Preview

Personal Narrative-Trade With Native Americans

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
171 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Personal Narrative-Trade With Native Americans
In 1612, my family made their first fur trade with the native americans. After that trade we never traded again. It was December 3rd when we were running out of fur blankets we had to look to the Native Americans. Mom went to go to the trade and came back with the blankets she also slept with them. When we woke up we found mother very sick she passed away, about a week later.

I was so devastated I needed a new and fresh start, so I traveled to a new Native American tribe. I learned their language so I could communicate with them. Soon after I learned their language they were forced off their lands and we headed west. Lots of people died and were left behind.

One day, I woke up with nobody there. I started walking in a rout hoping to find


You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    My cultural background is Native American, Scottish, Irish, and Canadian; I have been taught a lot about our cultural background throughout my life. I have also been lucky in the area I grew up. I grew up in a very culturally diverse area. Many of my friends from elementary school through high school were from many different cultures. I grew up eating food at friends house that to this day I still cant pronounce.…

    • 355 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Anthropologists and historians believe that the first inhabitants of the Western Hemisphere were migrants from Asia, most of whom most probably came by land between 13,000 B.C. and 9000 B.C. across a hundred-mile-wide land bridge between Siberia and Alaska. About 3000 B.C., some Native American peoples developed better cultivation techniques and began to farm a variety of crops, most notably maize (corn), which resulted in agricultural surpluses that laid the economic foundation for populous and wealthy societies in Mexico, Peru, and the Mississippi River Valley.…

    • 300 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Native American culture changed drastically because of the fur trade. The fur trade changed in these three ways: Trade, Traditional Value, and Environment. First, Trade both positively and negatively effected Native American culture. According to Lambert and Clark,” The fur trade increased European and American presence in the Oregon Country however, it had severe consequences for the American Indians.” (Lambert and Clark, 229)…

    • 343 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    At the beginning of the Columbian Exchange, native Americans were weakened by disease brought by the conquerors, reducing their population by millions. It would have been impossible, in such a short amount of time, for the conquerors to subdue millions of people with only hundreds of soldiers, even with their horses and guns, unless natives were somehow weakened. It is because of this that J.R. McNeill (n.d.) stated, “By far the most dramatic and devastating impact of the Columbian Exchange followed the introduction of new diseases into the Americas.” Diseases like smallpox, typhus fever, or measles, among many others, were the silent monsters that almost completely annihilate American native populations. Two examples of the destructive nature…

    • 132 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In modern English “ Consumer and consumption are the predominant descriptive nouns of all kinds of use of goods and services” ( Williams 17). The interactions between Native Americans and Europeans showed the consume and consumption of goods between two groups. As early 1607 the Europeans made contact with Natives Americans and traded their goods in exchange for the others. The consumer society changes over time as Europeans make a presence across much of North America and Native Americans were slowly eradicated. Ultimately, the colonist settled in their colonies and the entacting of boycotts and non consumption of British goods all occurred due to taxation on goods coming into America. Due to implementation of the Intolerance Acts made by…

    • 300 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    A couple years ago on Christmas morning, my brother and I were opening our presents when we were given passports but we didn’t know what they were at this time. Our parents told us that we were going on a mission trip to Mexico. Even though we begged to not have to go and refused our parents made us both go.…

    • 876 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Trade and the Columbian Exchange greatly affected the world between 1450 CE and 1750 CE. The Columbian Exchange helped to link the Americas, Africa, and Europe, while huge international trade networks aided in shaping the world. In these trade networks, the spice, silver, slave, and sugar trades were especially important in affecting the world.…

    • 1222 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Language was not always easy to speak, write, and understand when I first moved here from India. Understanding two different culture shocks from Indian culture and American culture, was surely one of the toughest part about moving to the United States was. Everything was very different from my skin color to the way I spoke English. Every time I passed by people in the hallway, everyone would stare at me because they all knew about “the new girl from India.” Slowly as months passed by I started realizing the difference in culture, lifestyle, and behavior. Looking back before I moved to the US, growing up with a single parent impacted my view in society. My mom always taught me to be the hardest working person in the room. She always told me…

    • 410 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    During the late 19th century Americans wanted to expand their land for the greater or their people. Little did they know their impact on the natives that occupied the west. The amount of land taken from them was so exponential that if it hadn't happened we wouldn't be where we are today(doc 1).Although there were reservations for the native americans, they used cruel methods to for them out of their land. Some examples of these are forcing them out or if they resisted they would have a battle. Other means of lowering the numbers of native americans was splitting the buffalo herd with the railroad and then killing most of them so the natives wouldn't have food.…

    • 460 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Overall the Columbian exchange is an unbalanced system, in which Native Americans were more greatly impacted. Afro-Eurasians provided cattle and horses (which produced war and famine), weeds (which destroyed natural flora and fauna), diseases (which decimated ninety percent of the population) and slavery (which introduced racial discrimination); and in turn the Americas provided silver (which enabled Spain to become a global superpower), corn and potatoes (which re-shaped the Afro-Eurasian diet), and land (which allowed the western hemispheric nations to expand.) Though the Columbian exchange transformed European diet and culture (with the introduction of New World crops), Europe was not eradicated from existence. With disease, slavery, war,…

    • 495 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Many people in today’s world do not realize just how important Native Americans were to our country many years ago and they definitely do not realize the impact they have made in our present time. This is why I made the title “How Important are Native Americans in the Past Present and Future.” This lack of knowledge in regards to Native American impacts is largely caused by the school systems in our country. They tend to leave out all of the things that the Native Americans were apart of as well as did for the people in our history. For my class, I want my students to no longer have that lack of information about the impact that the Native Americans made to their ancestors…

    • 1412 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I cannot say that my family has a vast American history of a 100+ years, but what I can say is that my family has grown a lot in the past 30+ years. We would not have migrated to the USA if it weren't for my aunt’s marriage. It was 1984 when the first member of my family, my aunt, came to the United States of America. From then on, the rest of my immediate family trickled into the United States of America, looking for a place to grow and expand their family lines. It wasn’t easy to get a stable household income and care for our family at the time, but paycheck to paycheck we managed to do it.…

    • 786 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The news vans from a dozen different television stations were gathered around the massive crowd of people outside of what was once the closed down and abandoned Museum in Coutts. Coutts is a Small town located just above the border into the United States. I saw the reporters interviewing the people looking to get their side of the story as they waited for the event to be underway the grand opening of the museum of native American history. One reporter was interviewing a tall Native American who wore a name tag that said I am Blackfoot on it. The man said to the news reporter “I remember 3 years ago when Mel started this petition to reopen this museum, we all thought he was crazy, he would come around with these little name tags…

    • 2144 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    "I don't know what to do. I have a husband and my family here, but the Nazis are taking power. I don't know if I can stay here any longer. I have heard about good things happening in America, so maybe I will go there," I explained to my family before I decided to leave my home country of Austria.…

    • 1000 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    This paper addresses a question that for some reason has received relatively less attention of psychologists. The question relates to how do persons who enter an organization with a different cultural mindset deal with the roles and fellow colleagues in work settings (in this case, academic work setting) of a diametrically different mindset. To my knowledge, studies on acculturation too have left this question unanswered, although, their major focus has been on contacts between cultures. It is in this context that I find this study quite welcome. The study focuses on the tribal world view of the Native American academics which is characterized…

    • 611 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics