Season twenty-one of the television program American Experience originally aired on the PBS network in the United States on January 26, 2009 and concluded on May 11, 2009. The season contained nine new episodes and began with the film The Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer.
The film chronicles a small-town Texas murder and its development into a landmark civil rights case in which Mexican American lawyers take Hernandez v. Texas to the Supreme Court, challenging Jim Crow–style discrimination.
Civil Rights, Native American History, Politics, The American West
April 13, 2009 (2009-04-13)
Part 1: "After the Mayflower" - In 1621, Wampanoag leader Massasoit negotiates to provide help to the ailing Pilgrims from the Mayflower, on the brink of disaster, because he thinks this alliance will ensure protection for his tribe from the threatening Narragansett tribe. For the next fifty years, it will become more and more clear that Massasoit was wrong as continuing European immigration, widespread diseases and overuse of natural resources push the interaction between the Wampanoag and the Pilgrims to war led by Metacomet, Massoit's son.
Civil Rights, Native American History, Politics, The American West
April 20, 2009 (2009-04-20)
Part 2: "Tecumseh's Vision" - In 1805, plains Indians in the Midwest were feeling the threat of westward expansion by white pioneers. Tecumseh, a member of the Shawnee tribe, used the growing worry of disparate tribes to bring them together into a confederacy with the common goal of saving their ancestral land. The dream of a separate Indian nation state would die along with Tecumseh when he was killed in the Battle of the Thames in 1813.
Civil Rights, Native American History, Politics, The American West
April 27, 2009 (2009-04-27)
Part 3: "Trail of Tears" - For many years, the Cherokee nation sought to gain respect from the United States Government by adapting Western-style religion, government and education in the hopes of receiving recognition of their ancestral land as a sovereign nation. On May 26, 1838, the United States Government had troops forcibly remove members of the Cherokee tribe from their land in the Southeastern US to Oklahoma. More than 4,000 people would die of disease and starvation along the way of the Trail of Tears.
Civil Rights, Native American History, Politics, The American West
May 4, 2009 (2009-05-04)
Part 4: "Geronimo" - ApacheGeronimo and his fierce band of warriors refused to accept the expansion of the United States and Mexico into his tribe's land. Geronimo and his band of warriors earned the distinction of being one of the last major forces of Native American resistance before their eventual surrender in 1886. This resistance earned Geronimo the distinction of being the most famous Native American of his time.
Civil Rights, Native American History, Politics, The American West
May 11, 2009 (2009-05-11)
Part 5: "Wounded Knee" - The American Indian Movement's last stand at Wounded Knee in 1973 brought attention to the desperate conditions of Indian reservation life. Around 200 American Indians engaged in a 71-day standoff with the US government demanding redress for grievances, some dating back over 100 years.