- Subjects
- Published
-
New York :
Ecco Press
2012.
- Language
- English
- Main Author
- Edition
- First ECCO paperback edition
- Physical Description
- xv, 628 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm
- Bibliography
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- ISBN
- 9780062225153
- List of Illustrations
- List of Maps
- Acknowledgments: Adventures in the Land of the Dead
- Introduction: The Geography of Empire in 1804
- St. Louis
- Mchilimackinac
- 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 the 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 Osages 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 Guadalupe 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 Wars 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