The United States devised a strategy to address the "Indian Problem" in the 1950s.
Explain in detail.
By relocating Native Americans to cities and abolishing reservations, it would assimilate them. Although the 20-year effort to eradicate Native Americans was unsuccessful, it still has an impact on Indian Country.
The main tenet of treaty-making—that tribes were sovereign states—was gradually rejected by the United States as its population and power increased in the 19th century. As a result, it began to implement policies that threatened tribal sovereignty.
Hundreds of different tribes made up millions of indigenous people who had colonized North America at the time. But between 1622 and the late 19th century, a series of wars and skirmishes known as the Indian Wars took place between American-Indians and European settlers, mainly over land control.