Darkroom (Vox, July 30, 2021); Xochitl, Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Why the US Army tried to exterminate the bison
Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz & Dina Gilio-Whitaker |
In the mid-1800s, a cultural fiction, an unfounded belief, known as “Manifest Destiny” dictated that white settlers were the rightful owners of the entire North American continent – even though Native Americans had inhabited the land for thousands of years.
In order to clear land for white settlers, the US Army engaged in violent scorched-earth tactics against the Indigenous peoples of the Great Plains. One big part of that campaign was to eliminate their crucial food source: the bison.
Not a Nation of Immigrants (R. Dunbar-Ortiz) |
Around the same time, the US government set aside some of the land once inhabited by the Plains Indians as a national park, and in 1872 Yellowstone was established.
A key mission of Yellowstone was to conserve the land and the animals that roamed there, including the bison.
Today, the soldiers who once patrolled the park are celebrated for having “saved” the bison in Yellowstone, obscuring their own violent contribution to the animal’s near extinction.
ABOUT: Darkroom is a history and photography series that anchors each episode around a single image. Analyzing what the photo shows (or doesn't show) provides context that helps unravel a wider story. Watch previous episodes: youtube.com/playlist...
Sources and further reading:
"The extermination of the American bison," 1887 Smithsonian survey by William T. Hornaday:
repository.si.edu/handle...
"Poaching Pictures," by Alan Braddock: jstor.org/stable...
"The frontier army and the destruction of the buffalo," by David T. Smits: studylib.net/doc...
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