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In a barren land : American Indian dispossession and survival / Paula Mitchell Marks.

By: Material type: TextTextEdition: First editionDescription: xxiv, 451 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cmISBN:
  • 0688141439
  • 9780688141431
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • E98.L3 M375 1998
Contents:
1. "An uneasiness on our minds" (1607-1764) -- 2. "Nothing will satisfy them but the whole of our hunting grounds" (1764-1816) -- 3. "Get a little farther" (1817-1843) -- 4. "I am driven away from home" (1817-1843) -- 5. "Take away your paper" (1844-1860) -- 6. "Run them about" (1861-1886) -- 7. "I hope to God you will not ask me to go to any other country" (1861-1875) -- 8. "Cornered in little spots of the earth" (1875-1886) -- 9. "Gumbo with greasewood on it" (1887-1910) -- 10. "Where are we now?" (1911-1930) -- 11. "Who's got the button?" (1930-1950s) -- 12. "Our land is everything to us" (1950s-1964) -- 13. "Until we have regained our rightful place" (1964-1979) -- 14. "There is no place but here" (1980-1996).
Summary: Marks dramatically illustrates how, across the nation and over the course of nearly four centuries, America's original inhabitants were stripped of both their land and their way of life by a series of broken promises and bloody persecutions. Here, of course, are such well-known events as the Battle of Little Big Horn, the Trail of Tears, and the massacre at Wounded Knee. And here, too, are such equally well-known personalities as Chief Joseph, Geronimo, Cochise, and Andrew Jackson, a president whose perfidies to the Indians still retain the power to shock and dismay. But also recounted are such comparable but less famous episodes as the Navajos' Long Walk of removal from their homelands in the last half of the nineteenth century, the fervent Snake Indian resistance to the allotting of Indian lands early in this century, and the disastrous effects of government dam projects on Indian communities in the 1950s, as well as a discussion of the benefits and draw-backs of legalized gambling on Indian reservations in the past decade. Among the forgotten figures the book brings to life are William McIntosh, who sold the land out from under his fellow Creeks and was subsequently executed by them; John Ross, who led the Cherokee nation throughout its removal and reconstruction, only to see it split apart by the Civil War; and the Oglala Sioux warrior Red Cloud, who forced the U.S. government to abandon its Bozeman Trail forts within his tribe's territory.
Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Books (30-Day Checkout) Books (30-Day Checkout) Nash Library General Stacks E98.L3M375 1998 Available 33710001179253

Map of locations of federally recognized tribes in 1990 on endpapers.

Includes bibliographical references (pages 427-434) and index.

1. "An uneasiness on our minds" (1607-1764) -- 2. "Nothing will satisfy them but the whole of our hunting grounds" (1764-1816) -- 3. "Get a little farther" (1817-1843) -- 4. "I am driven away from home" (1817-1843) -- 5. "Take away your paper" (1844-1860) -- 6. "Run them about" (1861-1886) -- 7. "I hope to God you will not ask me to go to any other country" (1861-1875) -- 8. "Cornered in little spots of the earth" (1875-1886) -- 9. "Gumbo with greasewood on it" (1887-1910) -- 10. "Where are we now?" (1911-1930) -- 11. "Who's got the button?" (1930-1950s) -- 12. "Our land is everything to us" (1950s-1964) -- 13. "Until we have regained our rightful place" (1964-1979) -- 14. "There is no place but here" (1980-1996).

Marks dramatically illustrates how, across the nation and over the course of nearly four centuries, America's original inhabitants were stripped of both their land and their way of life by a series of broken promises and bloody persecutions. Here, of course, are such well-known events as the Battle of Little Big Horn, the Trail of Tears, and the massacre at Wounded Knee. And here, too, are such equally well-known personalities as Chief Joseph, Geronimo, Cochise, and Andrew Jackson, a president whose perfidies to the Indians still retain the power to shock and dismay. But also recounted are such comparable but less famous episodes as the Navajos' Long Walk of removal from their homelands in the last half of the nineteenth century, the fervent Snake Indian resistance to the allotting of Indian lands early in this century, and the disastrous effects of government dam projects on Indian communities in the 1950s, as well as a discussion of the benefits and draw-backs of legalized gambling on Indian reservations in the past decade. Among the forgotten figures the book brings to life are William McIntosh, who sold the land out from under his fellow Creeks and was subsequently executed by them; John Ross, who led the Cherokee nation throughout its removal and reconstruction, only to see it split apart by the Civil War; and the Oglala Sioux warrior Red Cloud, who forced the U.S. government to abandon its Bozeman Trail forts within his tribe's territory.