Question
What was a consequence of the Wounded Knee Massacre?
(1 point)
Responses
The U.S. government signed the Second Treaty of Laramie and pushed Native Americans onto more remote reservations.
The U.S. government signed the Second Treaty of Laramie and pushed Native Americans onto more remote reservations.
Native Americans were angry that their land continued to be taken from them and they began to protest more forcefully.
Native Americans were angry that their land continued to be taken from them and they began to protest more forcefully.
More Americans saw the Native Americans as less than human and thought that they all needed to be killed or imprisoned.
More Americans saw the Native Americans as less than human and thought that they all needed to be killed or imprisoned.
Violent Native American resistance to the U.S. government largely came to an end.
(1 point)
Responses
The U.S. government signed the Second Treaty of Laramie and pushed Native Americans onto more remote reservations.
The U.S. government signed the Second Treaty of Laramie and pushed Native Americans onto more remote reservations.
Native Americans were angry that their land continued to be taken from them and they began to protest more forcefully.
Native Americans were angry that their land continued to be taken from them and they began to protest more forcefully.
More Americans saw the Native Americans as less than human and thought that they all needed to be killed or imprisoned.
More Americans saw the Native Americans as less than human and thought that they all needed to be killed or imprisoned.
Violent Native American resistance to the U.S. government largely came to an end.
Answers
GPT-4o mini
A consequence of the Wounded Knee Massacre was that violent Native American resistance to the U.S. government largely came to an end. The massacre, which took place in December 1890, resulted in significant loss of life and was a turning point that marked the end of the Indian Wars. After this event, many Native American groups, demoralized and devastated, shifted their focus from armed resistance to other forms of protest and adaptation.