Winner of the 2012 Bancroft Prize The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 doubled the size of the new United States, promising not only land but prosperity for its citizens. But the West was not the virgin wilderness of common myth. Rather, as historian Anne F. Hyde makes clear in her groundbreaking, prizewinning history, America was a newcomer in a place already complicated by vying empires?native and European. Here, for the first time, she traces the network of multiethnic family associations, which, along with the river systems of the trans-Mississippi West, had formed the basis for the global fur…mehr
Winner of the 2012 Bancroft Prize The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 doubled the size of the new United States, promising not only land but prosperity for its citizens. But the West was not the virgin wilderness of common myth. Rather, as historian Anne F. Hyde makes clear in her groundbreaking, prizewinning history, America was a newcomer in a place already complicated by vying empires?native and European. Here, for the first time, she traces the network of multiethnic family associations, which, along with the river systems of the trans-Mississippi West, had formed the basis for the global fur trade for centuries. Involved with this trade were trappers, hunters, merchants, bankers, and politicians by the thousands. Dazzling in its breadth and startling in its intimacy, Empires, Nations, and Families provides a new look at Native nations and the economies and societies they built as well as a radically new understanding of the web of families, businesses, and personal empires that organized the North American West before the Civil War and the rise of the American empire.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Anne F. Hyde is the William R. Hochman Professor of History at Colorado College. She is the author of An American Vision: Far Western Landscape and National Culture, 1820-1920, and the coauthor, with William Deverell, of The West in the History of the Nation.
Inhaltsangabe
List of Illustrations List of Maps Acknowledgments: Adventures in the Land of the Dead Introduction: The Geography of Empire in 1804 St. Louis Michilimackinac Santa Fe The Pacific Coast Family Stories "Died Single" Why Fur and Why Families? Sources and Definitions Maps and Signposts Part I: Replacing a State: The Continental Web of Family Trade Chapter 1: Families and Fur: The Personal World of the Early American West The Chouteau Family and Missouri River World "Middle Ground" or "Native Ground"? "Tough Love" and Family Loyalty On the Trail of Wealth and Opportunity The Sublette Brothers and Their Family Business Chasing Fortune and Family Americans in Mexico, Californios in America Dangerous Places Chapter 2: Fort Vancouver's Families: The Custom of the Country Cogs in the Fur Trade The Local and Global Communities of the Columbia The Métis World of John McLoughlin The Tentacles of International Trade The McLoughlins and the Company Life and Work on the Columbia Global Ambitions The Fine Mesh of the Family Network Immigrants, Nations, and the Loss of a Family Empire Murder at Fort Stikine and Suicide in California Chapter 3: Three Western Places: Regional Communities and Vecinidad William Bent's Border World Bent's Fort and Its Neighborhood Omens and Weddings Norteños and Yanquis in Alta California Captain Sutter's New Helvetia Dinner and Diplomacy in Northern California Portents of Change Stephen Austin's Border World Planting Colonies in Texas Austin's Fractious Neighborhood PART II: Americans All: The Mixed World of Indian Country Chapter 4: The Early West: The Many Faces of Indian Country Cherokee, Shawnee, and Osage The View from Fort Osage The View from St. Louis Change, Loss, and Warfare on the Missouri The Arikara War Métis and Half-Breed in an Anglo West Chapter 5: Empires in Transition: Indian Country at Midcentury, 1825-1860 Counting Indians Expanding Power The Santa Fe Trail Native Nations and Texas Revolution Retrenchment and Resistance The Osage and Accommodation on the Arkansas Good Fathers and the Fur Trade Captivity Tales and Epidemic Disease PART III: From Nations to Nation: Imposing a State, 1840-1865 Chapter 6: Unintended Consequences: Families, Nations, and the Mexican War What if Guadelupe Boggs married Teresina Carson? Questions of Citizenship and Identity Joseph Smith and the Origins of Mormonism Mexican Revolutions Continental Rumor Factories The Bent Family and the Vagaries of War Bent's Choice Brigham Young and the Choices of War Hard Choices in California The McLoughlins' Choice Chapter 7: Border Wars: Disorder and Disaster in the 1850s The Evolving Fur Trade World Postwar Family and Business on the Arkansas Indian War in the Pacific Northwest Oregon's Bloody Legacy The Failure of Warfare and Washington's Native Nations Nation-Building in the Southwest Raising Families and Fighting Wars Chapter 8: The State and its Handmaidens: Imposing Order Civil Threats and the Mormons The Personal Politics of Polygamy and Theocracy The Almost War and the Massacre in Utah Conquest and Chaos in California A Nation of Squatters While Kansas Bled and Native People Fled The Pesky Details of Popular Sovereignty A National Horror Show The Minnesota Uprising of 1862 Sand Creek and the Bent Family Nightmare Epilogue: How it All Turned Out Sonoma Los Angeles Taos The Arkansas River Oregon St. Louis Kawsmouth Notes Bibliography Index
List of Illustrations List of Maps Acknowledgments: Adventures in the Land of the Dead Introduction: The Geography of Empire in 1804 St. Louis Michilimackinac Santa Fe The Pacific Coast Family Stories "Died Single" Why Fur and Why Families? Sources and Definitions Maps and Signposts Part I: Replacing a State: The Continental Web of Family Trade Chapter 1: Families and Fur: The Personal World of the Early American West The Chouteau Family and Missouri River World "Middle Ground" or "Native Ground"? "Tough Love" and Family Loyalty On the Trail of Wealth and Opportunity The Sublette Brothers and Their Family Business Chasing Fortune and Family Americans in Mexico, Californios in America Dangerous Places Chapter 2: Fort Vancouver's Families: The Custom of the Country Cogs in the Fur Trade The Local and Global Communities of the Columbia The Métis World of John McLoughlin The Tentacles of International Trade The McLoughlins and the Company Life and Work on the Columbia Global Ambitions The Fine Mesh of the Family Network Immigrants, Nations, and the Loss of a Family Empire Murder at Fort Stikine and Suicide in California Chapter 3: Three Western Places: Regional Communities and Vecinidad William Bent's Border World Bent's Fort and Its Neighborhood Omens and Weddings Norteños and Yanquis in Alta California Captain Sutter's New Helvetia Dinner and Diplomacy in Northern California Portents of Change Stephen Austin's Border World Planting Colonies in Texas Austin's Fractious Neighborhood PART II: Americans All: The Mixed World of Indian Country Chapter 4: The Early West: The Many Faces of Indian Country Cherokee, Shawnee, and Osage The View from Fort Osage The View from St. Louis Change, Loss, and Warfare on the Missouri The Arikara War Métis and Half-Breed in an Anglo West Chapter 5: Empires in Transition: Indian Country at Midcentury, 1825-1860 Counting Indians Expanding Power The Santa Fe Trail Native Nations and Texas Revolution Retrenchment and Resistance The Osage and Accommodation on the Arkansas Good Fathers and the Fur Trade Captivity Tales and Epidemic Disease PART III: From Nations to Nation: Imposing a State, 1840-1865 Chapter 6: Unintended Consequences: Families, Nations, and the Mexican War What if Guadelupe Boggs married Teresina Carson? Questions of Citizenship and Identity Joseph Smith and the Origins of Mormonism Mexican Revolutions Continental Rumor Factories The Bent Family and the Vagaries of War Bent's Choice Brigham Young and the Choices of War Hard Choices in California The McLoughlins' Choice Chapter 7: Border Wars: Disorder and Disaster in the 1850s The Evolving Fur Trade World Postwar Family and Business on the Arkansas Indian War in the Pacific Northwest Oregon's Bloody Legacy The Failure of Warfare and Washington's Native Nations Nation-Building in the Southwest Raising Families and Fighting Wars Chapter 8: The State and its Handmaidens: Imposing Order Civil Threats and the Mormons The Personal Politics of Polygamy and Theocracy The Almost War and the Massacre in Utah Conquest and Chaos in California A Nation of Squatters While Kansas Bled and Native People Fled The Pesky Details of Popular Sovereignty A National Horror Show The Minnesota Uprising of 1862 Sand Creek and the Bent Family Nightmare Epilogue: How it All Turned Out Sonoma Los Angeles Taos The Arkansas River Oregon St. Louis Kawsmouth Notes Bibliography Index
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