BLACK HILLS NATIONAL PARK

BLACK HILLS NATIONAL PARK

Target:
Petition to President George W Bush, Jr and United States Congress
Sponsored by: 

In 1872, Congress made history by establishing Yellowstone, the world's first national park. Since then, the National Park System has grown to include 385 sites and more than 83 million acres of land with nearly 300 million visits annually. The national parks protect diverse ecosystems and awe-inspiring landscapes, and safeguard our cultural and historical heritage.

These are the legendary Black Hills of South Dakota, an oasis of pine-clad mountains on the Great Plains. The mountains and forests of the Black Hills.

The Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851 was signed on September 17 between United States treaty commissioners and representatives of the Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Crow, Shoshone, Assiniboine, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara nations. The U.S. government promised control of the Great Plains which was the bulk of Native American territory, for "as long as the river flows and the eagle flies". The Indians guaranteed safe passage for settlers on the Oregon Trail in return for promises of an annuity in the amount of fifty thousand dollars for fifty years. The Native American nations also allowed roads and forts to be built in their territories. The United States Senate ratified the treaty, adding Article 7, to adjust compensation from fifty to ten years, if the tribes accepted the changes. Acceptance from all tribes, with the exception of the Crows, was procured. Several tribes never received the commodities promised as payments. The treaty produced a brief period of peace.


The Treaty of Fort Laramie was an agreement between the United States and the Lakota nation, Yanktonai Sioux, Santee Sioux, and Arapaho signed in 1868 at Fort Laramie in the Wyoming Territory, guaranteeing to the Lakota ownership of the Black Hills, and further land and hunting rights in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. The Powder River Country was to be henceforth closed to all whites. The treaty ended Red Cloud's War.

The treaty included articles intended to "ensure the civilization" of the Lakota; financial incentives for them to farm land and become competitive - and stipulations that minors should be provided with an "English education" at a "mission building". To this end the US government included in the treaty that white teachers, blacksmiths, a farmer, a miller, a carpenter, an engineer and a government agent should take up residence within the reservation.

Repeated violations of the otherwise exclusive rights to the land by gold prospectors led to the Black Hills War. The treaty explicitly described, "the permanent home of the Indians, which is not mineral land..." Migrant workers seeking gold had crossed the reservation borders, in violation of the treaty. Indians had assaulted migrant workers, in violation of the treaty. War ensued. The U.S. government seized the Black Hills land in 1877.

More than a century later, the Sioux nation won a victory in court. On June 30, 1980, in United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, 448 U.S. 371, the United States Supreme Court upheld an award of $17.5 million for the market value of the land in 1877, along with 103 years worth of interest at 5 percent, for an additional $105 million.



What I would like to see is the Black Hills to be set up in a National Protected Park that everyone has the right to enjoy. Illegal stripping has to stop to allow history to HONOR and pay respect to those who lives were taken.  Please sign this petition to give respect to those who lives were taken and protect our history.

In 1872, Congress made history by establishing Yellowstone, the world's first national park. Since then, the National Park System has grown to include 385 sites and more than 83 million acres of land with nearly 300 million visits annually. The national parks protect diverse ecosystems and awe-inspiring landscapes, and safeguard our cultural and historical heritage.

These are the legendary Black Hills of South Dakota, an oasis of pine-clad mountains on the Great Plains. The mountains and forests of the Black Hills.

The Fort Laramie Treaty of 1851 was signed on September 17 between United States treaty commissioners and representatives of the Sioux, Cheyenne, Arapaho, Crow, Shoshone, Assiniboine, Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara nations. The U.S. government promised control of the Great Plains which was the bulk of Native American territory, for "as long as the river flows and the eagle flies". The Indians guaranteed safe passage for settlers on the Oregon Trail in return for promises of an annuity in the amount of fifty thousand dollars for fifty years. The Native American nations also allowed roads and forts to be built in their territories. The United States Senate ratified the treaty, adding Article 7, to adjust compensation from fifty to ten years, if the tribes accepted the changes. Acceptance from all tribes, with the exception of the Crows, was procured. Several tribes never received the commodities promised as payments. The treaty produced a brief period of peace.


The Treaty of Fort Laramie was an agreement between the United States and the Lakota nation, Yanktonai Sioux, Santee Sioux, and Arapaho signed in 1868 at Fort Laramie in the Wyoming Territory, guaranteeing to the Lakota ownership of the Black Hills, and further land and hunting rights in South Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana. The Powder River Country was to be henceforth closed to all whites. The treaty ended Red Cloud's War.

The treaty included articles intended to "ensure the civilization" of the Lakota; financial incentives for them to farm land and become competitive - and stipulations that minors should be provided with an "English education" at a "mission building". To this end the US government included in the treaty that white teachers, blacksmiths, a farmer, a miller, a carpenter, an engineer and a government agent should take up residence within the reservation.

Repeated violations of the otherwise exclusive rights to the land by gold prospectors led to the Black Hills War. The treaty explicitly described, "the permanent home of the Indians, which is not mineral land..." Migrant workers seeking gold had crossed the reservation borders, in violation of the treaty. Indians had assaulted migrant workers, in violation of the treaty. War ensued. The U.S. government seized the Black Hills land in 1877.

More than a century later, the Sioux nation won a victory in court. On June 30, 1980, in United States v. Sioux Nation of Indians, 448 U.S. 371, the United States Supreme Court upheld an award of $17.5 million for the market value of the land in 1877, along with 103 years worth of interest at 5 percent, for an additional $105 million.



What I would like to see is the Black Hills to be set up in a National Protected Park that everyone has the right to enjoy. Illegal stripping has to stop to allow history to HONOR and pay respect to those who lives were taken.  Please sign this petition to give respect to those who lives were taken and protect our history.

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We signed the "BLACK HILLS NATIONAL PARK" petition!
# 274:
7:55 am PDT, Sep 16, Austin Kendall, Florida
# 273:
11:02 am PDT, Sep 6, Name not displayed, Pennsylvania
# 272:
7:11 am PDT, Aug 31, Eva Lightfoot, Maryland
# 271:
3:05 am PDT, Aug 31, John Atchison, Minnesota
Do justice and honor the treaty you government make with the native americans
# 270:
9:55 am PDT, Aug 11, Sherri Bessire, Texas
# 269:
9:46 am PDT, Aug 9, Andreas Kjallman, Sweden
# 268:
8:05 pm PDT, Aug 2, Laurel Watson, Arizona
# 267:
10:51 am PDT, Jul 31, Andi Alnwick, New York
# 266:
12:45 pm PDT, Jul 27, Jennifer Losh, West Virginia
# 264:
2:59 am PDT, Jul 27, Nyack Clancy, New York
# 263:
1:10 am PDT, Jul 27, Jason Bowman, California
# 262:
4:39 pm PDT, Jul 23, Tawnya Shields, Mississippi
# 260:
8:30 am PDT, Jul 21, Name not displayed, California
# 259:
12:53 am PDT, Jul 21, Candy LeBlanc, California
# 258:
3:55 am PDT, Jul 16, Sylvette Vathonne, France
# 257:
10:03 am PDT, Jul 7, Mario Furtado, New Jersey
# 256:
6:29 pm PDT, Jul 2, Nature Monroe, Idaho
The Black Hills are so incredibly beautiful.... I loved the feeling I got while I was there..... They NEED to be protected! It's their land! Do they just not deserve anything? The Native Americans have been screwed-over so many times.... The Black Hills must be protected!
# 255:
1:40 pm PDT, Jun 25, Joanne D. Ferguson, Ohio
# 254:
1:04 pm PDT, Jun 17, Seth Stern, New Jersey
# 253:
5:24 am PDT, Jun 11, Alicya Lima, Netherlands
# 252:
12:15 pm PDT, Jun 10, Sara Smith, Connecticut
# 251:
9:47 am PDT, Jun 8, June Marshall, New Hampshire
# 250:
9:14 am PDT, Jun 8, NICK DAVIS, Canada
# 249:
8:41 am PDT, Jun 8, Carole Sarcinello, California
# 248:
8:40 am PDT, Jun 8, Littlewing NANCY GLAVIANO, Utah
# 247:
8:31 am PDT, Jun 8, Jim Phillips, California
Gladly signed this petition. Black Hills need to be fully protected and the treaties need to be honoured.
# 246:
7:29 am PDT, Jun 8, Lisa Yost, West Virginia
# 245:
10:46 pm PDT, Jun 7, Animals Abuse Greece, Greece
# 244:
12:46 pm PDT, Jun 7, Susan D., Michigan
# 243:
11:17 am PDT, Jun 7, Bonnie Dawson, Canada
# 242:
8:04 am PDT, Jun 6, Glen Za, Canada
# 241:
5:20 am PDT, Jun 6, Kouba Achille Didier, Cote D'ivoire
# 240:
8:16 pm PDT, Jun 5, Gwen Hoss, Colorado
# 239:
4:14 am PDT, Jun 1, Berenice St, New York
# 238:
4:46 pm PDT, May 31, Ruth Bescript, Arizona
Show them some respect.
# 237:
3:41 pm PDT, May 31, Maria Dixon, Spain
# 236:
2:35 pm PDT, May 30, Florence Miller, Pennsylvania
The Black Hills are the Sioux's beloved Paha Sapa and need to be given back to those who were here in the beginning.No land can be owned but merely preserved for its beauty and wildlife.So much was taken from the Sioux and many lies told and it is time that promises made are finally kept.
# 235:
8:34 pm PDT, May 29, Laura Stringer, Maryland
# 234:
5:28 pm PDT, May 29, Fran Cannon, California
# 233:
4:31 pm PDT, May 29, Cat Mills, Canada
# 232:
2:41 pm PDT, May 29, Jacolin Schultz, Wisconsin
# 231:
7:34 am PDT, May 29, Elizabeth Burlock, Canada
# 230:
2:53 pm PDT, May 28, Lori Rohn, Oregon
# 229:
1:53 am PDT, May 28, Isis Star, California
# 228:
11:29 pm PDT, May 27, Paul L Cameron Jr, Massachusetts
# 227:
9:27 pm PDT, May 27, Holly Swint, Florida
# 226:
5:18 pm PDT, May 27, Evert Jan Klein Velderman, Netherlands
# 225:
4:45 pm PDT, May 27, Beth O'Hara, Maine
# 224:
4:06 pm PDT, May 27, Brad Miller, Kansas
# 223:
3:45 pm PDT, May 27, Stephen Hill, California
For more impact, add a personal comment here
# 222:
2:37 pm PDT, May 27, Amelia Zahoor, Florida
# 221:
1:14 pm PDT, May 27, Daniella Roozenburg, Netherlands
# 220:
9:41 am PDT, May 27, Melissa Dawson Chapman, Michigan
# 219:
7:49 am PDT, May 27, Louise Holton, Maryland
# 218:
7:21 am PDT, May 27, Hans Lak, Netherlands
# 217:
7:11 am PDT, May 27, Stephanie Vitt, Georgia
The Black Hills area should be protected from the greed of mankind. Give the land protection. We are ONLY the caretakers as we are only here for such a short time, but the lands COULD live forever if we only help them. P.S> the prayer from signer 198 is beautiful. Thank you!
# 216:
7:10 am PDT, May 27, John V. Peterson, Oregon
# 215:
7:07 am PDT, May 27, Jacqueline Tremlin, Idaho
# 214:
7:05 am PDT, May 27, Marena Chen, Malaysia
# 213:
7:02 am PDT, May 27, Patti Ross, New Jersey
Protect the Black Hills National Park and maintain its integrity.
# 212:
6:51 am PDT, May 27, RIVER FRANCE, Canada
# 211:
11:22 pm PDT, May 26, Lady Athena, Sweden
# 210:
5:10 pm PDT, May 26, Sarah Panullo, Pennsylvania
# 209:
3:54 pm PDT, May 26, Barb Knight, North Carolina
Please protect Black Hills National Park it is rich with Indian history and deserves to be protected to the utmost. Thank you. (bisker)
# 208:
1:44 pm PDT, May 26, Jessamyn Smallenburg, Michigan
# 207:
12:02 pm PDT, May 26, Elena Pintilie, Canada
# 206:
11:53 am PDT, May 26, LISA SWAIN, Texas
# 205:
7:48 am PDT, May 26, Sage Me, Oregon
# 204:
4:36 am PDT, May 26, Ingrid Peeters, Spain
# 203:
4:24 am PDT, May 26, Jila Taghizadeh, Iran, Islamic Republic Of
# 202:
3:41 am PDT, May 26, Ali Opodus, Pennsylvania
Finally do what is right by the indigenous peoples of this Nation!
# 201:
3:36 am PDT, May 26, Lynda Anna Marie Harding, United Kingdom
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