From the reservation to Washington The rise of Charles Curtis

Debra Goodrich

Book - 2024

"The first person of color to serve as vice president, Charles Curtis was once a household name but has become a footnote in American history. As a mixed-race person who became a public figure in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, his story is more relevant today than ever. He was constantly forced to choose whether to be Indian or white. Society would not let him be both. When his temper flared it was his "savage nature" coming through; when he presided over the United States Senate with an unprecedented knowledge of the rules and procedures, it was evidence of his "civilized" ancestry. Charles Curtis was born into Bleeding Kansas and came of age during the most turbulent of times. His father participate...d in the violence, as a Kansas Redleg avenging the actions of Missouri bushwhackers. As Civil War evolved into the Plains Indian Wars, Curtis was an eyewitness as his own people were starving and even the most powerful of tribes were confined to reservations. These forces shaped his philosophy and perspective. To this day he holds the distinction of being the only person of Native American heritage to be elected the second highest office in the land. He served as the 31st vice president of the United States from 1929 to 1933 under Herbert Hoover. Private and pragmatic, he became a respected statesman championing citizenship for Native Americans and rights for women. But his path of inclusion was perceived by others as destroying tribal sovereignty. Perhaps he realized that. But in his experience the most powerful force on earth was the federal government, and he learned to play the government game and to be better at it than almost anyone else"--

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Subjects
Genres
Biographies
Published
Essex, Connecticut : TwoDot [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Debra Goodrich (author)
Physical Description
252 pages ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781493075355
  • Acknowledgments
  • Prologue
  • Chapter 1. Roots and Branches 1791-1842
  • Chapter 2. Gold-Seekers, Dreamers, and Ferryboat Men 1855-1863
  • Chapter 3. Copperheads, Bushwhackers, and Jayhawkers 1863-1866
  • Chapter 4. A Bowl of Corn, a Piece of Ground 1866-1868
  • Chapter 5. A Boy Adrift 1868-1873
  • Chapter 6. The French Apple Peddler 1873-1879
  • Chapter 7. The Indian Rider 1880-1888
  • Chapter 8. Hello, Dolly! 1888-1892
  • Chapter 9. An Indian in the House 1892-1905
  • Chapter 10. A Marble Battleground 1906-1915
  • Chapter 11. Weddings, War, and Want 1915-1928
  • Chapter 12. Second Place 1928
  • Chapter 13. A Good Loser 1932-1936
  • Legacy
  • Appendix
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

Goodrich's biography of Charles "Charley" Curtis is a vivid, well-written, and well-organized account of this Kansas resident who lived from 1860 to 1936 and was part Kaw Native American and part white. Raised by his mother's parents on the Kaw reservation and his father's parents in Topeka, he was motivated to become a congressman and a U.S. senator, a senate majority leader, and Herbert Hoover's vice president, the first person of color to hold that office. In the House, he advanced the Curtis Act, which, confusingly, diminished Native American land ownership and sovereignty. Senator Curtis supported Prohibition, advocated for veterans, drafted anti-lynching legislation, led the fight to pass the constitutional amendment to allow women's suffrage, and introduced the Equal Rights Amendment. Goodrich details how Curtis' grandmothers, wife, and half-sister Dolly were instrumental in helping him succeed. Her fast-moving account covers frontier history, the oppression of the Kaw and other tribes, Curtis' stint racing horses, and the revelation that a Kaw cousin started the Native American code talkers in WWI. A welcome and engaging reclamation of a significant yet long-overlooked statesman.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.