A pictorial history of the American Indian

A pictorial history of the American Indian

1956 • 288 pages

The absorbing and amazingly interesting story of the Indians of North America from the time the first white men landed to the present. Oliver La Farge, the foremost authority on the American Indian, traces the spread of the civilizations of Mexico and South America northward, correcting many misconceptions and reconstructing in great detail the life of the Indians in every section of North America. All the great events, major developments and notable chiefs and heroes of Indian history are covered. The wars among the tribes, their leagues, their fighting and alliances with the British, the French, the Spanish and the American settlers are recounted dramatically, as is the tribes’ resistance to the pioneers as they moved westward to Kentucky, to the Mississippi, across the wide-open spaces of the plains to the Far West. All the many tribes are described, from the Choctaws, Creeks, Chickasaws, Seminoles and Natchez of the Southeast, and the Cherokees, Iroquois (Mohawks, Senecas, Oneidas, Onondagas, Cayugas and Tuscaroosas), Hurons and Eries of the Northeast to the tribes of the West: Pawnees, Osages, Kickapoos, Pueblos, Blackfeet, Navahos and other Apaches, Cheyennes, Comanches, Sioux, Utes, Shoshones, and the Raven people of the Northwest. The customs, ways of life, religions, superstitions, culture and social organization of the Indians are all thoroughly examined: the place of women in tribal councils, war activities, agriculture, hunting, dances, sports, inter-marriage with whites, clothing, wampum, arts, crafts, dwelling places - there is no aspect of Indian life left uncovered. As the white men advanced and Indians were pushed westward new cultural influences occurred: in the prairie, horses were introduced, hunting took precedence over agriculture, and subsequently new pressures were introduced with the gold rush to the West Coast. Finally we see the Indians as they are today - their reservations and the policy towards them, education, medical service, self-government, industries and promise for the future. Great care, attention and emphasis was given to the several hundred illustrations illuminating Mr. La Farge’s superb text. These include color plates and many previously unpublished items. All the pictures are authentic. They were selected after an examination of some 5,000 drawings, paintings, photographs, engravings and manuscript illuminations in public and private collections all over the country, including the files of the Bureau of Indian Affairs, The Smithsonian Institution, the Library of Congress, and of institutes, museums, railroad and industrial collections and numerous private sources. BOOK JACKET.

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