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Settling Ohio - First Peoples and Beyond (Paperback)
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Settling Ohio - First Peoples and Beyond (Paperback)
Series: New Approaches to Midwestern Studies
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Scholars working in archaeology, education, history, geography, and
politics tell a nuanced story about the people and dynamics that
reshaped this region and determined who would control it. The Ohio
Valley possesses some of the most resource-rich terrain in the
world. Its settlement by humans was thus consequential not only for
shaping the geographic and cultural landscape of the region but
also for forming the United States and the future of world history.
Settling Ohio begins with an overview of the first people who
inhabited the region, who built civilizations that moved massive
amounts of earth and left an archaeological record that drew the
interest of subsequent settlers and continues to intrigue scholars.
It highlights how, in the eighteenth century, American Indians who
migrated from the East and North interacted with Europeans to
develop impressive trading networks and how they navigated
complicated wars and sought to preserve national identities in the
face of violent attempts to remove them from their lands. The book
situates the traditional story of Ohio settlement, including the
Northwest Ordinance, the dealings of the Ohio Company of
Associates, and early road building, into a far richer story of
contested spaces, competing visions of nationhood, and complicated
relations with Indian peoples. By so doing, the contributors
provide valuable new insights into how chaotic and contingent early
national politics and frontier development truly were. Chapters
highlighting the role of apple-growing culture, education, African
American settlers, and the diverse migration flows into Ohio from
the East and Europe further demonstrate the complex multiethnic
composition of Ohio’s early settlements and the tensions that
resulted. A final theme of this volume is the desirability of
working to recover the often-forgotten history of non-White peoples
displaced by the processes of settler colonialism that has been,
until recently, undervalued in the scholarship.
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