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During the years of the Early Republic, prominent Native leaders
regularly traveled to American cities-Albany, Boston, Charleston,
Philadelphia, Montreal, Quebec, New York, and New Orleans-primarily
on diplomatic or trade business, but also from curiosity and
adventurousness. They were frequently referred to as "the Chiefs
now in this city" during their visits, which were sometimes for
extended periods of time. Indian people spent a lot of time in
town. Colin Calloway, National Book Award finalist and one of the
foremost chroniclers of Native American history, has gathered
together the accounts of these visits and from them created a new
narrative of the country's formative years, redefining what has
been understood as the "frontier." Calloway's book captures what
Native peoples observed as they walked the streets, sat in pews,
attended plays, drank in taverns, and slept in hotels and lodging
houses. In the Eastern cities they experienced an urban frontier,
one in which the Indigenous world met the Atlantic world.
Calloway's book reveals not just what Indians saw but how they were
seen. Crowds gathered to see them, sometimes to gawk; people
attended the theatre to watch "the Chiefs now in this city" watch a
play. Their experience enriches and redefines standard narratives
of contact between the First Americans and inhabitants of the
American Republic, reminding us that Indian people dealt with
non-Indians in multiple ways and in multiple places. The story of
the country's beginnings was not only one of violent confrontation
and betrayal, but one in which the nation's identity was being
forged by interaction between and among cultures and traditions.
In this collection, Champagne and Stauss demonstrate how the rise
of Native studies in American and Canadian universities exists as
an extraordinary achievement in higher education. In the face of
historically assimilationist agendas, institutional racism, and
structural opposition by Western educational institutions,
collaborative programs continue to grow and promote the values and
goals of sovereign tribal communities. The contributors show how
many departments grew significantly following the landmark 1969
Senate report, 'Indian Education: A National Tragedy, A National
Challenge.' They evaluate the university efforts to offer Native
students intellectual and technical skills, and the long battle to
represent Native cultures and world views in the university
curriculum. In twelve case studies, Indian and non-Indian teachers
provide rich, contextual histories of their programs through three
decades of growth. They frankly discuss successes and failures as
innovative strategies and models are tested. Programs from
University of California-Davis, Harvard, Saskatchewan, Arizona and
others provide detailed analyses of academic battles over
curriculum content, the marginalization of indigenous faculty and
students, the pedagogical implications of integrating native
instructors, the vagaries of administrative support and funding,
Native student retention, the vulnerability of native language
programs, and community collaborations. A vision of Indian
education that emerges from these pages that reveals the
university's potential as a vehicle for Indian nation-building, one
in which the university curriculum also benefits from sustained
contacts with tribal communities. As Native populations grow and
the demand for university training increases, this book will be a
valuable resource for Native American leaders, educators in Native
American studies, race and ethnic studies, comparative education,
minorities in education, anthropology, sociology, higher education
administration and educational policy.
In this collection, Champagne and Stauss demonstrate how the rise
of Native studies in American and Canadian universities exists as
an extraordinary achievement in higher education. In the face of
historically assimilationist agendas, institutional racism, and
structural opposition by Western educational institutions,
collaborative programs continue to grow and promote the values and
goals of sovereign tribal communities. The contributors show how
many departments grew significantly following the landmark 1969
Senate report, 'Indian Education: A National Tragedy, A National
Challenge.' They evaluate the university efforts to offer Native
students intellectual and technical skills, and the long battle to
represent Native cultures and world views in the university
curriculum. In twelve case studies, Indian and non-Indian teachers
provide rich, contextual histories of their programs through three
decades of growth. They frankly discuss successes and failures as
innovative strategies and models are tested. Programs from
University of California-Davis, Harvard, Saskatchewan, Arizona and
others provide detailed analyses of academic battles over
curriculum content, the marginalization of indigenous faculty and
students, the pedagogical implications of integrating native
instructors, the vagaries of administrative support and funding,
Native student retention, the vulnerability of native language
programs, and community collaborations. A vision of Indian
education that emerges from these pages that reveals the
university's potential as a vehicle for Indian nation-building, one
in which the university curriculum also benefits from sustained
contacts with tribal communities. As Native populations grow and
the demand for university training increases, this book will be a
valuable resource for Native American leaders, educators in Native
American studies, race and ethnic studies, comparative education,
minorities in education, anthropology, sociology, higher education
administration and educational policy.
In 19th century paintings, the proud Indian warrior and the
Scottish highland chief are portrayed in similar wayscolorful and
wild, righteous and warlike, the last of their breeds. In 17th and
18th century accounts, they are both presented as barbarians, in
need of English language, religion, and civilization. During the
Seven Years War, the Cherokees and Highland troops were said to be
cousins. By the 19th century, one could hear Cree, Mohawk,
Cherokee, and Salish spoken with Gaelic accents. Colin Calloway, in
this imaginative work of imperial history, looks at why these two
peoples have so much in common. A comparative approach to the
American Indians and Scottish Highlanders, this book examines the
experiences of clans and tribal societies, which underwent parallel
experiences on the peripheries of Britains empire (in Britain, the
United States, and Canada) and what happened when they encountered
one another on the frontier. Pushed out of their ancestral lands,
their traditional food sourcescattle in the Highlands and bison on
the Great Plainswere decimated to make way for livestock farming.
Chapters of this book explore the storied landscapes, communal
land-holding practices, and deep spiritual connections to place
they shared; families and clans; Christian missionary activities
among both Highlanders and Indians; and the forced removals of both
peoples from their ancestral lands. Eventually, the conquering
cultures would romanticize the indigenous peoples whose tribal ways
of life they destroyed, in art and literature by such authors as
Sir Walter Scott and James Fenimore Cooper. In North America, the
groups often came together through the fur and deerskin industries
and intermarried, and this book examines their relationships in the
context of relations with colonial powers. Today, both groups
continue to celebrate the survival of their heritages in pow-wows
and Highland festivals, and growing numbers of Indians apply for
membership in Scottish clan societies. A scholar of American
Indians, who is of Scottish Highlander heritage, Calloway is known
for his work on the relationships between Indians and colonists in
North America. In this book, he complicates the notion of British
power by differentiating between the English and Scottish
Highlanders, who the English co-opted into serving in their
military forces in North America. What one gains is a more
finely-tuned understanding of how indigenous peoples with their own
rich identities experienced cultural change, economic
transformation, and demographic dislocation amidst the growing
power of the British empire.
The largest known collection of ledger art ever acquired by one
individual is Mark Lansburgh's diverse assemblage of more than 140
drawings, now held by the Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College
and catalogued in this important book. The Cheyennes, Crows,
Kiowas, Lakotas, and other Plains peoples created the genre known
as ledger art in the mid-nineteenth century. Before that time,
these Indians had chronicled the heroic achievements of their
warriors and chiefs on rock, buffalo robes, and tipi covers. As
they came into increasing contact with American traders, the
artists recorded their experiences in pencil and crayon drawings on
paper bound in ledger or account books. The drawings became known
as ledger art.
This volume presents in full color the Lansburgh collection in its
entirety. The drawings are narratives depicting Plains lifeways
through Plains eyes. They include landscapes and scenes of battle,
hunting, courting, ceremony, incarceration, and travel by foot,
horse, train, and boat. Ledger art also served to prompt memories
of horse raids and heroic exploits in battle.
In addition to showcasing the Lansburgh collection, "Ledger
Narratives" augments the growing literature on this art form by
providing seven new essays that suggest some of the many stories
the drawings contain and that look at them from innovative
perspectives. The authors--scholars of art history, anthropology,
history, and Native American studies--touch on such themes as
gender, social status, sovereignty, tribal and intertribal
politics, economic exchange, and confinement and space in a
changing world.
The Lansburgh collection includes some of the most arresting
examples of Plains Indian art, and the essays in this volume help
us see and hear the multiple narratives these drawings
relate.
Colin G. Calloway collects, for the first time, documents
describing the full range of encounters of Indians and Europeans in
northern New England during the Colonial era. His comprehensive and
highly readable introduction to the subject of Indian and European
interaction in northern New England covers early encounters,
missionary efforts, diplomacy, war, commerce, and cultural
interchange and features a wide range of primary sources, including
narratives, letters, account books, treaties, and council
proceedings.
Together with period illustrations, the documents testify to the
richness and variety of the inter-ethnic relations in northern New
England. They also show that while conflict certainly occurred, the
encounters were also marked by cooperation and accommodation.
George Washington's place in the foundations of the Republic
remains unrivalled. His life story-from his beginnings as a
surveyor and farmer, to colonial soldier in the Virginia Regiment,
leader of the Patriot cause, commander of the Continental Army, and
finally first president of the United States-reflects the narrative
of the nation he guided into existence. There is, rightfully, no
more chronicled figure. Yet American history has largely forgotten
what Washington himself knew clearly: that the new Republic's fate
depended less on grand rhetoric of independence and self-governance
and more on land-Indian land. Colin G. Calloway's biography of the
greatest founding father reveals in full the relationship between
Washington and the Native leaders he dealt with intimately across
the decades: Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Guyasuta, Attakullakulla,
Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Cornplanter, Red Jacket, and Little
Turtle, among many others. Using the prism of Washington's life to
bring focus to these figures and the tribes they represented-the
Iroquois Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware-Calloway
reveals how central their role truly was in Washington's, and
therefore the nation's, foundational narrative. Calloway gives the
First Americans their due, revealing the full extent and complexity
of the relationships between the man who rose to become the
nation's most powerful figure and those whose power and dominion
declined in almost equal degree during his lifetime. His book
invites us to look at America's origins in a new light. The Indian
World of George Washington is a brilliant portrait of both the most
revered man in American history and those whose story during the
tumultuous century in which the country was formed has, until now,
been only partially told.
Although many Americans consider the establishment of the colonies
as the birth of this country, in fact early America existed long
before the arrival of the Europeans. From coast to coast, Native
Americans had created enduring cultures, and the subsequent
European invasion remade much of the land and society. In New
Worlds for All, Colin G. Calloway explores the unique and vibrant
new cultures that Indians and Europeans forged together in early
America. The journey toward this hybrid society kept Europeans' and
Indians' lives tightly entwined: living, working, worshiping,
traveling, and trading together-as well as fearing, avoiding,
despising, and killing one another. In some areas, settlers lived
in Indian towns, eating Indian food. In the Mohawk Valley of New
York, Europeans tattooed their faces; Indians drank tea. A unique
American identity emerged. The second edition of New Worlds for All
incorporates fifteen years of additional scholarship on
Indian-European relations, such as the role of gender, Indian
slavery, relationships with African Americans, and new
understandings of frontier society.
The 1676 killing of Metacomet, the tribal leader dubbed "King
Philip" by colonists, is commonly seen as a watershed event,
marking the end of a bloody war, dissolution of Indian society in
New England, and even the disappearance of Native peoples from the
region. This collection challenges that assumption, showing that
Indians adapted and survived, existing quietly on the fringes of
Yankee society, less visible than before but nonetheless retaining
a distinct identity and heritage. While confinement on tiny
reservations, subjection to increasing state regulation, enforced
abandonment of traditional dress and means of support, and racist
policies did cause dramatic changes, Natives nonetheless managed to
maintain their Indianness through customs, kinship, and community.
George Washington dominates the narrative of the nation's birth,
yet American history has largely forgotten what he knew: that the
country's fate depended less on grand rhetorical statements of
independence and self-governance than on land-Indian land. While
other histories have overlooked the central importance of Indian
power during the country's formative years, Colin G. Calloway here
gives Native American leaders their due, revealing the relationship
between the man who rose to become the most powerful figure in his
country and the Native tribes whose dominion he usurped. In this
sweeping new biography, Calloway uses the prism of Washington's
life to bring focus to the great Native leaders of his
time-Shingas, Tanaghrisson, Bloody Fellow, Joseph Brant, Red
Jacket, Little Turtle-and the tribes they represented: the Iroquois
Confederacy, Lenape, Miami, Creek, Delaware; in the process, he
returns them to their rightful place in the story of America's
founding. The Indian World of George Washington spans decades of
Native American leaders' interaction with Washington, from his
early days as surveyor of Indian lands, to his military career
against both the French and the British, to his presidency, when he
dealt with Native Americans as a head of state would with a foreign
power, using every means of diplomacy and persuasion to fulfill the
new republic's destiny by appropriating their land. By the end of
his life, Washington knew more than anyone else in America about
the frontier and its significance to the future of his country. The
Indian World of George Washington offers a fresh portrait of the
most revered American and the Native Americans whose story has been
only partially told. Calloway's biography invites us to look again
at the story of America's beginnings and see the country in a whole
new light.
Indian peoples made some four hundred treaties with the United
States between the American Revolution and 1871, when Congress
prohibited them. They signed nine treaties with the Confederacy, as
well as countless others over the centuries with Spain, France,
Britain, Mexico, the Republic of Texas, Canada, and even Russia,
not to mention individual colonies and states. In retrospect, the
treaties seem like well-ordered steps on the path of dispossession
and empire. The reality was far more complicated.
In Pen and Ink Witchcraft, eminent Native American historian Colin
G. Calloway narrates the history of diplomacy between North
American Indians and their imperial adversaries, particularly the
United States. Treaties were cultural encounters and human dramas,
each with its cast of characters and conflicting agendas. Many
treaties, he notes, involved not land, but trade, friendship, and
the resolution of disputes. Far from all being one-sided, they were
negotiated on the Indians' cultural and geographical terrain. When
the Mohawks welcomed Dutch traders in the early 1600s, they sealed
a treaty of friendship with a wampum belt with parallel rows of
purple beads, representing the parties traveling side-by-side, as
equals, on the same river. But the American republic increasingly
turned treaty-making into a tool of encroachment on Indian
territory. Calloway traces this process by focusing on the treaties
of Fort Stanwix (1768), New Echota (1835), and Medicine Lodge
(1867), in addition to such events as the Peace of Montreal in 1701
and the treaties of Fort Laramie (1851 and 1868). His analysis
demonstrates that native leaders were hardly dupes. The records of
negotiations, he writes, show that "Indians frequently matched
their colonizing counterparts in diplomatic savvy and tried,
literally, to hold their ground."
Each treaty has its own story, Calloway writes, but together they
tell a rich and complicated tale of moments in American history
when civilizations collided.
This study presents the first broad coverage of Indian experiences in the American Revolution rather than Indian participation as allies or enemies of contending parties. Colin Calloway focuses on eight Indian communities as he explores how the Revolution often translated into war among Indians and their own struggles for independence. Drawing on British, American, Canadian and Spanish records, Calloway shows how Native Americans pursued different strategies, endured a variety of experiences, but were bequeathed a common legacy as a result of the Revolution.
In 1791, General Arthur St. Clair led the United States army in a
campaign to destroy a complex of Indian villages at the Miami River
in northwestern Ohio. Almost within reach of their objective, St.
Clair's 1,400 men were attacked by about one thousand Indians. The
U.S. force was decimated, suffering nearly one thousand casualties
in killed and wounded, while Indian casualties numbered only a few
dozen. But despite the lopsided result, it wouldn't appear to carry
much significance; it involved only a few thousand people, lasted
less than three hours, and the outcome, which was never in doubt,
was permanently reversed a mere three years later. Neither an epic
struggle nor a clash that changed the course of history, the battle
doesn't even have a name.
Yet, as renowned Native American historian Colin Calloway
demonstrates here, St. Clair's Defeat--as it came to be known-- was
hugely important for its time. It was both the biggest victory the
Native Americans ever won, and, proportionately, the biggest
military disaster the United States had suffered. With the British
in Canada waiting in the wings for the American experiment in
republicanism to fail, and some regions of the West gravitating
toward alliance with Spain, the defeat threatened the very
existence of the infant United States. Generating a deluge of
reports, correspondence, opinions, and debates in the press, it
produced the first congressional investigation in American history,
while ultimately changing not only the manner in which Americans
viewed, raised, organized, and paid for their armies, but the very
ways in which they fought their wars.
Emphasizing the extent to which the battle has been overlooked in
history, Calloway illustrates how this moment of great victory by
American Indians became an aberration in the national story and a
blank spot in the national memory. Calloway shows that St. Clair's
army proved no match for the highly motivated and well-led Native
American force that shattered not only the American army but the
ill-founded assumption that Indians stood no chance against
European methods and models of warfare. An engaging and
enlightening read for American history enthusiasts and scholars
alike, The Victory withNo Name brings this significant moment in
American history back to light.
Dartmouth College began life as an Indian school, a pretense that
has since been abandoned. Still, the institution has a unique, if
complicated, relationship with Native Americans and their history.
Beginning with Samson Occom's role as the first "development
officer" of the college, Colin G. Calloway tells the entire,
complex story of Dartmouth's historical and ongoing relationship
with Native Americans. Calloway recounts the struggles and
achievements of Indian attendees and the history of Dartmouth
alumni's involvements with American Indian affairs. He also covers
more recent developments, such as the mascot controversies, the
emergence of an active Native American student organization, and
the partial fulfillment of a promise deferred. This is a
fascinating picture of an elite American institution and its
troubled relationship-- at times compassionate, at times
conflicted--with Indians and Native American culture.
This magnificent, sweeping work traces the histories of the Native
peoples of the American West from their arrival thousands of years
ago to the early years of the nineteenth century. Emphasizing
conflict and change, "One Vast Winter Count" offers a new look at
the early history of the region by blending ethnohistory, colonial
history, and frontier history. Drawing on a wide range of oral and
archival sources from across the West, Colin G. Calloway offers an
unparalleled glimpse at the lives of generations of Native peoples
in a western land soon to be overrun.
For over three hundred years, the Indian peoples of North America
have attracted the interest of diverse segments of German
society--missionaries, writers, playwrights, anthropologists,
filmmakers, hobbyists and enthusiasts, and even royalty. Today,
German scholars continue to be drawn to Indians, as is the German
public: tour groups from Germany frequent Plains reservations in
the summer, and so-called Indianerclubs, where participants dress
up in "authentic" Indian costume, are common. In this fascinating
volume, scholars and writers illuminate the longstanding connection
between Germans and the Indians.
From a range of disciplines and occupations, the contributors probe
the historical and cultural roots of the interactions between
Germans and Indians and examine how such encounters have been
represented in different media over the centuries. Particularly
important are reflections and insights by modern Native American
writers on this relationship. Of special concern is why such a
connection has endured. As the contributors make clear, the
encounters between Germans and Indians were also imagined,
sometimes as fantasy, sometimes as projection, both resonating
deeply with the cultural sensibilities and changing historical
circumstances of Germans over the years.
Before European incursions began in the seventeenth century, the
Western Abenaki Indians inhabited present-day Vermont and New
Hampshire, particularly the Lake Champlain and Connecticut River
valleys. This history of their coexistence and conflicts with
whites on the northern New England frontier documents their
survival as a people-recently at issue in the courts-and their wars
and migrations, as far north as Quebec, during the first two
centuries of white contacts. Written clearly and authoritatively,
with sympathy for this long-neglected tribe, Colin G. Calloway's
account of the Western Abenaki diaspora adds to the growing
interest in remnant Indian groups of North America. This history of
an Algonquian group on the periphery of the Iroquois Confederacy is
also a major contribution to general Indian historiography and to
studies of Indian white interactions, cultural persistence, and
ethnic identity in North America Colin G. Calloway, Assistant
Professor of History in the University of Wyoming, is the author of
Crown and Calumet: British-Indian Relations, 1783-181S, and the
editor of New Directions in American Indian History, both published
by the University of Oklahoma Press. "Colin Calloway shows how
Western Abenaki history, like all Indian history, has been hidden,
ignored, or purposely obscured. Although his work focuses on
Euro-American military interactions with these important eastern
Indians, Calloway provides valuable insights into why Indians and
Indian identity have survived in Vermont despite their lack of
recognition for centuries."-Laurence M. Hauptman, State University
of New York, New Paltz. "Far from being an empty no-man's-land in
the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the western Abenaki
homeland is shown in this excellent synthesis to have been an
active part of the stage on which the events of the colonial period
were acted out. -Dean R. Snow, State University of New York,
Albany. "At last the western Abenakis have a proper history. Colin
Calloway has made their difficultly accessible literature his own
and has written what will surely remain the standard reference for
a long time."-Gordon M. Day, Canadian Ethnology Service. "Although
they played a central role in the colonial history of New England
and southern Quebec, the western Abenakis have been all but ignored
by historians and poorly known to anthropologists. Therefore,
publication of a careful study of western Abenaki history ranks as
a major event.... Calloway's book is a gold mine of useful
data."-William A. Haviland, senior author, The Original Vermonters.
Revealing firsthand narratives of Indian captivity from
eighteenth-century New Hampshire and Vermont.
Narratives of Europeans who experienced Indian captivity represent
one of the oldest genres of American literature. They are often
credited with establishing the stereotype of Indians as cruel and
bloodthirsty. While early southern New England accounts were
heavily influenced by a dominant Puritan interpretation which had
little room for individual and cultural distinctions, later
northern New England narratives show growing independence from this
influence.
The eight narratives selected for this book challenge old
stereotypes and provide a clearer understanding of the nature of
captive taking. Indians used captives to replace losses in their
tribes and families, and also to participate in the French and
British ransom market. These stories portray Indian captors as
individuals with a unique culture and offer glimpses of daily life
in frontier communities. Calloway complements them with valuable
historical background material. His book will appeal especially to
readers interested in Native American peoples and life on the north
country frontier of Vermont and New Hampshire.
In 1791, General Arthur St. Clair led the United States army in a
campaign to destroy a complex of Indian villages at the Maumee
River in northwestern Ohio. Almost within reach of their objective,
St. Clair's 1,400 men were attacked by about one thousand Indians.
The U.S. force was decimated, suffering nearly one thousand
casualties in killed and wounded, while Indian casualties numbered
only a few dozen. But despite the lopsided result, it wouldn't
appear to carry much significance; it involved only a few thousand
people, lasted less than three hours, and the outcome, which was
never in doubt, was permanently reversed a mere three years later.
Neither an epic struggle nor a clash that changed the course of
history, the battle doesn't even have a name. Yet, as renowned
Native American historian Colin Calloway demonstrates here, St.
Clair's Defeat-as it came to be known- was hugely important for its
time. It was both the biggest victory the Native Americans ever
won, and, proportionately, the biggest military disaster the United
States had suffered. With the British in Canada waiting in the
wings for the American experiment in republicanism to fail, and
some regions of the West gravitating toward alliance with Spain,
the defeat threatened the very existence of the infant United
States. Generating a deluge of reports, correspondence, opinions,
and debates in the press, it produced the first congressional
investigation in American history, while ultimately changing not
only the manner in which Americans viewed, raised, organized, and
paid for their armies, but the very ways in which they fought their
wars. Emphasizing the extent to which the battle has been
overlooked in history, Calloway illustrates how this moment of
great victory by American Indians became an aberration in the
national story and a blank spot in the national memory. Calloway
shows that St. Clair's army proved no match for the highly
motivated and well-led Native American force that shattered not
only the American army but the ill-founded assumption that Indians
stood no chance against European methods and models of warfare. An
engaging and enlightening read for American history enthusiasts and
scholars alike, The Victory with No Name brings this significant
moment in American history back to light.
In this superb volume in Oxford's acclaimed Pivotal Moments series,
Colin Calloway reveals how the Treaty of Paris of 1763 had a
profound effect on American history, setting in motion a cascade of
unexpected consequences, as Indians and Europeans, settlers and
frontiersmen, all struggled to adapt to new boundaries, new
alignments, and new relationships.
Britain now possessed a vast American empire stretching from
Canada to the Florida Keys, yet the crushing costs of maintaining
it would push its colonies toward rebellion. White settlers, free
to pour into the West, clashed as never before with Indian tribes
struggling to defend their way of life. In the Northwest, Pontiac's
War brought racial conflict to its bitterest level so far. Whole
ethnic groups migrated, sometimes across the continent: it was 1763
that saw many exiled settlers from Acadia in French Canada move
again to Louisiana, where they would become Cajuns. Calloway
unfurls this panoramic canvas with vibrant narrative skill,
peopling his tale with memorable characters such as William
Johnson, the Irish baronet who moved between Indian campfires and
British barracks; Pontiac, the charismatic Ottawa chieftain; and
James Murray, Britains first governor in Quebec, who fought to
protect the religious rights of his French Catholic subjects.
Most Americans know the significance of the Declaration of
Independence or the Emancipation Proclamation, but not the Treaty
of Paris. Yet 1763 was a year that shaped our history just as
decisively as 1776 or 1862. This captivating book shows why.
Winner of the Society of Colonial Wars Book Award for 2006
From maps, monuments, and architectural features to stamps and
currency, images of Native Americans have been used again and again
on visual expressions of American national identity since before
the country’s founding. In the first in-depth study of this
extraordinary archive, Cécile R. Ganteaume argues that these
representations are not empty symbols but reflect how official and
semi-official government institutions—from the U.S. Army and the
Department of the Treasury to the patriotic fraternal society Sons
of Liberty—have attempted to define what the country stands for.
Seen collectively and studied in detail, American Indian imagery on
a wide range of emblems—almost invariably distorted and bearing
little relation to the reality of Native American–U.S. government
relations—sheds light on the United States’ evolving sense of
itself as a democratic nation. Generation after generation,
Americans have needed to define anew their relationship with
American Indians, whose lands they usurped and whom they long
regarded as fundamentally different from themselves. Such images as
a Plains Indian buffalo hunter on the 1898 four-cent stamp and
Sequoyah’s likeness etched into glass doors at the Library of
Congress in 2013 reveal how deeply rooted American Indians are in
U.S. national identity. While the meanings embedded in these
artifacts can be paradoxical, counterintuitive, and contradictory
to their eras’ prevailing attitudes toward actual American
Indians, Ganteaume shows how the imagery has been crucial to the
ongoing national debate over what it means to be an American.
 Officially Indian is published in concert with the
Americans exhibition, which opens October 26, 2017, at the National
Museum of the American Indian in Washington, D.C. American Indians
represent less than 1 percent of the U.S. population, yet names and
images of Indians are everywhere: military weapons, songs, town
names, advertising, and that holiday in November. Americans invites
visitors to take a closer look, and to ask why. Featuring nearly
350 objects and images, from a Tomahawk missile to baking powder
cans, Americans examines the staying power of four stories
(Thanksgiving, Pocahontas, the Trail of Tears, and the Battle of
Little Bighorn) that are woven into the fabric of both American
history and contemporary life. By highlighting what has been
remembered, contested, cherished, and denied about these stories,
and why they continue to resonate, this exhibition shows that
Americans have always been fascinated, conflicted, and profoundly
shaped by their relationship to American Indians.
This magnificent, sweeping account traces the histories of the
Native peoples of the American West from their arrival thousands of
years ago to the early years of the nineteenth century. Colin G.
Calloway depicts Indian country west of the Appalachians to the
Pacific, with emphasis on conflict and change. With broad and
incisive strokes Calloway's narrative includes: the first
inhabitants and their early pursuit of big-game animals; the
diffusion of corn and how it transformed American Indian life; the
Spanish invasion and Indian resistance to Spanish colonialism;
French-Indian relations in the heart of the continent; the
diffusion of horses and horse culture; the collision of rival
European empires and the experiences of Indian peoples whose
homelands became imperial borderlands; and the dramatic events
between the American Revolution and the arrival of Lewis and Clark.
The account ends as a new American nation emerged independent of
the British Empire, took over the trans-Mississippi West, and began
to expand its own empire based on the concept of liberty and the
acquisition of Indian land. One Vast Winter Count offers a new look
at the early history of the region-a blending of ethnohistory,
colonial history, and frontier history. It features Native voices
and perspectives; a masterful, fluid integration of a wide range of
oral and archival sources from across the West; a dynamic
reconstruction of cultural histories; and balanced consideration of
controversial subjects and issues. Calloway offers an unparalleled
glimpse at the lives of generations of Native peoples in a western
land soon to be overrun. Colin G. Calloway is a professor of
history, Samson Occom Professor of Native American Studies, and
chair of the Native American Studies program at Dartmouth College.
He is the coeditor of Germans and Indians: Fantasies, Projections,
Encounters (Nebraska 2002) and the author of many publications
including New Worlds for All: Indians, Europeans, and the Remaking
of Early America.
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