Chronicle of the Indian Wars: From Colonial Times to Wounded KneeFrom the moment that Europeans landed on America's shores, they engaged in bloody conflict with the natives they encountered. Tensions and hostilities bred in the colonial wars with the Spanish, English, French, and Dutch would lead inevitably to the later wars of the removal period, skirmishes on the western Plains, and, ultimately, the confrontation at Wounded Knee. Now, captured here in the words of those who lived it, is the epic, violent history of a landscape turned red - through fear, greed, and fatal misunderstanding. Each chapter in this sweeping narrative outlines and focuses on a particular war or period, re-creating its conflicts through hundreds of immediate sources - the diaries and letters of military commanders, captivity narratives and missionary journals, U.S. Army reports and treaties, and Native American speeches and oral accounts. Here are the authentic voices of Chief Joseph, Black Hawk, Sitting Bull, and Crazy Horse; the accounts given by George Rogers Clark, Kit Carson, William Tecumseh Sherman, and George Armstrong Custer; as well as the experiences of the common soldier who labored under brutal conditions along the frontier, and Native American warriors fighting to the death to preserve their threatened way of life. Additional features make this volume the perfect reference. Included in each chapter are brief biographies of individual native and white leaders; excerpts from hundreds of historical documents; feature boxes on such topics as the conduct of warfare along the frontier, Native American beliefs, the fate of a captive, and treaties that were made and abandoned; maps of tribal locations and battle campaigns; and historical drawings and photographs. Adetailed chronology highlights all of the significant events in Native-white relations from the sixteenth-century Spanish exploration of North America through the aftermath of Wounded Knee. Like no other single volume, Chronicle of the Indian Wars brings to life the entire history of this centuries-old struggle for possession of a continent, tracing the sources of tragic conflict from their origin nearly 500 years ago up to the brink of the twentieth century. |
From inside the book
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Page 116
... FRONTIER CAMPAIGN Many men. Brother of William Clark , who served as co - captain of the Lewis and Clark expedition , George Rogers Clark began his own career in the 1770s as a sur- veyor in the western frontier territory of Virginia ...
... FRONTIER CAMPAIGN Many men. Brother of William Clark , who served as co - captain of the Lewis and Clark expedition , George Rogers Clark began his own career in the 1770s as a sur- veyor in the western frontier territory of Virginia ...
Page 117
... FRONTIER CAMPAIGN Many men simply deserted . Others wandered. British representatives , including the famous Tory - allied frontiersman Simon Girty , to plan a vengeance invasion of Kentucky . The early spring of 1780 was marked by ...
... FRONTIER CAMPAIGN Many men simply deserted . Others wandered. British representatives , including the famous Tory - allied frontiersman Simon Girty , to plan a vengeance invasion of Kentucky . The early spring of 1780 was marked by ...
Page 119
... frontier posts . By the time General Cornwallis had surrendered to General Washing- ton at Yorktown in 1781 , virtually ending the revolution , military discipline on the frontier had disintegrated , white raiding continued . Elsewhere ...
... frontier posts . By the time General Cornwallis had surrendered to General Washing- ton at Yorktown in 1781 , virtually ending the revolution , military discipline on the frontier had disintegrated , white raiding continued . Elsewhere ...
Contents
Jamestown and the Southern | 10 |
King Philips War 16751676 | 23 |
The DutchIndian Wars 16261664 | 38 |
Copyright | |
23 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
agent allies American Apaches army attack attempted August authorities band battle became began Black British called camp campaign Captain captive Cavalry Cheyennes chief Civil Colonel colonial command continued Creek death defeat Delaware destroyed effect English failed fight fire five force Fort French frontier George governor hands Hawk head horses hostile Indians Iroquois John joined Joseph July June killed King Lake land later leader Lieutenant Little live Major March Mexico Miles military militia Mohawks move named Navajos North November October officers Ohio party peace Pequots Philip present prisoners raids regulars remained removal reported reservation resistance returned River Saint sent September settlement settlers Shawnees side Sioux soldiers Spanish supply surrender territory took town trade treaty tribes troops turned United Valley village warriors West western women wounded York