The Chickasaws

Forside
University of Oklahoma Press, 21. nov. 2012 - 352 sider

For 350 years the Chickasaws-one of the Five Civilized Tribes-made a sustained effort to preserve their tribal institutions and independence in the face of increasing encroachments by white men. This is the first book-length account of their valiant-but doomed-struggle.

Against an ethnohistorical background, the author relates the story of the Chickasaws from their first recorded contacts with Europeans in the lower Mississippi Valley in 1540 to final dissolution of the Chickasaw Nation in 1906. Included are the years of alliance with the British, the dealings with the Americans, and the inevitable removal to Indian Territory (Oklahoma) in 1837 under pressure from settlers in Mississippi and Alabama. Among the significant events in Chickasaw history were the tribe’s surprisingly strong alliance with the South during the Civil War and the federal actions thereafter which eventually resulted in the absorption of the Chickasaw Nation into the emerging state of Oklahoma.

 

Innhold

A Reconstruction
3
I
4
The Province of Chicaza
31
Serving Three Masters
58
Twilight of the Full Bloods
80
Conquest of Chickasaw Gods
106
Prelude to Removal
138
Liquidating the Chickasaw Estate
158
Two Chickasaw boarding schools
209
Chickasaws in the Western Wilderness
216
The New Chickasaw Nation
238
Ancient Chickasaw Domain 5
253
The Chickasaw Nation in Rebellion and Reconstruction
259
The Last Days of the Chickasaw Nation
279
xii
299
Death of a Nation
300

Chickasaw Trail of Tears
179
Burney
197
Third Chickasaw capitol at Tishomingo page
203
Sources
311
Index
331
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Om forfatteren (2012)

Arrell Morgan Gibson (1921–1987) was the George Lynn Cross Research Professor of History at the University of Oklahoma. He was the author of many books on western history, including The Chickasaws, The Life and Death of Colonel Albert Jennings Fountain, and Oklahoma: A History of Five Centuries, all published by the University of Oklahoma Press.

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