first Mission-style Reservation System, there must have been a public policy of extermination that today seems barbarous and cruel beyond imagination. Reduced from 300,000 to 30,000 in less than 100 years is a tragedy on a mass scale. This means that for every 10 people in their population, only one was left alive. Why were they nearly exterminated? For one thing only: LAND.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:51AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#13 why when you could Unlock the door.
cesar felix: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:51AM PST (-0800 GMT)
8#=A fight started with two indians alot of spaniards and the indians died plus the mission was set on fire
Susan Wong at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:51AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 5 The Government was acting in the interests of a small group of white settlers who wanted to steal the Indians lands. Modoc refused to sell their lands.The government got mad because Modoc won't sell their land. The government do some bad things to them.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:51AM PST (-0800 GMT)
. Thu, Jan 24, 10:50AM PST (-0800 GMT)
Mission Santa Inez Mission Santa Inés was the nineteenth mission to be founded in the mission system, and was named after St. Agnes. Completing the chain between San Francisco and San Diego, the Mission was dedicated in 1804 by the Father-President Estévan Tápis. Construction was finished right before the earthquake of 1812 destroyed most of the church and damaged the buildings, and the church was rebuilt by 1817 and re-dedicated. A campanario ( bell tower ) of three bells was also erected. Although both of the churches as well as the water system were designed by Father Francisco Javier de Uría, another man; Joseph Chapman, also assisted in the mission’s second construction. Chapman, who had once served with the pirate Hipployte de Bouchard, was employed as a general handyman, and helped to plant vineyards and erect buildings. Mission Santa Inés was known for it’s rich crops and large herds of cattle, as well as the memorable way the Mission greeted visitors. Being off of the highway and more difficult to access than other Missions, the inhabitants there were grateful for those willing to travel to the semi-secluded mission. When visitors were spotted, the bells of the Mission were rang, and everyone greeted the guests at the front door. Prosperity ended for Mission Santa Inés in the 1820’s. After Mexico declared her independence from Spain in 1821, the Missions were cut off from supplies and pay for the soldiers, and the Missions had to sustain themselves as well as the military. This resulted in the Indians having to work hard and support the Missions themselves, all the while being abused by the soldiers and the Spaniards. On February 21st 1824, a guard flogged a neophyte corporal visiting from Mission La Purísima, and all of the Indians at the Santa Ines Mission rebelled. In the fight that followed, two Indians were killed, and most of the Mission was destroyed by fire. Although the Indians were rebelling, it is recorded that they rushed to put out the fires at the Mission during the struggle. Military reinforcements from Santa Barbara arrived, and the rebels fled to Mission La Purísima, where they fought severely with the Spaniards, and into the Sierra Madre Mountains, as far as the foothills of the Eastern Sierra Nevadas seeking refuge. Repair of the Mission was finished in 1832, and secularization took place in 1834. Until 1843, the Mission was divided in half between the padres and the other residents, and an actual physical barrier; the "father’s wall", was erected between them. The Indians gradually left the mission, and between 1844 and 1846, the site was used as temporary quarters for the first educational institution in California: The College of Our Lady of Refuge of Sinners. In 1846, Mission Santa Inés was sold for $7,000 to Mexican business men, Carrillo and Covarrubias. In the same year California was seized by the United States, and all Mission transactions were suspended, until some of the property was later returned to the church. The Mission was neglected until the new pastor of the Mission; Father Alexander Buckler, started the twenty-year restoration process in 1904. During the restoration process, the campanario was destroyed in 1911 by a storm, and rebuilt with concrete and four bell niches instead of three. This campanario was replaced again in 1948 by the original three bell design so as to look more original. The mission is located in the town of Solvang on State Highway 150, and holds one of the most important art collections in the Mission system.
cesar felix: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:52AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#7 The natives stole things
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:52AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#11 I would braek the window.
Henry Zhu: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:53AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3. One out of ten in the indians lived...
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:55AM PST (-0800 GMT)
this is so cool
Karina Moran at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:55AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE #7-By J. Ross Browne, Harper and Brothers.That the Government was not to be defeated by its failed benevolent intentions. Voluminous reports were made to Congress, showing that a general reservation system, on the plan so successfully pursued by the Spanish missionaries, would best accomplish the object. It was known that the missions of California had been built chiefly by Indian labor; that during their existence the priests had fully demonstrated the capacity of this race for the acquisition of civilized habits; that extensive vineyards and large tracts of land had been cultivated solely by Indian labor, under their instruction; and that by this humane system of teaching many hostile tribes had been subdued, and enables not only to support themselves, but to render the Missions highly profitable establishments.
Susan Wong at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:55AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 6 Helen Hunt Jackson is the author who wrote the poor treatment for the idians.
: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 10:55AM PST (-0800 GMT)
fuck you
Omar/Tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 2:13PM PST (-0800 GMT)
6.The girl said somthing to the GreatKing.
Omar/Tulsa/MPapietro: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 2:18PM PST (-0800 GMT)
7.The natives steel things.
Flakron-Tulsa-MpapietroThe: . . . . Thu, Jan 24, 2:20PM PST (-0800 GMT)
7.The indans stole stuf
Carlos-TULSA-M.Papietro: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 9:37AM PST (-0800 GMT)
6.The girl said to the king.
Pedro,Fernando,Mr.Torres lams: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:26AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 How many Native C
Irma,Marianita,Mr. Torres @LAAMS : . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were only 3,000 people.
Pedro, Fernando , Mr. Torres lams : . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 It means 10 people in their population
Edgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMSEdgardo,John,Mr. Torres,@LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Ther were 3,000,000 mision system began in 1769.
Pedro ,Fernando, Mr. Torres lams: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:33AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 The begginingof the GoLD Rush to thirty thousand by `1860at the end of the first Mission Style reservation.
Damian,Gerardo,Mr.Torres LAAM: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:35AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Thare ware 300.000 native California when the explorers and settlers aribed.
Damian,Gerardo,Mr.Torres LAAM: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:36AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Thare ware 300.000 native California when the explorers and settlers aribed.
Irma,Marianita,Mr.Torres @LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:39AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 At the beginning of the Gold Rush there were about thrity thousand people.
Pedro,Fernando ,Mr.Torres lams : . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:40AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3They were left 300 people.
Harold,Gustavo, Mr. Torres: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:40AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were 300,000 Native Californians when explorers , and settlers arrived.
Peter .T,Brayan,Mr.Torres,LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The Native Californians arived like thousands of years.
Jonathan, Juan,Mr.Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1# There were about 300,000 Native Californians.
Peter .T,Brayan,Mr.Torres,LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:45AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 The Native Californians arived like thousands of years.
Pedro, Mr.Torres, lams: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:46AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 The important man name was Mr. Ishi's.
David,MrTorres@laacad: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:47AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1They were 30,000native americans.
Jonathan, Juan,Mr.Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:47AM PST (-0800 GMT)
1# There were about 300,000 Native Californians.
Damian,Gerardo,Mr.Torres LAAM: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:52AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 they when about thrity thousand people in Gold Rush.
Pedro,Mr.Torres lams: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 11:55AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 Between peaceful California Modoc Indians who were employed and befriended by while settler's.
David,MrTorres@laacad: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 0:05PM PST (-0800 GMT)
They were still 100,000 remained.
Jonathan, Juan, Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 0:05PM PST (-0800 GMT)
2# There were 100,000 in the 1848 at the beginning of gold rush.
Francisco,Mr.Torres.L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:23PM PST (-0800 GMT)
1.There were 10 Americans there.
Francisco,Mr.Torres.L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:23PM PST (-0800 GMT)
There were 10 Americans
Misael,Mr.Torres,L.A.A.M.S : . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:30PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1. They were 300,000 california.
Yadir G. Rosaura B. Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:31PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 When the explores and settlers arrived there were 300,000 Native Californians.
Santiago,Felipe,: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:32PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1
Santiago,Felipe,Mr: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:32PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1
Santiago,Felipe,Mr: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:32PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1
Jerry G, Juvenal C, LAAMC, MR . TORRES: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:37PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 Every 10 people in their population, on one was left alive.
Shelley L. Yolanda A. Mr. torres L.A.A.M.SSs : . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:38PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 How many native California were there when the explorers and settlers arrived? Ten people in their population only one was left alive.
Brenda,Denia.Mr.Torres.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:38PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were oniy 3,000 people.
Santiago,Felipe,Mr.Torres: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:39PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.How many native californins were thre when the explorese and settlers arred?Therwerd only 3,000 people.
Yadira G. Rosaura B. Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:41PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people remain by the begining of the gold rush.
Brenda,Denia.Mr.Torres.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:42PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 There were oniy 3,000 people.
Joe,F , Juan,C, Mr. Torres LAAM: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:42PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1 This means that for every 10 peopl in their population, only one was left alive.
Misael,Mr.Torres,L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:42PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.100,000 remain afther the gold rush.
Yadira G. Rosaura B. Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:52PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 There were about thirty thousand by 1860.
Misael,Mr. Torres, L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:53PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3 Ther Were 30,000 native america at the begining of the war.
Sntiago,Felipe,Mr.Torres: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 2:54PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.How many remaimed by the begeming of the Gold Rush?
Ther werd 100,000 in 1848 at the begunng of the Gold Rush.
Brenda,Denia,Mr.Torres: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:01PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people remain by the beginning of gold ruch.
Yadira G. Rosaura B. Mr. Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:02PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4 Ishi was the last in his tribe.
Misael,Mr. Torres, L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:04PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#4.Ishe had a family that tall died he was the last one left a sherrfi.
Jerry G, Juvenal C, LAAMC, MR . TORRES: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:09PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2In 1848 at the begging of the GOLD Rush to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first MISSION -style.
Joe,F , Juan,C, Mr. Torres LAAM: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 In 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush , to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first mission styl.
Shelley L. Yolanda A. Mr. Torres L.A.A.S.: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:10PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 How many remained by the beginning of the Gold Rush? In 1848 at the beginning of the Gold Rush to about thirty thousand by 1860 at the end of the first mission style.
Deniea,Brenda,Mr.Torres: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:12PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people remain by the beginnig of the gold ruch.
Yadira G. Rosaura B.Mr.Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:12PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 They faugh this war because the U.S. Goverment wanted the Indians land.
Yadira G. Rosaura B.Mr.Torres L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:12PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5 They faugh this war because the U.S. Goverment wanted the Indians land.
Misael,Mr. Torres, L.A.A.M.S: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:13PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#5.They white men wanted war because they wated the indian land and thats how the war stared.
Joaquin Medina, -Mr. Torres LAACMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:31PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1.there were 300,000 when they arrived.
Joaquin Medina, -Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:39PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2.To 100,000 in 1848 at the begining of the Gold Rush.
Joaquin Medina, -Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:47PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.About thirty thousand remained by the Civil War.
Joaquin Medina, -Mr. Torres LAAMS: . . . . Fri, Jan 25, 3:48PM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.About thirty thousand remained by the Civil War.
Chna mi Kim@Nightingale MS: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:02AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#8 A fight started with two indians alot of spaniards and the indians died plus the mission was set on fire
Chan Mi Kim@Nightingale MS: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:03AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9.It was the Taquitz.
: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:06AM PST (-0800 GMT)
30,000 people reimaind by the Civil War in the 1860's.
: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:09AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#3.About thirty thousand remained by the Civil War.
Elizabeth V@Nightingale MS: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:11AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#8 A fight had begun with two indians. Many Spaniards died and so did many Indians also the mission was set on fire.
Elizabeth V@Nightingale MS: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:13AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9 They are the Taquitz
Susan Wong at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:25AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For #7 The native steel stuff
Francisco Arellano: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:25AM PST (-0800 GMT)
2. In 1769 their were 100,000 in the beginning of 1848 of the Golf Rush.
juan chavez: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:27AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#2 There were 100,000 people left, in the beginning of the gold
rush.
Karina Moran at Nightingale MS : . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:27AM PST (-0800 GMT)
DIG CHALLENGE # 8 - The Indians gradually left the mission, and between 1844 and 1846, the site was used as temporary quarters for the first educational institution in California: The College of Our Lady of Refuge of Sinners. In 1846, Mission Santa Inés was sold for $7,000 to Mexican business men, Carrillo and Covarrubias. In the same year California was seized by the United States, and all Mission transactions were suspended, until some of the property was later returned to the church.
cesar felix : . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#9=They are the Taquitz
Marco Baca @N.M.S: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
#1= For a native population to go from 300,000 when the Mission System began in 1769,
Susan Wong at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:29AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 8 A was fight started with two indians. Many Indians and Spaniards and Indians died also the mission was set on fire.
Susan Wong at Nightingale M.S.: . . . . Mon, Jan 28, 11:30AM PST (-0800 GMT)
For # 9 It was the Taquitz.