Empires, nations and families A new history of the North American west, 1800-1860

Anne Farrar Hyde, 1960-

Book - 2012

The Louisiana Purchase in 1803 doubled the size of the new United States, promising not only land but prosperity for its citizens.

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Subjects
Published
New York : Ecco Press 2012.
Language
English
Main Author
Anne Farrar Hyde, 1960- (-)
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
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A sharp reframing of the history of the early Western frontier in personal terms. At the outset of this elegantly written study, winner of the Bancroft Prize and a finalist for last year's Pulitzer Prize (the book was first published in 2011 by the University of Nebraska Press), Hyde (History/Colorado Coll.) observes that the Louisiana Purchase did not suddenly dump into the tender hands of the new United States a howling, savage unknown. Instead, granted that the "Anglo-Americans were newcomers in a world that was anything but wilderness," the vast region was a territory both held together and divided by complex lines of relation, friendship and other affinities elective and otherwise. Within the confines of the West were settlements such as St. Louis, Santa Fe, Nootka and Prairie du Chien whose inhabitants spoke countless languages and were often of mixed ethnicity. It was family connections more than any political or military power that enabled those people to cross lines of nationhood and race; Hyde cites, for instance, the case of William Bent, the founder of Bent's Fort, Colo., a success as both a trading post and a non-Native American settlement only "because [he] had made familial relationships with the Cheyenne, American, and Mexican elites." With the arrival of formal American institutions, writes Hyde, racism began to take hold; as she concludes, after 1860, "[i]deas about race and how it described people and circumscribed behavior remained very shifty but soon had the power of the state to give them shape." The shape they took was that of Jim Crow, and soon, those old kinship and friendship ties gave way to a different set of laws. With a vast dramatis personae and stage, Hyde's book sheds considerable light on the 19th-century development of the nation. Highly recommended.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.