By the time of the Civil War, clashes between white Americans and Native Americans had largely ceased; the U.S. government had forced Indians out of fertile farmland in the Southeast and onto reservations in present-day Oklahoma in the 1830s, but most Americans assumed that the West, absent California, was a wasteland that whites would permanently avoid. Given this, why did U.S.-Indian warfare resume in the 1870s and 1880s, and why did this warfare take on such an apocalyptic scale? What had changed, in other words, in U.S.-Indian relations, U.S. attitudes regarding the western frontier, American technology and military strategy, and so forth? Finally, what were the legacies of the last round of U.S.-Indian warfare?
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