Read An Indigenous Peoples' History of the United States Online
Authors: Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz
land claims, 205â8
land grants, 123, 126â27, 140â42
Land Ordinance (1785), 124
land restitution, 175, 179â80, 181, 205â8, 258â59n5
The Last of the Mohicans
(Cooper), 71, 103â4, 221
Lawrence, D. H., 94, 105, 227
Lawton, Henry W., 165
Leatherstocking Tales (Cooper), 103, 106
Lee, Robert E., 133, 135
Lewis and Clark Expedition, 28, 120â21
liberty and empire, 105â6, 124
Liliuokalani (Queen of Hawaiâi), 163
Lincoln, Abraham: and Civil War, 133; colonial policy prior to military implementation under, 140â46; and “free soil” for settlers, 134â36; and genocidal army of the West, 136â40
Little Bighorn, 151â52, 155
Little Crow, 136
Little House on the Prairie series, 252â53n19
Little Turtle (Meshekinnoqquah), 81, 83, 85
Little Wolf, 149
Lone Wolf v. Hitchcock
(1903), 189
“Long Walk,” 138â39
“Lord Dunmore's War” (1774), 71â72
“lost tribes,” 233
Louisiana Purchase, 95â96; Daniel Boone and, 106; Cherokees and, 111; conditions for statehood in, 124; and Lewis and Clark, 120; and Sioux Nation, 186
Lowell, James Russell, 130, 131
“low-intensity conflict,” 58
Lyons, Oren, 26
MacArthur, Arthur, 165
MacDonald, Peter, 210
Madison, James, 85, 87, 100
Magellan, Ferdinand, 43
Malisset people, 67
El Malpais, 180
manifest destiny: and buffalo soldiers, 147; challenge to concept of, 220; and General Allotment Act, 157â61; Mexican War and, 130, 131; and multiculturalism, 5â6; unconscious, 2â3; and US origin myth, 105â6; and US overseas imperialism, 162â67; Walt Whitman on, 118
Mankiller, Wilma, 108
Mann, Charles C., 15, 27, 28
Maroons, 23, 66, 101
Marshall, John, 110, 199â200
MartÃnez, Miguel Alfonso, 205
Mason, John, 59, 62, 63
Mayan civilization, 18â19
Mayflower Compact, 49, 50
McGillivray, Alexander, 78
McIntosh, Lachlan, 72â73
McNickle, D'Arcy, 175, 176, 197
Means, Russell, 186
medicine, Indigenous, 17, 246n3
Melville, Herman, 103, 130
Menominee Nation, 175
mercantile capitalism, 143â44
Merritt, Wesley E., 165
Meshekinnoqquah (Little Turtle), 81, 83, 85
Mesoamerica, 17â21
Mexican War (1846), 117, 123, 130â32
Mexican workers, deportation of, 176
Mexico: abolishment of slavery by, 127; early Indigenous civilizations in, 17â21; independence movement in, 120; indigenous people of occupied, 125â30; land grants in, 123, 126â27; revolution of Indigenous farmers in, 167; US colonization of, 121â24; and US imperialism, 118â21; views on US invasion and occupation of, 130â32
Miamis, 81â83
Micronesians, 225â26
migration(s): of Cherokees, 21; and cultivation of corn, 22, 30; to Indian Territory, 112, 115; interstate, 8; to and from reservations, 259n20; of Scots-Irish, 52â53, 54, 96; seasonal, 29; of Sioux, 152; through Mexico, 30
migratory genocide, 149
Mi'kmaq people, 67
Miles, Nelson A., 139, 149, 164, 165
militarization, 225â28
military names, 56â57
militia(s): in “Black Hawk War,” 111; in Cherokee territory, 89; colonial, 58â60, 64; in French and Indian War, 67, 69, 71; and Green Corn Rebellion, 167; in Illinois and Indiana Territories, 87; under Andrew Jackson, 97, 99; and Modocs, 223; and Muskogee Nation, 92; in Ohio Country, 72, 73, 81; regular army and, 94; Rough Riders, 165; Scots-Irish in, 53â54; and Second Amendment, 80; settler, 73, 82, 165; in Virginia, 75; in West, 137, 138
Mills, Sid, 181â82
Miner, H. Craig, 167, 168
mining, 19, 209â10
Mission Dolores, 127â28
Modoc War, 223â24
Monroe, James, 102, 133
Monroe Doctrine, 3; Roosevelt Corollary to, 166
Montezuma II, 21
Montgomery, Archibald, 68â69
Mooney, James, 112â13
Moriscos, 37
Morrill Act (1862), 140
Mount Rushmore, 180, 207
MurguÃa, Alejandro, 129
Muskogee (Creek) Nation: and allotments, 158â59; and “civilization” project, 98; forced removal of, 113; governance of, 26; origins of, 30; Red Sticks of, 98â99, 100, 101; resistance by, 90â92; treaties with Confederacy by, 135
Muskogee Creek Orphan Fund, 168
Muskogee War (1813â14), 93, 97â101
Myer, Dillon S., 174
NAGPRA (Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act, 1990), 206
Narragansetts, 63
National Congress of American Indians (NCAI), 57, 175, 184, 193
National Indian Gaming Association, 210
National Indian Youth Council (NIYC), 181, 182, 185, 210
national narrative, 2, 3â4, 12â13
Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA, 1990), 206
Navajo (Diné) Nation: Fairchild assembly plant in, 209; forced march of, 138â39; land base of, 12; and mining, 210; origins of, 23; rejection of Indian Reorganization
Act by, 171â72
Nazi Germany, 204â5
NCAI (National Congress of American Indians), 57, 175, 184, 193
Neal, Richard, 57, 193
neocolonialism, 7, 190
New Deal, 170â72
New England colony, 62â64
“new frontier,” 178â80
New Mexico: land-grant settlements in, 258â59n5; Spanish settler-colonists in, 125; statehood of, 124
New Spain, 43
“New World,” 42
Nimi'ipuu (Chief Joseph, Nez Perce), 149â50, 165
Nixon, Richard M., 179â80, 184, 185
NIYC (National Indian Youth Council), 181, 182, 185, 210
Northwest Ordinance (1787), 3, 124
Obama, Barack: on colonial power, 115â16; and Violence Against Women Act, 214
Office of Indian Affairs, 102â3, 151, 189
Oglethorpe, James, 66
Ohio Country: and Northwest Ordinance, 3; Tecumseh in, 84â87; transfer from Britain of, 78; during war for independence, 71â74; after war of independence, 81â83
Ojibwe Nation, 24, 216â17
Oklahoma: Green Corn Rebellion in, 166â67; statehood of, 159.
See also
Indian Territory (Oklahoma)
“Oklahoma Run,” 158
Old Lady Horse, 143
Olmec civilization, 19
Oneida Nation, 77
“Operation Wetback,” 176
origin myths/narratives, 2, 3â4, 12â13, 47â51, 102â7
Ortiz, Simon J., 133, 137, 236
Osage Nation, 215â16
overgrazing, 171â72
Pacific Railroad Act (1862), 140
Paha Sapa.
See
Black Hills (Paha Sapa)
pan-Indigenous movement, 10, 84â85
patriotism: Alamo and, 127; after Civil War, 140; and covenant, 50, 51; under Andrew Jackson, 102â7, 108, 115; origin story and, 47
Patton, George, 167, 194
Pequot War (1637), 62â63, 64
Percy, George, 60
Pershing, John J., 167
Persian Gulf War, 57, 193â94
Philippines, US occupation of, 164, 165â66
Pike, Zebulon M., 120â22, 123
Pilgrims, 49
Pine Ridge Sioux Reservation: Guardians of the Oglala Nation at, 186, 250n22; home rule in, 190; poverty and social dysfunction in, 208, 211; and Trail of Broken Treaties, 185â86; and Wounded Knee Massacre, 154â56
Plains Indians: and Geronimo, 150; relocation of, 150, 151; scorched-earth forays against, 139; slaughter of buffalo of, 142â43, 220; Winchester rifle in campaign against, 234
plantation(s): economy of, 55, 92â93, 109; and Hawkins project, 98; Muskogee, 100; owned by Scots-Irish, 53; vs. small-scale farmers, 55, 71, 80, 109, 134; in Spanish Florida, 66, 102; in Texas, 126â27
Plenty Horses, 156â57
Plymouth Colony, 49, 62â64
Polk, James K., 131
Ponce de León, Juan, 43
Pontiac, 84
Pontiac's Rebellion (1763), 68
Poor People's Campaign, 182â83
population: during colonization, 39â42; in precolonial America, 17
Portuguese colonialism, 42â43, 199
poverty: of Chagossians, 225; colonialism and, 262n23; on reservations, 191, 208, 211; War on, 182, 208â9
POW.
See
prisoner of war (POW)
powerlessness, 211
Powhatan Confederacy, 60â61
prairies: habitat management on, 45; in precolonial America, 24â25
Pratt, Richard Henry, 151
precolonial North America, 15â31; Aztec civilization in, 20â21; corn cultivation in, 21â25; governance in, 25â27; Indigenous peoples as stewards of the land in, 27â30; Mesoamerica in, 17â21; peoples of the corn in, 30â31; population in, 17
Price, David H., 227â28
prisoner of war (POW): William “Rusty” Calley as, 192; Geronimo as, 150â51; return of remains of, 207; vs. unlawful combatant, 222
privatization: and allotments, 157â61, 249n4; of common land, 34â36; of property, 98; of war, 65
Prophet's Town, 84, 86
Pueblo Indians: and allotments, 160â61; history of, 20, 22, 23, 29; land claims by, 171, 180; and militarization, 226; military assault on, 125
Pueblo Lands Act (1924), 171
Puritans, 48, 62â64
Quakers, 200
Quincentennial year, 197â98
racism: and anticommunism, 175â76; of Ralph Waldo Emerson, 131; irregular warfare and, 59; and multiculturalism, 5; neo-, 230; in 1920s, 170; and racial superiority, 231; of US policies, 1â2; and Vietnam War, 192; and white supremacy, 36â39; of Walt Whitman, 117â18, 253n2
railroads: across reservations, 188; and buffalo, 143; investment of Indigenous funds in, 168; land grants to, 140, 141â42, 145; workers strike at, 166
rangers and ranging: in French and Indian War, 67, 68, 69, 71; in Georgia, 66, 92; and Haudenosaunee, 77; in Illinois and Indiana Territories, 87; in late seventeenth century, 63â64; and manifest destiny, 220; and Miamis, 82; in Ohio Country, 71â75, 82â83; and Tecumseh, 86; in Tennessee, 88â90; in Texas, 127, 130â31, 150
Redhouse, John, 210
“redskins,” 64â65
Red Sticks, 98â99
religion: absorbing Christianity into, 79; and assimilation, 151; of Calvinists, 47â51, 54; and Crusades, 32â33, 36â37; and Doctrine of Discovery, 200â201; Kiowa, 143; Mayan, 18; of Pueblos, 125; and repatriation of ancestral remains, 207; of Sioux Nation, 188, 189; Sun Dance, 21; and Tecumseh, 85
reparations for land claims, 205â8
repatriation, 206, 207, 231â33
reservations, 10â12, 249n2; and allotments, 158, 159, 189â90;
Anishinaabe, 216; Apache, 150; Cheyenne, 146, 149â50, 152; crowding in, 157; Ghost Dance in, 154; and Indigenous funds, 168; industrial plants in, 209; informal, 249n2; Lakota, 155; and land restoration, 171; migration to and from, 259n20; Modoc, 223; Navajo, 172; in New England, 114; poverty in, 191, 208, 211; railroad and, 188; Sand Creek, 137â38; Sioux, 164, 185, 190, 207â8; and termination policy, 174, 191; trading posts in, 144; violence against women in, 176, 214, 262n32
resistance: to allotment, 158â61; by Apaches, 131â32, 150; in California, 129; by Cherokee Nation, 69, 75, 76, 87â90; by Cheyennes, 149, 165; during civil rights era, 175â77; culture of, 79; and Ghost Dance, 153â57; and irregular forces, 58; in King Philip's War, 64; by Miamis, 81; by Muskogee Nation, 90â92; in Ohio Country, 83; by Seminole Nation, 101â2; of Sioux, 165; by Tecumseh, 72, 84â87; in Virginia, 61; in West, 147, 149â53
restitution, land, 175, 179â80, 181, 205â8, 258â59n5
restoration for land claims, 205â8, 236
revisionism, 5â6, 7
roads in precolonial America, 28â30
Rogers, Robert, 68, 94, 227
Rogers's Rangers, 68, 71
Rogin, Michael Paul, 109, 114
Roosevelt, Franklin Delano, 170â71, 173
Roosevelt, Theodore, 53, 162, 165â66
Roosevelt Corollary to Monroe Doctrine, 166
Ross, John, 135
sacred corn food, 16â17
sacred land, 55, 152, 179â80, 206â7, 211, 236
Sanchez, Marie, 203â4
Sand Creek Massacre (1864), 93, 137â38
Sandoz, Mari, 149
San MartÃn, José de, 119â20
Santa Fe Trail, 122
Sauks, 111
scalping, 38, 52, 63, 64â65
scorched-earth campaigns.
See
total war
Scotland, England's invasion of, 38
Scots-Irish, 51â54, 248n17
Second Amendment rights, 50, 80, 227â28
“Second Barbary War” (1815â16), 119
Second Seminole War (1835â42), 101â2
self-determination, 181â86, 202â5; economic, 208â10; and Indigenous governance, 215â17
Seminole Nation, 26, 93, 101, 113
Seminole Wars (1817â-58), 97, 101â2
Senate Subcommittee on Indian Affairs, 180, 258n5
Seneca Nation, 77, 82
September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, 221
Serra, JunÃpero, 128
settler colonialism, 2â10; as framework for US history, 7â8; and genocide, 2, 6, 8â10; legacy of, 229â30; and manifest destiny, 2â3, 5â6; and national narrative, 2, 3â4, 12â13; and neocolonialism, 7; and Ulster-Scots, 51â54; and US West or Borderlands history, 7â8
settler-farmers, 61â62, 70â71
settler patriotism, 102â7
settler-rangers.
See
rangers
Seven Years' War (1756â63), 53, 67â71
Sevier, John, 88â90, 94
Seward, William H., 163
sexual violence, 212â14, 262n32
Shawnee Nation, 71â73, 75, 83, 84â87
Sherman, William Tecumseh, 9â10, 94, 139, 144â46, 156
Sioux Nation: Crazy Horse and, 152; Ghost Dance of, 153â54; historical experience of, 186â91; massacre at Wounded Knee of, 154â56; reparations to, 207â8; seizure of Black Hills from, 180, 188, 207; and termination policy, 190
Sitting Bull (Tatanka Yotanka), 151â52, 154
Six Nations of the Iroquois Confederacy.
See
Haudenosaunee