Friday, October 31, 2014

Native Americans in the Old Northwest

What happened to the Indians of the Old Northwest Territory? Conflicting portraits emerge and answers often depend on who's telling the story, with each participant bending and stretching the truth to fit their own view of themselves and the world.

Written by Elizabeth O'Maley, Bones on the Ground presents biographical sketches and first-person narratives of Native Americans, Indian traders, Colonial and American leaders, and events that shaped the Indians' struggle to maintain possession of their tribal lands in the face of the widespread advancement of white settlement.

The book covers events and people in the Old Northwest Territory from before the American Revolution through the removal of the Miami from Indiana in 1846, including the Gnadenhutten Massacre, Little Turtle, William Wells, Fallen Timbers, the Treaty of Greenville, Tecumseh, the Battle of Tippecanoe, William Conner, Frances Slocum, the Potawatomi Trail of Death, and Jean Baptiste Richardville, among others.

As America's Indian policy was formed, and often enforced by the U.S. military, and white setters pushed further west, some Indians fought the white intruders, while others adopted their ways. In the end, most Indians were unable to hold their ground and the evidence of their presence now lingers only in found relics and strange-sounding place names.

A graduate of Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, O'Maley worked after college as a school psychologist in Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, and Fort Wayne. She is also the author of the IHS Press book By Freedom's Light. Elizabeth O'Male died on May 20, 2014.

Bones on the Ground costs $16.95 and is available from the IHS Basile History Market.

2 comments:

  1. Como el candor.

    En la pradera
    un ligero soplo
    de viento recuerda
    el pasar de un
    instante de vida,
    el canto del sol
    y la dulce palabra
    de una tierna
    poesía.

    Francesco Sinibaldi


    Atmosphère de poésie.

    Dans la
    profondeur
    d'un rêve
    matinal, dans
    le souffle de
    la mer qui
    chante le sourire
    et la voix des
    pensées....

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous11:49 AM

    In the sound of a stream.

    The whisper
    of a fugitive bird
    covers the sadness
    placed near an
    hedge while the
    delicate singing
    describes an
    attraction full of
    happiness: and
    there, near the
    sound of a stream,
    a white dream
    reappears.....

    Francesco Sinibaldi

    ReplyDelete