The Heartland

Home > Other > The Heartland > Page 46
The Heartland Page 46

by Kristin L. Hoganson

allotment policies, 70, 262–64

  archival traces, 1, 2

  and cattle industry, 36–37, 69

  and disease, 26

  and locality, 6

  mobility as excuse for, 11, 13–15, 27–28, 197

  and place names, 15–16

  and War of 1812, 25

  Native American mobility:

  constraints on, 262, 262, 265–70, 268

  and Eagle Pass Kickapoos, 293–97

  early nature of, 6–7, 8, 9–11

  as excuse for displacement, 11, 13–15, 197

  local histories on, 13–15, 25

  and Mexican Kickapoos, 274, 291

  and railroads, 11, 265

  and reservations, 266–67

  trade goods as sign of, 8

  and wet prairie terrain, 10, 11

  Native Americans:

  and agriculture, 25, 77, 100, 261

  bird hunting, 220–21

  boarding schools, 267, 268

  cattle industry, 68–71

  connections to place, 23–24, 29–30

  and corn cultivation, 77, 100

  and land rights, 24–25

  see also Kickapoos

  Neapolitan hogs, 85

  Neepaha, 30

  neutrality, 125, 160, 194

  Niles, Charles F., 245

  No-ko-what, 276

  Northwest Ordinance (1787), 79–80

  O’Brien, Joseph, 48

  Omubyah, 16

  Ormerod, Eleanor A., 225

  Ornithologist and Oölogist, 236, 237

  Orosa, Vicente Ylanzan, 189–90

  Osages, 27, 69, 270

  Ostfrieslanders, 203–4

  Owens, William, 40

  Pah Ko Tah, 289

  Panama Canal, 118, 151, 184

  Panama Canal Zone, 98

  Panic of 1857, 102, 106

  Pan O Wa, 289

  patent medicine advertising, 17, 18, 19

  Patton, Samuel H., 299

  Peabody, O. H., 166–67

  Pershing, John J., 254, 255

  Phelps, W. W., 153

  Philippines:

  anticolonialism, 189–90

  and aviation, 255–56

  bioprospecting in, 165

  McKinley’s visit to, 183–84, 183

  and scientific agriculture, 180, 181

  phrenology, 94

  pig industry:

  and cattle industry, 38, 86–87

  central Illinois development of, 86–88

  Chicago as meat-processing center for, 106–7

  Chinese hogs, 82–83, 83, 84, 88

  and disease, 109–10, 111–12

  transportation, 101–4, 106–7, 120

  see also British pig breeds; pork export markets

  pioneers:

  and bird hunting, 221, 223

  and crop imports, 141–42

  and global connections, 22–23

  mobility of, xxii, 19–23, 31

  political invention of locality, 3, 6

  on weather, 211–12, 213

  see also Native American displacement

  place names, 15–16

  Plimsoll, Samuel, 51–52

  polar exploration, 33, 239–41, 303–4

  Political Refugee Defense League, 192

  Porfirio Díaz, José, 286

  pork export markets, 108–18

  and British emigration, 120–21

  and British military, 121–24

  British naturalization, 113–16, 114

  Canadian route, 112

  dependency on Britain, 116–18

  and disease, 109–10, 111–12

  European restrictions, 109–10

  and exploration, 121

  Irish route, 112–13, 122

  and meat types, 98–99, 101, 155

  packing companies, 110–11

  and railroads, 106, 107–8

  size of, 108–9

  and World War I, 78, 124–26

  Potawatomis, 6, 7

  poultry industry, 148, 149, 197

  Prairie Farmer:

  on British pig breeds, 88

  on cattle rustling, 63, 64

  on crop origins, 141

  on emigration, 22

  and midwestern cultural affinity, 53, 55

  on migratory birds, 235

  racism in, 173

  on U.S.-Canadian transborder connections, 46, 47

  Prairie Farming in America (Caird), 103, 211

  Puerto Rico, 97–98

  quarantine laws, 73–74

  Queroz, Louis, 177

  Quintanilla, Oscar Arze, 296

  racism:

  antiblack legislation, xxi, 266

  and cattle breeding, 60

  and cattle rustling, 64–65

  and heartland myth origins, xvi

  and heartland security myth, 260

  and Mexican mobility, 66–67

  and Native American displacement, 266

  and pig breeding, 82–83, 94, 96, 97

  and scientific agriculture, 173–76

  radio, 208–11

  Rahn, Otto, 172

  railroads:

  and agricultural export markets, 106, 107–8

  and cattle industry, 37, 52–53, 66

  and human mobility, 11, 66, 104, 265

  Kickapoo use of, 11, 265

  Mexican routes, 67

  and military bases, 249

  and Native American displacement, 263

  and pig industry, 101–2, 106–7, 120

  refrigeration, 50, 52–53, 107

  and U.S.-Canada transborder connections, 46–47, 49, 50, 52–53

  and U.S. expansion, 118, 119, 120

  Rantoul, see Chanute airfield

  Reciprocity Treaty (1854), 41–42, 43

  refrigeration, 50, 52–53, 107

  Renadro, Juan, 236

  reservations, 266–67

  Rethinking American History in a Global Age (Bender), xix

  Richards, Patrick, 48

  Ridgway, Robert, 224

  Rogerson, John, 20, 48

  Roosevelt, Alice, 183, 183

  Roosevelt, Theodore, 152, 153

  Roots of the Modern American Empire, The (Williams), 80–81, 98, 127–28

  Rudowitz, Christian, 192

  Russo-Japanese War, 163, 185

  Rutherford, Andrew, 131

  Sadorus, Henry, 20, 48

  Sadorus, William, 21

  Salazar, Marguerita, 30

  Samson, Margaret Crandel, 48

  Samson, Willard, 48

  San José scale, 227–28

  Schoolcraft, Henry Rowe, 14

  scientific agriculture, 166–82

  Asian studies, 166–67

  and European imperialism, 174, 178–82

  European influence, 167–68, 169–70

  and land-grant universities, 166, 168–73, 178–82, 191

  and racism, 173–76

  and U.S. expansion, 77, 175–78, 180, 181, 182, 193

  and U.S.-Mexican transborder connections, 33, 172

  Scott, Charles, 10, 24

  Scroggins, Frank, 208

  Scroggs, George, 152

  Scully, William, 103

  security, xiv, xvi, xxvi, 106, 175, 194–95, 259–61, 282–85

  seed catalogs, 145, 146, 147, 151, 170

  Seminoles, 68, 271, 279

  settler colonists, see pioneers

  Sevilla, Diego Aguilar, 181

  sex stereotypes:

  and Kickapoos, 261, 262

  and pig breeding, 94–95


  Seymour, Arthur R., 188

  Seymour, Mayee, 188

  Shamel, A. D., 77

  Shaw, Thomas, 96

  sheep industry, 148

  Silvilla, H., 188

  Sinha, S., 179–80

  Sioux, 70

  Smith, H. G., 197

  Smith, Louis H., 171

  Smith, Mary, 10

  Smithsonian Institution, 236

  smuggling, 61–62

  soil composition, 149–51

  southwest Africa, 160–61

  soy, 165–66

  Spanish-American War, 32

  Spanish fever, 71–73

  spatial constraint, 266–67

  Stevens, Harman, 48

  Stevenson, Elisha, 20

  Suffolk hogs, 86

  Sullivant, Michael L., 38–39, 47, 225

  Sweet, Donena, 65

  Swigart, O. H., 41

  Taft, William Howard, 183

  Tagore, Rabindranath, 193–94

  Tagore, Rathindranath, 181, 185–88, 187, 190–91, 193

  Tanquary, Maurice Cole, 239–40

  tariff policies:

  and agricultural export markets, 73, 135

  farmers’ demands, 151

  Republican policies, 153

  and U.S.-Canadian transborder connections, 56

  and U.S.-Mexican transborder connections, 62

  Tecumseh, 25

  telegraph, 205–6, 208, 210

  telephone, 197, 206–8, 207

  Texan cattle, 57–59, 59, 63–65, 66, 69–70

  Thapathethea, 289

  tornadoes, 216–20

  trade, foreign, 41–44, 46, 56, 62, 107–10, 115–18

  trade goods, 8

  transborder connections:

  and Indian Territory cattle industry, 68–71, 73–74

  and pioneer mobility, 21–22

  scholarship on, 35–36

  see also U.S.-Canadian transborder connections; U.S.-Mexican transborder connections

  transimperial connections, 174

  transportation:

  and agricultural export markets, 106, 107–8

  Canadian rail routes, 50, 52–53

  and cattle industry, 37, 50–53, 51, 66

  and human mobility, 11, 66, 104, 265

  and immigration, 11, 104

  Kickapoo use of, 11, 265

  Mexican rail routes, 67

  and military bases, 249

  and Native American displacement, 263

  and pig industry, 101–4, 106–7, 120

  and wet prairie drainage, 204–5

  see also railroads

  trichinosis, 109, 110, 111

  Tucker, Henry and Ann, 47

  Turner, Frederick Jackson, 80, 81

  Tyler, Henry, 50

  United States Fair (Chicago), 45

  Urbana Courier:

  on aviation, 244, 245, 246, 247–48, 251–52, 255

  on ballooning, 243

  on bird hunting, 222–23, 224, 226

  on bird preservation, 230–31

  on communications technology, 208, 209

  on emigration, 22

  on insect control, 228

  on International Institute of Agriculture, 158

  on kite flying, 242–43

  on McKinley, 139

  on meteor sightings, 242

  on migratory birds, 237

  on Philippines, 184

  on polar exploration, 240–41

  preservation of, 199

  on scientific agriculture, 172

  and telegraph, 206

  on tornadoes, 217–18, 219, 220

  on weather forecasting, 214, 215, 216

  on wet prairie drainage, 204, 224

  Urbana Union, 104, 141

  U.S.-Canadian transborder connections:

  and canal system, 49–50

  and cattle disease, 74

  and cattle industry, 41–45, 45, 50, 52–53, 54–55, 56

  and cultural affinity, 53–56

  and human mobility, 46–49

  and migratory birds, 231, 233–34

  privileging of, 75

  and scientific agriculture, 172

  and tariff policies, 56

  U.S. expansion:

  and agricultural export markets, 81, 118, 119, 120, 127–28

  and anticolonialism, 189–90, 193

  and aviation, 255–56

  and British empire, 128–29

  and British pig breeds, 95–98

  and Cold War, 81, 129

  and creation of heartland, 34–35

  frontier thesis on, 80, 81

  and heartland security myth, 260

  and Northwest Ordinance, 79–80

  Philippines, 182–84, 183

  and pig breeding, 97–98

  positive views of, 2

  and scientific agriculture, 77, 175–78, 180, 181, 182, 193

  U.S. government, see federal government policies

  U.S.-Mexican transborder connections:

  bracero program, 294, 295

  and cattle breeding, 60, 68

  and cattle disease, 73–74

  cross-border cattle trade, 59–63

  cross-border rustling, 63–65

  denigration of, 75–76

  and Eagle Pass Kickapoos, 293–97

  and human mobility, 32, 33, 65–67

  and Mexican economy, 67–68

  and Mexican Kickapoos, 275–78, 279–85

  and migratory birds, 231, 232–33, 234

  and race, 60, 68

  and scientific agriculture, 33, 172

  and tariff policies, 62

  and Texan cattle, 57–59, 59, 63–65, 66

  Valdez Garcia, Aurelio (Ekoneskaka), 23–24

  Villa, Pancho, 245, 250, 255

  Wah-pah-kah, 265–66, 278, 279

  Wapichi Cucha, 286

  war, and human mobility, 21

  War of 1812, 25

  Washington, George, 132

  weather:

  emigration guides on, 211

  forecasting, 213–16

  information exchanges, 159

  pioneers on, 211–12, 213

  tornadoes, 216–17

  Weather Bureau, U.S., 159, 215, 216, 219

  West Indies, see Caribbean

  wet prairie drainage:

  and bird hunting, 224–25

  and crop imports, 142

  and flyover jokes, 199

  and immigration, 201, 203–4

  methods for, 200–201, 202

  and military bases, 249

  and pioneers, 11

  and transportation, 204–5

  wet prairie terrain:

  and cattle industry, 36

  and game birds, 221

  and Kickapoo mobility, 10–11

  stereotypes of, xxi

  wheat exports, 106

  White Water, 269

  Whitewater, Margaret, 197

  Wilcox, L. S., 152

  Wilkinson, James, 10, 25

  William Bull (seed purveyor), 145

  Williams, William Appleman, 80–81, 98, 120, 127–28, 129

  William Simpson, Ltd., 111

  Wilson, Alexander, 235

  Wipecuinacudita (Jose Naco Jiminez), 293

  women:

  constraints on, 261, 262

  isolation of, xxii

  see also sex stereotypes

  Worcester, Dean C., 180, 181

  World War I:

  and agricultural export markets, 78, 124–26

  and aviation, 247–48, 2
50, 251

  and communications technology, 197, 209

  and ethnic Germans, 248, 258

  and insect control, 228, 229

  and poultry industry, 197

  World War II, xv

  worms, 149–50

  Wy-mo-sho-na, 278–79

  yams, 144–45

  Yankovsky, George M., 178–79

  Yaquis, 289–90

  ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Kristin L. Hoganson is the Stanley S. Stroup Professor of United States History at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. She is the author of Consumers' Imperium: The Global Production of American Domesticity, 1865-1920; American Empire at the Turn of the Twentieth Century; and Fighting for American Manhood: How Gender Politics Provoked the Spanish-American and Philippine-American Wars. Having lived in central Illinois longer than any other place, she now calls the prairie home.

  What’s next on

  your reading list?

  Discover your next

  great read!

  Get personalized book picks and up-to-date news about this author.

  Sign up now.

  * I use Hawaii to refer to the state and Hawai‘i to refer to the kingdom and the territory.

 

 

 


‹ Prev