Showing posts with label native american. Show all posts
Showing posts with label native american. Show all posts

Conquering the Southern Plains (Eyewitnesses to the Indian Wars, 1865-1890) Review

Conquering the Southern Plains (Eyewitnesses to the Indian Wars, 1865-1890)
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The first book in the series that I read. Cozzens provides a nice introduction, followed by a great series of primary documents, grouped by event. Beecher's Island is an example of an event, and there are several accounts from the men who fought there. Each account is well footnoted, and the footnotes themselves make for great reading. Maps are included inside front and back covers showing forts, battle sites, etc. Illustrations throughout.

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Moon Medicine Review

Moon Medicine
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A fine window into the Old West of the 1840's before the heyday of gamblers and gunfighters, cattlemen and railroads and sheriffs at high noon in burgeoning cow towns, this book reminds us of an earlier era, when mountain men from the first decades of the nineteenth century mingled with traders, entrepeneurs and plainsmen to explore the wild country then populated by isolated nomadic tribes of Indians, many of whom had yet to see white men. In this era, the musket and muzzle loading rifle and single shot pistol were still dominant and the Colt revolver (introduced in the mid-1830's) was just making its debut. Unlike the revolver we're familiar with today, it didn't shoot bullets or load quickly but depended on a three step process for each cylinder, involving loading the powder, lead ball and percussion cap separately for each, jamming the "bullet" down into the seat of each cylinder with a small ramrod, just as the rifles of that era were loaded. That's why men of that day carried more than one gun (who wanted to have to stop and reload in the heat of battle?) and were normally skilled in a lot more ways of fighting than just drawing and shooting a pistol.
It is this era that author Michael Blakely brings to life with his story of Jean-Guy, a young exile from a quality French school fleeing his native land after an unfortunate incident at home. Arriving in America at the port of New Orleans, the youthful Frenchman renames himself, Honore Dumant (later renamed Honore Greenwood and then "Plenty Man") and heads west to the place where his dreams have summoned him. There is an abundance of mysticism here and we're repeatedly informed by our narrator that he is a genius with a remarkable facility for languages, mathematics and a deeply sophisticated education, all of which young Honore hides through much of the book so he can blend in with the men he encounters. Honore also suffers from a condition which makes him unusually active during times of the full moon and highly susceptible to binge sleeps when the moon is new, presenting him with certain challenges and advantages in the Old West he finds beyond the Mississippi as well as a gateway into the mysticism of the Indian shaman.
Also an accomplished classical violinist, he plays fiddle for those he finds and delights them all while seeking out and eventually winning a place among the wild Comanche who rule the plains and who other men fear. Honore manages to win the respect and friendship of most of the mountain and plains men he comes across, falling in with the trading company of Bent and St. Vrain which runs a series of forts across the prairie and deserts of what was then still Mexico (though not for long as the Mexican War is soon fought during the events of this book, bringing New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado and California into the American orbit and changing forever the tone and texture of the Old West of Honore's day).
If there are weaknesses here, and there are, they are to be found in the self-conscious narration (provided by a 99 year old Honore living alone at the remains of an old fort in 1927 somewhere in the Texas panhandle) which consistently flips into a second person mode, addressing the reader as if he or she were there, listening to the old man talk. The old man is verbose, as old men sometimes are, but seemingly too articulate for the kind of tale he has to tell. And he knows too much of the goings on around him, even when placed in the era he is describing, producing an artificial sense of history instead of a more natural one. Honore seems to know everything and everyone as we're treated to a veritable who's who of frontier rogues and legends from the Bent brothers to Kit Carson and Jim Bridger. At times it's as though Blakely had a list of famous names he wanted to cover and so has his narrator simply call off the people he sees as his interlocutors in the tale respond with a bit of historical background for each. It's a little hard to stomach because it shows Blakely here wearing his research on his sleeve.
On the other hand, the research is strong and we do get a vivid sense of the era and the land itself right down to Honore's stint as an adobe brick maker and builder of forts. Honore's encounter with Indians, especially the Comanche, does feel honest and well portrayed though the Indians tend to be a little stereotypical. Nevertheless the cultural information rings true. I got a little tired of Honore's self-descriptions of himself as a genius, but it did serve to enable him to plausibly know things an ordinary person in his position would not have been expected to. On the other hand, he seems remarkably naive and obtuse at times when his brilliance would have been expected to serve him better.
All in all though, this was an enjoyable if not totally absorbing tale, given that so much of it consists of a string of incidents wherein Honore moves back and forth around the Great Plains, the Southwest and the Sierras seeking out, trading with and hunting down various Indians and tribes. There is, at times, a lack of a strong central narrative engine impelling the story forward. On the other hand, Honore's final encounter with the Apache (who have become his blood enemies) and the brutal, nefarious whiskey dealer, Snakehead Jackson, is exciting and fast moving if not entirely credible. But the end of the tale, as we slide back to 1927, is sort of a letdown. Yet, overall, the book was an enjoyable window into a now largely forgotten past, one that is too often overlooked even by the mythmakers of the Old West.
SWM
Author of The King of Vinland's Saga

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On The Border With Crook Review

On The Border With Crook
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The concept of Manifest Destiny took root during the Mexican American War, and assumed grander proportions following the Civil War. Gen. Crook had been a calvery officer whose services proved to be of considerable value, as much for his ability as for his compassion for the Indians. His job was to protect the settlers and subdue the Indians by locating them on reservations. The author was with Crook during his first and second Southwest campaigns as well as that of the Northern Plains. His love for his commander and appreciation of the Indians made him the perfect writer for the topic. Gen. Crook seems the ideal officer for the job, but was defeated, not by the Indians but Agents assigned, after the army had done its work, to reservations by Washington. The book is a wonderful description of the duty performed by Gen. Crook who, had his system been utilized, would have led to a better life for all. In the end, Bourke feels, Crook died of a broken heart. Important history, and a story too beautifully told to miss.

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Josanie's War: A Chiricahua Apache Novel (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series) Review

Josanie's War: A Chiricahua Apache Novel (American Indian Literature and Critical Studies Series)
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Josanies's War is one of the best novels I've ever read on the final Chiricahua outbreak of 1885 under Geronimo, Naiche and band leaders like Josanie. The author appears to know the country very well and blends history and fiction together in way I've rarely seen. Chiricahua Apache beliefs are handled well and with respect and these people come alive as living, breathing human beings. The narrative moves swiftly and being Apache I see many of the places described in the novel clearly. There are one or two mistakes but they are minor and the average reader would never catch them so I won't dwell on these. A joy to read and part of my permanent collection of great novels on tribal American people.

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Neighbors Review

Neighbors
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Joan Leslie Woodruff is one of the most refreshing, original voices in current American fiction. Her books rank well in the company of such writers as Barbara Kingsolver and Amy Tan. "Neighbors" is a quirky story, humorous yet spiritually deep. The Native American sensibilities are authentic, derived from the writer's ancestry and her experiences in New Mexico. The heroine, Dana Whitehawk, moves from Los Angeles to New Mexico, where she discovers that some of her 'neighbors' are not ordinary folks. The beauty of Woodruff's tale is in the language. She explores the boundary between magic and reality, leaving readers to make up their own minds about some of the book's questions. Both comparatively short and generally upbeat, "Neighbors" is a good read for someone with a tight schedule who would like a "feel good" book. If you like this one, try "The Shiloh Renewal" -- it's topically different, but told with similar skill.

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Buffalo Days: Stories from J. Wright Mooar (Texas Heritage Series) Review

Buffalo Days: Stories from J. Wright Mooar (Texas Heritage Series)
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Good personal reminiscence. Very good end notes. Certainly not politicaly correct but a very good view of the prevaling mind set of the nineteenth century buffalo hide trade.

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"Because he has been criticized as a destroyer, a ruthless killer, and wastrel of a great game resource of a Nation, the buffalo hunter appeals to the bar of history for his vindication. . . . Within four years we opened up a vast empire to settlement, and put the Indians forever out of Texas."J. Wright Mooar tells the story of the buffalo hunter, from the hunter's perspective, in this first-person account published more than seventy years ago in several installments in Holland's, The Magazine of the South. Mooar was more than eighty years old when he sat down with Methodist minister/educator James Winford Hunt and recounted his years as a buffalo hunter.He describes how buffalo hunting became a huge business that thrived for less than a decade in the 1870s and makes the case that the buffalo hunter, more than anyone else, opened the way for white settlement by eradicating the Indians' source of food."Buffalo hunting was a business and not a sport. It required capital, management, and a lot of hard work. Magazine writers and others who claim that the killing of the buffalo was a national calamity and was accomplished by vandals simply expose their ignorance, and I resent such an unjust judgment upon us."If it had not been for the work of the buffalo hunters, the wild bison would still graze where Amarillo now is, and the red man would still reign supreme over the pampas of the Panhandle of Texas."Any one of the families killed and homes destroyed by the Indians would have been worth more to Texas and to civilization than all the millions of buffalo that ever roamed from the Pecos River on the south to the Platte River on the north.""Here is an odyssey of hairbreadth escapes from death with wild Indians, wilder white men, and thundering herds of wild buffalo," writes J. W. Hunt, founding president of Abilene's McMurry College (now University), in his introduction.Illustrated by Texas folklore artist Granville Bruce, the stories of J. Wright Mooar make for lively reading and continuing debate.

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Sierra: A Novel of the California Gold Rush Review

Sierra: A Novel of the California Gold Rush
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I had to let this one rest a little bit before I was willing to take an analytical point of view. It was a good love story and I wanted to enjoy feeling mushy and misty about it. Actually, there are two love stories, one a Romeo & Juliet plot sort of like "All the Pretty Horses" (Impossible not to picture Penelope Cruz!) and the other the classical Odyssey plot except that this Penelope is named Susannah (as in "Oh,Susannah") and her father-in-law throws her out of the young couple's comfortable Midwestern farm. The contrast in the two young men of the stories is that one is a from a large, vigorous, open-your-mouth-so-I-can-put-this-silver-spoon-in prosperous family which he needs to escape and the other is from no real family and barefoot in the world. (He's the one who falls in love with the Californio girl, who believes she is living in an extension of Mexico.)
All four are true to their genders and their times and each must endure much before the ending. The final reunion of Ulysses and his Susanna capitalizes on the light in a canvas tent, if you remember what it's like. "...a magic shadowless place. The golden light burnished Ulysses, turning his deep tan into amber liquid. It caught his face, and she saw a man who had been transformed. As much gold emanated from him as from the filtered sun." The other story ends classically: "Stephen Jarvis lifted her in his arms and carried her up."
The interesting "inside" factor is that when Wheeler was working on the book he had an agent who kept trying to influence him to make bad guys the focus. Wheeler resisted this and perhaps his resistance and the necessity of defending his own particular style and world-vision made this novel even more coherent and dense with detail that it would have been otherwise.
The WORST villain is a man leading a party crossing of the US to California. Not content with traveling so early that much of the trail is still mud, he pushes his livestock to their limits and then shoots them so they can't recover to be used by others coming behind. Carcasses go into water sources to spoil them. Any dissenters are abandoned with no supplies. Also, he burns off all the grass as he goes, to slow down any travelers behind him. One longs for him to end up on some Indian rotisserie, but he gets to California and thrives in the gold fields, wandering off into a continuing brutal life. He doesn't do much digging -- just takes gold from others.
There are two other "bad guys," one female, who are both portrayed as human. Both are gamblers and the male version warns, "Don't gamble with me because I'll clean you out no matter who you are." And he does.
The key to the plot is what happens AFTER the men have either made or not made their gold strike: how they respond to the developing government and rising population. After the boom had ended, those who prospered were the ones who found opportunities in mercantile and agriculture. Sometimes the gold was key and sometimes skills from back East made the day. Many times chance made the difference, just as it did in finding the gold.
As usual there is a lot of interesting historical detail. I hadn't thought about all the ships in California bays, abandoned on the tide flats when the sailors deserted to look for gold. Some became instant floating hotels, stores or even jails. A phenomenon of gold, the heavy metal, is that it settles through the gravel beds of streams and lodges against the bedrock. One can only get at it with heavy equipment or by digging "coyote holds" five or six feet deep, risking death in collapses. Even a simple technology like a rocker box made an enormous difference.
This book won Wheeler a Spur Award and was certainly part of the case for his Owen Wister Award for lifetime achievement.

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The Santa Fe Trail: Its History, Legends, and Lore Review

The Santa Fe Trail: Its History, Legends, and Lore
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This is a very thoroughly researched book that tells the tale of the trail -- A commercial trail that linked the American frontier in Missouri with Spanish founded Santa Fe and points south.
The author tells the story from the time of Spanish settlement of Santa Fe through it's abandonment in the wake of the railroad. In its hay-day, the trail linked first two cultures and then the disparate parts of the western United States. The linkage was tenuous and strenuous. Traders took first pack mules then wagon trains through several hundred miles of prairie -- some of it bereft of water and all of it through Indian country.
This book mostly tells how trade bloomed along the trail from the 1820's through the 1860's. This economic detail is well fleshed out by the stories of the many characters that plied the trail or supported its existence. Interesting incidents and first person accounts are liberally strewn throughout the work and give this book its appeal -- otherwise it would be a subject as dry as the short fork to Santa Fe.
I was left with a sense of wonder at the risks these traders and travelers took -- particularly the early ones. Around 1810 -1820, most Americans who reached Santa Fe were rounded up and jailed -- some for five to eight years. Even in the era when the vast majority of early trail blazers failed to return to Missouri, there were always new would- be entrepreneurs ready to set out the next season. Such was the spirit of pioneering Americans and the lure of riches. Even after Spain/Mexico decided to welcome Americans in trade, there remained fairly high chances of succumbing to Indians, weather, or lack of water. The incredible perseverance and relentless pursuit of this open trade route is remarkable -- particularly to a reader of our era.
Although the subject is somewhat dry -- this is a story about economics and transportation -- the author does an admirable job of using interesting characters and stories from the trail to enliven the work.

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Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology) (Volume 2) Review

Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas, and Yucatan (Cambridge Library Collection - Archaeology) (Volume 2)
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And real full strength Catherwood illustrations.
Unlike some of the recent re-edited editions of Stevens' and Catherwood's work, this Dover Publications edition Volume One of the two volume "Incidents of Travel in Central America, Chiapas and Yucatan presents dense, complex, and revealing insights into a brilliant writer's impressions of travel in nascent Central American countries.
Regarding his charge to enter into diplomatic relations with the governments of these countries, Stephens reports, "I was not able to find one..."
In following Stephens eccentric and sometimes high-handed travels through these unsettled societies, we are by contrast in his ruminations given glimpses of the political and social climate in the United States at that time - a commercially predatory, exuberantly expansionist, segregated society. Despite the biases of his times, Stephens is always adaptable to the ways of his hosts.
Although not great in number, Catherwood's illustrations of the stelae at Copan are truly great. His revealing comments on the difficulty of adapting his Western perception enough to capture the scenes even with the help of his camera lucida - tell us just how unusual the sculptural forms were.
As a team - Stephen's enthusiasm and wry humor and Catherwood's sublime skill and dogged persistence - consistently produced great and discerning works of scientific and historical value.
It should be illegal for anyone to edit or abridge these books.

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Watch for Me on the Mountain (Originally Published As : Cry Geronimo) Review

Watch for Me on the Mountain (Originally Published As : Cry Geronimo)
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Reading THE EDUCATION OF LITTLE TREE prompted me to find other Forrest Carter works. Through Amazon, I discovered the Josey Wales books (terrific). References to Geronimo in those books piqued my interest about this fascinating historical figure, so I ordered WATCH FOR ME ON THE MOUNTAIN. It did not disappoint. Though Carter takes liberties with the story by including personal details about Geronimo which he could not know--thus making it a fictional work--there is a symmetry in his use of history and folklore which is captivating. He tells a great story, and if you are the least bit interested in the spirituality and mysticism that defined this man's life, you will find this book fascinating. Geronimo lived between the earthly and spiritual worlds, giving him great powers which he used to enable the Apache to ward off slavery and death,against huge odds, for twenty years longer than seemed possible. Moving, sad and inspiring, this book brings about heightened appreciation for Native American spirituality and resillency.

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The Wild Girl: The Notebooks of Ned Giles, 1932 Review

The Wild Girl: The Notebooks of Ned Giles, 1932
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In 1999, elderly photographer Ned Giles explains one of his photographs to a man attending a New York showing of Giles's photos. The image is of a young Apache girl in a Mexican jail. The girl, Giles says, was called "the wild girl," and was found naked and starving in Mexico's Sierra Madre. The man purchases the photograph, leaving Giles to remember the girl's story, and his own, in detail. The tale, relayed by journal entries, flashbacks, and from the point of view of several characters, is set in 1932 and begins with the girl running desperately through the arroyo below the Sierra Madre while the cougar hunter Billy Flowers chases her.
Seventeen-year-old Ned Giles joins a large expedition as a photojournalist to Mexico to retrieve a kidnapped boy from the Apaches. Ned makes friends with wealthy and outspokenly gay Tolley, cultural anthropologist Margaret, and his own young assistant, Jesus.
Meanwhile, Flowers chases the Apache girl again, as she has escaped. The girl had been with her family, in a raid led by her crazy brother-in-law, Indio Juan, when they kidnapped the rich rancher's little boy. She remembers the kidnapping as she hides in a cave from Flowers. When Flowers finally catches the wild girl, he has no idea what to do with her, and so he takes her to the nearby town jail.
In the tiny village of Bavispe, Sonora, Ned encounters the shocking sight of the Apache girl tied to a post in front of the jail. He arranges to bathe and clothe her. Along with his friends, he hatches a plan that should benefit everyone, including the girl and the kidnapped boy --- trade the girl for the kidnapped boy. A small band consisting of Ned, the girl, an English butler, Tolley, Margaret, Jesus, and two Indian scouts set off to accomplish the mission. The Apaches soon capture them, and Ned finds himself in "...another world, a world with its own sun and moon, and its own separate race of man" --- and in imminent mortal danger.
As a tribute to Jim Fergus's talents as a storyteller, I literally could not put down this novel, staying up until nearly dawn to finish it. The characters are full-blooded and alive; the adventure unfolds at a breathless pace and the descriptions are lyrical. As I watched Ned Giles leave chilly Chicago to set off on his adventure, my mind movie changed from black and white to warm Technicolor. The story felt so real that I actually checked (several times!) to be sure that the word "novel" hadn't somehow changed to "nonfiction" on the jacket flap. This is one of the best books I've read in years, and a story that will remain with me. Very highly recommended.
--- Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon

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The Road to Disappearance: A History of the Creek Indians (Civilization of the American Indian Series) Review

The Road to Disappearance: A History of the Creek Indians (Civilization of the American Indian Series)
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A tragic and all too common place tale of the struggles between the First Nation people and the United States Government. Road to Disappearance: A History of the Creek Indians (Civilization of the American Indian)

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Two hundred years ago, when the activities of the white man in North America were dominated by clashing imperial ambitions and colonial rivalry, the great Creek Confederacy rested in savage contentment under the reign of native law. No one in their whole world could do the Creeks harm, and they welcomed the slight white man who came with gifts and promises to enjoy the hospitality of their invincible towns.

Their reputation as warriors and diplomats, during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, extended to the most distant reaches of the Indian country. Secure in their careless strength, friendly toward the white man until his encroachment made them resentful and desperate, they learned that they had no guile to match broken promises, and no disciplined courage to provide unity against white ruthlessness. Broken, dissembled, and their ranks depleted by the Creek and Seminole wars, they were subjected to that shameful and tragic removal which forced all the Five Civilized Tribes to a new home in the untried wilderness west of the Mississippi.

There, when they found the land good, they revitalized their shattered tribal institutions and rebuilt them upon the pattern of the American constitutional republic. But contentment again was short-lived as they were encircled by the encroaching white man with his hunger for land, his herds of cattle, and his desire for lumber, minerals, and railway concessions. They were faced, moreover, with internal political strife, and split by the sectionalism of the Civil War. Yet, they still survived in native steadfastness-a trait which is characteristic of the Creek-until the final denouement produced by the Dawes Act.

In The Road to Disappearance, Miss Debo tells for the first time the full Creek story from its vague anthropological beginnings to the loss by the tribe of independent political identity, when during the first decade of this century the lands of the Five Civilized Tribes were divided into severalty ownership. Her book is an absorbing narrative of a minority people, clinging against all odds to native custom, language, and institution. It is the chronicle of the internal life of the tribe -the structure of Creek society-with its folkways, religious beliefs, politics, wars, privations, and persecutions. Miss Debo's research has divulged many new sources of information, and her history of the Creeks since the Civil War is a special contribution because that period has been largely neglected by the historians of the American Indian.

"The vitality of our race still persists," said a Creek orator. "We have not lived for naught.... We have given to the European people on this continent our thought forces-the best blood of our ancestors having intermingled with that of their best statesmen and leading citizens. We made ourselves an indestructible element in their national history. We have shown that what they believed were arid and desert places were habitable and capable of sustaining millions of people.... The race that has rendered this service to the other nations of mankind cannot utterly perish."


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Parading through History: The Making of the Crow Nation in America 1805-1935 (Studies in North American Indian History) Review

Parading through History: The Making of the Crow Nation in America 1805-1935 (Studies in North American Indian History)
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This well researched text provides great insight into the Crow Indian culture. Beginning with earliest recorded written accounts, proceding through the forced move of the Crow, or Apslaloke, from historic homelands and concentrated on their modern day reservation, this is an excellent introduction or supplement to a basic understanding of this plains nation. There is a lot of first person quotes, good photo documentation and scholarly posings. The book concludes with a interesting analysis of Chief Plenty Coups presentation at the dedication of the tomb of the unknown soldier and it's meaning as representative of Native American society at that time.

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This history of the Crow Indians links their nineteenth-century nomadic life and their modern existence. The Crows not only withstood the dislocation and conquest visited on them after 1805, but acted in the midst of these events to construct a modern Indian community--a nation.Their efforts sustained the pride and strength reflected in Chief Plenty Coups' statement in 1925 that he did "not care at all what historians have to say about Crow Indians," as well as their community's faith in the beauty of its traditions and its inventions. Frederick E. Hoxie demonstrates that contact with outsiders drew the Crows together and tested their ability to adapt their traditions to new conditions.He emphasizes political life, but also describes changes in social relations, religious beliefs, and economic activities.His final chapter discusses the significance of the Crow experience for American history in general.

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Red Cloud: Warrior-Statesman of the Lakota Sioux (Oklahoma Western Biographies) Review

Red Cloud: Warrior-Statesman of the Lakota Sioux (Oklahoma Western Biographies)
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Traditionally, stories of Indian leaders view them as temporarily dangerous nuisances the whites had to deal with during the reasonable and inevitable process of moving the Indians onto reservations. This book is part of a new approach of looking at what an Indian leader tried to achieve for his people and assessing how he went about it and how successful he was in meeting his own goals. There is much detail. Larson has been extremely thorough in his researches, and, though we do not really hear Red Cloud's voice, we respecfully watch him do what he had to do to further his people's best interests. He didn't wear a suit or tie or have an Ivy League degree, but Red Cloud functioned very well indeed in opposing an alien force. Anyone who thinks the earth may one day be invaded from outer space should study Red Cloud. Thank you, Oklahoma University Press.

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Halfbreed: The Remarkable True Story of George Bent-- Caught Between the Worlds of the Indian and the White Man Review

Halfbreed: The Remarkable True Story of George Bent-- Caught Between the Worlds of the Indian and the White Man
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The story of George Bent is riveting. Halfbreed is history at its best. It is exceptionally well written and, at the same time, superbly researched and footnoted. Many historians and writers have incorporated bits and pieces of the Bent story into their work, but Halfbreed is the first attempt to tell the whole story. Halaas and Masich have pieced together a rich tapestry as Bent's life weaves in and out of Indian and white worlds. Following the Sand Creek massacre of 1864 Bent chose the Cheyenne path, in war and peace, until his death in 1918.

I recommend Halfbreed for everyone interested in the American West, the Civil War, Indian culture, and great storytelling.

P.S. I'm not sure if it's still in print, but these are the same authors who wrote Cheyenne Dog Soldiers--now the standard source on that subject.

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Founding St. Louis: First City of the New West (MO) Review

Founding St. Louis: First City of the New West (MO)
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As a long time follower of St. Louis history, I found this is an excellent and very in depth review of the founders of St. Louis. Fred Fausz talks about the motivation that led the founders (Laclede and Chouteau) from the mountains in France to the shores of the Mississippi River and what drove their thoughts and enabled their personal success, and the success of the early days of the entire City of St. Louis.
This book is extremely well researched and ties together many of the complex issues of the time (like Thomas Jefferson's policies towards the Native American Indians) that I have never seen discussed before.
Plus the book is an easy and entertaining read for anyone who wants to learn more about St. Louis, and the development of the early American Mississippi River Valley.

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The animal wealth of the western "wilderness" provided by talented "savages" encouraged French Americans from Illinois, Canada and Louisiana to found a cosmopolitan center of international commerce that was a model of multicultural harmony. Historian J. Frederick Fausz offers a fresh interpretation of St. Louis from 1764 to 1804, explaining how Pierre Laclède, the early Chouteaus, Saint Ange de Bellerive and the Osage Indians established a "gateway" to an enlightened, alternative frontier of peace and prosperity before Lewis and Clark were even born. Historians, genealogists and general readers will appreciate the well-researched perspectives in this engaging story about a novel French West long ignored in American history.

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The Ioway Indians (Civilization of the American Indian) Review

The Ioway Indians (Civilization of the American Indian)
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This is the only book in print on the Ioway Indian tribe, originally located in Iowa, and now in two branches, one in Kansas-Nebraska and one in Oklahoma. The first edition was hardback and published in 1979; this second edition is paperback and published in 1995, with a valuable NEW section about the modern Ioway. The updated version listed here has an additional and very useful chapter that brings the book up to contemporary times.
"This account is the first extensive ethnohistory of the Ioway Indians, whose influence -- out of all proportion to their numbers -- stemmed partly from the strategic location of their homeland between the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers. ...Beginning with archaeological sites in northeast Iowa, Martha Royce Blaine traces Ioway history from ancient to modern times. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, French, Spanish, and English traders vied for the tribe's favor and for permission to cross their lands. The Ioways fought in the French and Indian War in New York, the War of 1812, and the Civil War, but ultimately their influence waned as they slowly lost control of their sovereignty and territory. By the end of the nineteenth century, the Ioways were separated in reservations in Nebraska, Kansas, and Indian Territory [Oklahoma]. A new preface by the author carries the story to modern times and discusses the present status of and issues concerning the Oklahoma and the Kansas and Nebraska Ioways." [From the book cover]
This is an essential book for members of the tribe, for those researching the Ioway's history and culture, and for anyone interested in the history and landscape of the American Midwest. Some have remarked the book is a bit academic in its approach rather than aimed at the popular market. I am a member of the Ioway tribe myself, and am a scholar of our language, history, archaeology, and culture, and I highly recommend it.
Every Iowa tribal member should have a copy of this book, as well as anyone else interested in Iowa history!

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Beginning with archaeological sites in northeast Iowa, Martha Royce Blaine traces Ioway history from ancient to modern times. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, French, Spanish, and English traders vied for the tribe's favor and for permission to cross their lands. The Ioways fought in the French and Indian War in New York, the War of 1812, and the Civil War, but ultimately their influence waned as they slowly lost control of their sovereignty and territory. By the end of the nineteenth century, the Ioway were separated in reservations in Nebraska, Kansas, and Indian Territory. A new preface by the author carries the story to modern times and discusses the present status of and issues concerning the Oklahoma and the Kansas and Nebraska Ioways.


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