Transcript Document
Native American Tribes by Region
5th Grade Social Studies
Native Americans of the Southwest
The Hopi
• The Hopi live in an area in Arizona with steep-sided, flattopped landforms called mesas.
• The Hopi people called themselves “Hopiti” which means
“gentle people” in their language.
• Hopi homes were called pueblos, and were made out of
adobe clay. They looked like apartments, but with doors on
their roofs.
• Kivas were their religious centers.
• Kachinas are spirits that visit the villages for half of the year.
Dolls representing kachinas are used to teach children about
their traditions, and dancers represent the kachinas in
ceremonies.
• Hopi made pottery and wooden dolls;
• They used a method called “Dry farming” to grow crops.
The Navajo
• The Navajo lived peacefully with the Hopi, but they raided
other neighboring tribes.
• The Navajo learned farming, weaving, and jewelry making
from the Hopi.
• Navajo lived in hogans (domed homes made from earthcovered log frames).
• Spanish came to the region in the 1500s; they introduced
sheep, goats, cattle and horses. Navajo culture changed with
these new resources: they became expert horse riders and
raided the Spanish and their neighbors, and raised cattle and
sheep for food.
• In the 1700s, conflicts with their neighbors caused them to
move to Canyon de Chelly in NE Arizona, where they
continued to farm and live in the protected canyon.
Native Americans of the Woodlands
General Information
• The Eastern Woodlands tribes lived between
the Mississippi River and Atlantic Ocean, and
from Canada to Florida.
• Penobscot of Maine moved around to hunt.
• Natchez people mostly farmed and descended
from the Mound Builders. They lived in
wigwams and traveled in canoes made from
birch bark.
Hodenosaunee
• Means “people of the longhouse” : houses were long buildings
made of poles covered with sheets of bark.
• Made of 5 groups living in New York State:
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Seneca
Mohawk
Cayuga
Onondaga
Oneida
• Made fine beadwork called wampum.
• A group of families who share the same ancestor is called a clan.
The clans were led by clan mothers, who governed and owned the
longhouses and chose government leaders.
• Joined the Iroquois League Confederacy in 1452 to maintain peace
after conflicts with the Iroquois tribes over hunting rights. Hiawatha
and Deganawida solved the issue and developed the Great Law,
which was the constitution for the Iroquois Nation. Deganawida set
up a Grand Council.
Native Americans of the Plains
Life on the Plains
• The Great Plains region runs east of the Rocky
Mountains and from Canada to Mexico.
• Until the 1800s, buffalo roamed the Great Plains.
• Plains people did some farming but were mostly
hunters. Buffalo gave them food, clothing, and shelter.
– 30 million to 100 million buffalo roamed the plains during
the 1700s.
– After a hunt, buffalo meat was cured or hung on racks to dry
to make jerky.
– No part of the buffalo went to waste.
• To move around, Plains people used a sled device called
a travois, which was pulled by a dog before the Spanish
brought horses to the area.
The Lakota
• In the 1700s, they lived in the Black Hills, which
they called “the heart of everything that is”.
• They would show courage by touching an enemy
without killing him with a special stick called a
coup stick.
• Girls were taught how to prepare buffalo hides,
sew them, put up the teepee, cure buffalo meat,
and to search for herbs.
• They kept track of important events on a special
calendar called a winter count.
Native Americans of the Northwest (West)
The Northwest Coast
• The region extends from Anchorage, Alaska, to
San Francisco, California. It is a wet climate
with mild winters and cool summers.
• People gathered plants that grew plentifully in
the forests and hunted beaver, bears, deer,
and elk. They got almost everything they
needed from the sea, like their most
important food: salmon.
Tlingit
• In the 1700s, 400 coastal miles around Sitka, Alaska, were
controlled by the Tlingit.
• They were skilled woodworkers and decorated the items they
made.
• They held potlatches, a feast where the guests receive gifts,
not the host.
• They are known for beautiful, carved, symbolic decorations
called totem poles.
• In 1867, the US bought Alaska from Russia. Many people
moved into the Tlingit homeland and many Tlingit were
forced to move away from the ocean on which they relied.
• In 1971, the U.S. passed the Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act, which gave control over 44 million acres back to the
Tlingit people.