This book provides a history of the Canada-United States border from 1775 until 1939, highlighting the formation of each nation state, the role Indigenous people had in the development of the international boundary, and the impact the border had on Indigenous people, European settlers, Chinese migrants, and African Americans.
This book provides a history of the Canada-United States border from 1775 until 1939, highlighting the formation of each nation state, the role Indigenous people had in the development of the international boundary, and the impact the border had on Indigenous people, European settlers, Chinese migrants, and African Americans.
Benjamin Hoy is an assistant professor of history at University of Saskatchewan, where he directs the Historical GIS Lab.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgments Terminology Introduction Chapter 1 Building Borders Chapter 2 The Civil and Dakota War Chapter 3 New Countries, Old Problems Chapter 4 Borders of Stones, Guns, and Grass Chapter 5 Where it All Went Wrong Chapter 6 Borders of Salt and Rock Chapter 7 Blood and Bones Chapter 8 The Chaos of Control Chapter 9 Higher Than Sight Can Reach Chapter 10 The Borders of Everyday Life Epilogue Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
Acknowledgments Terminology Introduction Chapter 1 Building Borders Chapter 2 The Civil and Dakota War Chapter 3 New Countries, Old Problems Chapter 4 Borders of Stones, Guns, and Grass Chapter 5 Where it All Went Wrong Chapter 6 Borders of Salt and Rock Chapter 7 Blood and Bones Chapter 8 The Chaos of Control Chapter 9 Higher Than Sight Can Reach Chapter 10 The Borders of Everyday Life Epilogue Appendix Notes Bibliography Index
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