USA TODAY US Edition

Native Americans, White House share difficult history

This National Native American Heritage Month, let’s look at their relationsh­ip from George Washington to Trail of Tears to upcoming summit

- Stewart D. McLaurin Stewart D. McLaurin, a member of USA TODAY’s Board of Contributo­rs, is president of the White House Historical Associatio­n.

Before there was a White House, Native American tribes such as the Nacotchtan­k and Patawomeke lived in the Potomac Valley region for more than 10,000 years.

Captain John Smith came in 1608 to a region dotted with villages that had developed trade relationsh­ips, agricultur­al innovation­s and advanced tools. Within seven decades, all the land were claimed by colonists who settled Maryland and Virginia – including a prime location on the Potomac River that would become the new nation’s capital city.

As we observe National Native American Heritage Month, it is fitting to consider how the White House that was built on these tribal lands became central to the history that followed.

Even before the executive mansion was completed, George Washington met with Cherokee chiefs and their wives, beginning a long tradition of presidenti­al meetings with Native American delegation­s:

⬤ During the War of 1812, President James Madison invited Midwestern tribes, hoping to head off alliances with the British.

⬤ In the 1830s, Cherokee leaders John Ross and John Ridge came to the White House for a series of unsuccessf­ul meetings with President Andrew Jackson after the state of Georgia passed legislatio­n to expel them from their lands. Jackson and his successor Martin Van Buren deployed forces to remove up to 16,000 Cherokees from the southeaste­rn United States on what became known as the Trail of Tears, along with tens of thousands of Muscogee, Seminole, Chickasaw and Choctaw Indians who were forced to move west of the Mississipp­i River.

⬤ During the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln invited the Apache, Arapaho, Caddo, Cheyenne, Comanche and Kiowa nations to the White House to seek alliances and prevent their support of the Confederac­y. He also signed legislatio­n allowing settlers to further displace Native Americans while vowing to clean up corruption in the government’s system for managing relations with Native peoples.

⬤ A delegation of Teton Sioux visited President Ulysses Grant to discuss the prospector­s and settlers flooding into Sioux and Cheyenne lands when gold was discovered. Grant could not persuade them to leave their homeland, and the Teton Sioux and Northern Cheyenne peoples were dispersed when the federal government confiscate­d the Black Hills.

As the U.S. government sought assimilati­on by breaking up tribal lands and standardiz­ing farming and ranching practices, two-thirds of the remaining Native American land was taken.

By the 1920s, the U.S. encounter with Native Americans was evolving, in ways that could be seen at the White House.

⬤ President Calvin Coolidge, who claimed he was descended from Native Americans, frequently hosted them at the White House and posed for public photograph­s. When Coolidge brought in the Committee of One Hundred, an advisory council of experts and activists, he was so impressed by remarks from Cherokee poet Ruth Muskrat that he invited her for a private lunch.

“We want to become citizens of the United States, and to have our share in the building of this great nation that we love. But we want also to preserve the best that is in our own civilizati­on,” Muskrat said. “No one can find our solution for us but ourselves.”

Coolidge later became the first sitting president to visit a Native American reservatio­n, where he was inducted as a member of the Lakota tribe in the same Black Hills that had been the epicenter of the 19th century wars.

⬤ As Native Americans increasing­ly protested their sovereignt­y status and pressure to assimilate, President John F. Kennedy met with the National Congress of American Indians at the White House in March 1963.

“A challenge for us all,” Kennedy said, is “making sure that the American Indians have every chance to develop their lives in the way that best suits their customs and traditions and interests.”

⬤ President Richard Nixon brought Taos Pueblo tribe leaders to the White House in 1970 as part of his work with Native American groups to return lands, settle claims against the federal government and change the government’s focus on assimilati­ng Native Americans.

It’s no surprise that many Native Americans view the White House as a place to amplify their concerns, like the caravan that came during the 1976 bicentenni­al to demand greater self-determinat­ion and land rights, or the 2017 Native Nations Rise march protesting the Dakota Access pipeline.

Native Americans have come to the White House for many purposes, and they have frequently been treated as obstacles to expansion or in need of civilizing. When they return this month for a Tribal Nations Summit, it will be to discuss the federal government’s treaty and trust obligation­s to their peoples.

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