The American West

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The American West Page 56

by Robert V Hine


  Dare, Ananias and Eleanor White, 56

  Dare, Virginia, 56

  Dasmann, Raymond, 322

  data centers, 432–34

  Davis, Jefferson, 212

  Dawes, Henry, 287

  De Smet, Pierre-Jean, 158

  de Soto, Hernando, 28, 29

  Deadwood Dick (fictional character), 160, 161

  Death of General Wolfe, The (West painting), 91, 92

  Debs, Eugene, 259

  del Mar, David Peterson, 326

  Del Rey, California, 301–2

  Delaware valley, European settlement of, 73–76. See also Pennsylvania

  Delawares (Lenni-Lenapes): and the American Revolution, 109; Delaware Prophet (Neolin), 94; gender roles, 73–74; Gnadenhutten massacre, 110; Haudenosaunee and, 86; and the Indian Removal Act, 180; in the Ohio country, 90, 94, 121; Penn’s treaty with, 76–77, 87; and the Walking Purchase, 87, 88

  Denver, 318, 319, 354–55, 392–93, 395, 396

  Denver Pacific Railroad, 318

  Department of Agriculture, 325, 364

  Department of the Interior: creation of, 207; during the FDR administration, 376; forest management taken from, 364; and the National Park Service, 368; and reservation schools, 285; water projects, 370–71, 376 (see also dams). See also Ballinger, Richard; Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA); Bureau of Land Management (BLM); Bureau of Reclamation; Ickes, Harold

  Destruction of the Indies, The (Las Casas), 26

  Detroit: fort defended against Indian attack, 94; French settlement, 83; lost to British, 131; modern, ix, xi; and pan-Indian resistance, 121; during the Revolution, 109–10

  DeVoto, Bernard, 377–78, 388

  DeWitt, John L., Gen., 338

  Días, Bernal, 16–17, 19

  dime novels, 160, 161, 342, 442. See also fictional depictions of the West

  Diné. See Navajos

  disease: Aztecs devastated, 20, 21; Hurons devastated, 44–45, 52–53; Iroquois nations devastated, 69; and native peoples (generally), 26–27, 44–45, 166; New England natives devastated, 61–62, 64; smallpox used as weapon, 94. See also smallpox

  Divided We Stand: The Crisis of a Frontierless Democracy (Webb), 378

  Django Unchained (2012), 449

  Doig, Ivan, 450

  domestic violence, 326–27

  Douglas, Donald, 391

  Douglas, Stephen A., 177, 210

  Douglass, Frederick, 199

  Dr. Dre, x

  Drake, Francis, 54, 59

  drought, 256–57, 374–76

  Dunbar, William, 185

  Durant, Thomas C., 236, 244

  Dust Bowl, 374–76

  Dutch traders and colonists, 61, 69, 71, 73, 75

  Earp, Wyatt, 445

  Eastwood, Clint, xiii, 448, 449

  Echohawk, John, 411

  Edmunds Act (1882), 279

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 401, 437

  El Paso, Texas, 175, 304, 306, 395

  electricity, 378–80

  Eliot, John, 65, 66

  Elizabeth I, Queen (England), 53–54

  Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 359–60

  Eminem (Marshal Mathers II), ix, x–xi

  “empire of liberty,” 177–78

  encomienda system, 14–15, 23, 35

  English colonists, 40–41. See also New England; Pilgrims; Puritans; Virginia; and specific colonies, localities, events, and individuals

  environment: logging’s impact, 350, 360–63; mining’s impact, 227, 350–51; water projects’ impact, 371–72. See also wildlife, decline and disappearance of

  environmental movement: elites and, 355–56; FDR’s conservation programs, 376–77; forest conservation and management, 360–66; Moran and Bierstadt’s paintings and, 353–55; Muir and, 359–60; national parks created, 356–60; outdoor apparel companies and, 440–42; and rock climbing, 438–39; wilderness preservation, 364, 436. See also outdoor recreation

  Erdrich, Louise, 449–50

  Eric B. (DJ), 454

  Evans, John, 217–19

  Exclusion Act. See Chinese Exclusion Act (1882)

  Exodusters, 279–81

  expansion: after 1890, 339–40; cities’ role in, 310–11; “empire of liberty” envisioned, 177–78; Great Britain and, 110, 121, 122, 124–26; manifest destiny concept, 3, 177–78; as necessary and inevitable, 137–38; political conflict over, 191–92; slavery as driver of, 178–79; Spanish empire and, 122 (see also Mexican War); territorial acquisitions and statehood (map), 200. See also frontier; and specific regions, territories, and states

  extinction event, 4–5

  farming: decline of small farms, 393–94; farm women’s lives, 272, 325–26; and federal irrigation projects, 370–71; French long-plot farms, 46, 82–83; mechanization of, 246–48, 369–70; and slavery, 80–81 (see also slavery); surplus, 370, 373; taken up by Cherokees, 131; tenants and sharecroppers, 373–74; virtues of, 238. See also agriculture

  farmworkers, Mexican, 306–9, 420–22

  FBI (Federal Bureau of Investigation), 411

  Federal Aid Highway Act (1956), 437

  federal power and authority: after the Civil War, 224–25; defense spending, 389–90, 392–93; and the national parks, 356–59; and river development, 378–80; and water projects, 370–73; in the western territories, 209; and the Wounded Knee protest, 411. See also Confederation Congress; Congress (U.S.); Indian policy, federal; land policy, federal; and specific government agencies

  Federalist Papers, 137

  Fehrenbacher, Don, 119

  Ferdinand, King (Spain), 13, 14

  fertility rates, of English colonists, 78–79

  fictional depictions of the West, 159–61, 342–44, 442–54. See also specific authors, books, and movies

  Filson, John, 119, 120, 135

  fishing rights, 411

  Fistful of Dollars, A (1964 film), 448, 449

  Five Nations. See Iroquois Confederacy

  Fletcher v. Peck (1810), 117

  Flint, Timothy, 271

  Florida: British possession of, 92, 110; the French in, 5, 29–30; minority population (map), 425; Seminoles in, 85, 183, 411–12 (see also Seminoles); Spanish Florida, 21–22, 28, 29–31, 50, 85, 109, 110, 122; Timucua people, 5; U.S. acquisition and statehood, 200

  Fogelson, Robert, 333

  Fontana steel mill, 390

  Ford, John, 444–45, 448

  Forest Management Act (1897), 363

  Forest Reserve Act (1891), 363

  forests: conservation and management, 360–66; deforestation, 350, 360–62; logging, 350, 360–63, 364–66, 408–9

  Fort Apache (1948 film), 445

  Fort Duquesne, 90, 91

  Fort Hall, 171, 175

  Fort Laramie, 171, 175, 208, 260

  Fort Miami, 124, 125

  Fort Pitt, 91, 94

  Fort Scott, Kansas, 281–82

  Fort Vancouver, 155, 156, 171

  forty-ninth parallel, 157, 171, 192, 200

  Fox people, 84, 183

  France, 8, 74, 90–92, 139–40, 169. See also Florida; Louisiana (French/Spanish territory); New France

  Francis I, King (France), 41

  Franciscan missionaries. See Catholic missionaries

  Franklin, Benjamin, 78, 102

  Fraser, Alexander and Simon, 154

  Frazier, Donald, 212

  Frémont, Jessie Benton, 172–74

  Frémont, John Charles, 172–76, 195–96, 211

  French and Indian War (1754–63), 90–92

  Friends of the Indians, 287–88

  Frobisher, Martin, 54

  Frontenac, Louis de Bouade, Comte de, 50

  frontier: closing of, 310, 339–41, 348, 351, 376–77; concept questioned, 388–89; frontier myth invoked by Reagan, 403–5; isolation of frontier life, 272; and masculinity, 344–48, 369, 383–84; meanings of, 9–10, 436; popularization of, 342–48 (see also fictional depictions of the West); Turner’s frontier thesis, 310, 339–42, 405. See also expansion; West, the (concept)

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sp; Fulghem, Dorothy, 281

  Fuller, Margaret, 199

  fur trade, 43–44; and beaver, 43–44, 69, 153, 163–65; Beaver Wars, 69; dependent on Indian labor, 153; and disease, 44–45, 166; ecological impacts, 165–66, 349; French and, 43–46, 47; and the Mandans, 141; in the Pacific Northwest, 154–56; Rocky Mountain fur trade, 163–65; Russians and, 96; Saint Louis and, 162–65; trading companies, 153–55. See also bison; Hudson’s Bay Company

  Fur traders in camp (Miller), 164

  Gadsden, James, 200

  Gadsden Purchase, 200–201

  Galbraith, Thomas J., 283–84

  Gale, Zona, 295

  Galveston, Texas, 318

  gaming, Indian, 67, 411–12

  Garland, Hamlin, 272, 296, 325

  Garokontié, Daniel (Onondaga leader), 70

  Gates, Bill, 393

  Geffen, David, 428

  gender roles, European vs. Indian, 42–43. See also women

  General Land Office, 207, 240

  Gentlemen’s Agreement, 300–301

  George, Henry, 321

  Georgia, 80, 112–13, 117, 181, 200, 425

  German Americans, loyalty of, 337

  German immigrants, 79, 292, 328

  Geronimo (Apache leader), 266–68

  Ghost Dancers, 288–91

  Giannini, Amadeo Peter, 328, 390, 391

  Glacier National Park, 356, 360

  Glorieta Pass, battle of, 212

  Goff, Seldon, 227

  gold: in the Black Hills, 260; in California, 225–30, 232, 248 (see also Gold Rush); discovered in the Rockies, 212, 260; Spanish desire for, 13–14, 17–18

  Gold Rush (California, 1848–55), 225–31, 232, 235, 248–49

  Goldwater, Barry, 402, 403

  Goliad, battle of, 188

  Gonzalez, Alfredo Guerra, 335–36

  González, Gilbert G., 309

  González, Henry B., 416

  Goodnight, Charles, 223–24, 237

  Gore, Al, 401

  Gracon, Ruth, 414

  Grand Canyon of the Yellowstone (Moran, 1872), 353, 354

  Grand Coulee Dam, 380

  Grant, Ulysses S., 193–94, 197

  grape boycott, 421–22, 422

  Grapes of Wrath, The (Steinbeck), 374

  Great Britain: 49th parallel treaty, 192; and the American Revolution, 107–10; hunting restricted to upper classes, 74; Indian Country established, 94–95; Indians in, 54; Seven Years War, 90–92; Spanish galleons raided, 53–54; and U.S. westward expansion, 110, 121, 122, 124–26; War of 1812, 130–31, 156. See also Canada; and specific colonies and individuals

  Great Depression, 333–35, 374, 378

  Great Lakes, French colonization of, 47, 50–51, 83. See also New France

  Great Migration of 1843, 170

  Great Plains: conservation programs, 376; cyclical droughts, 256–57, 374–76; native way of life on, 143–45; travel across, 207–9 (see also railroads); as wasteland, 148. See also bison; Plains Indians; and specific territories, states, and tribes

  Great Sioux Reservation, 260–63, 265. See also Battle of Little Bighorn

  Great Swamp Fight, 66

  Great Train Robbery, The (1903 film), 443

  Greater California (economic region), 395–96

  Green Bay, French settlement at, 83

  Grey, Zane, 442

  Grinnell, George Bird, 356

  Gros Ventre tribe, 371

  Gruening, Ernest, 436

  Guerrero, Vicente, 187

  guns and firearms, 213, 214

  Gunsmoke (television show), 446, 447

  Haiti, independence of, 139

  Hakluyt, Richard, 54

  Handsome Lake (Iroquois leader), 126–28

  Hanford Nuclear Reservation, 392

  Hanson, Carl, 291

  Hardin, Samuel H., 186

  Harmar, Josiah, Gen., 124

  Harriot, Thomas, 54, 56

  Harris, Merriman, 300

  Harrison, Benjamin, 363

  Harrison, William Henry, 128, 129, 130, 191

  Hart, Albert Bushnell, 285

  Haudenosaunee. See Iroquois Confederacy

  Hawkins, Augustus, 416

  Hayashi, Brian Masaru, 336

  Hayden, Ferdinand V., 357

  Hayes, Samuel P, 434–36

  Hearst, George, 223–24, 245

  Henderson, Richard, 119

  Henry, Andrew, 163

  Herr, Michael, 448

  Hess, Jared, 450. See also Napoleon Dynamite

  Hetch Hetchy valley (Yosemite), 371–72

  Hickok, Wild Bill, 446

  hidalgos, 35. See also encomienda system

  high-tech industry, 393, 432–34

  highways, 437

  Hine, Thomas, 401

  hip-hop music and culture, ix, x–xi, 454–55

  Hispaniola, 27. See also Taínos (Caribbean)

  Hochelaga village (Iroquois), 41–44, 45. See also Montreal

  Hollywood. See movie industry; movies, Western

  Homestake Mine, 245

  Homestead Act (1862), 115, 211, 238–41

  Hondo (1953 film), 442

  Hoover, Herbert, 373

  Hoover Dam, 378, 379, 386

  Hopalong Cassidy (television show), 446

  Hopis, 34–35

  Hopkins, Mark, 234–36

  Horace, 1

  horses, 81–82, 143–45, 166, 369–70

  housing. See ranch houses; segregation; suburban development

  Houston, Samuel, 188

  Houston, Texas: as immigration gateway, 423; and “Imperial Texas,” 395; Jordan elected, 416; racism in, 413–14; success of, 318, 320

  Hudson’s Bay Company, 85, 153–55, 166, 171

  Huerta, Dolores, 421

  Hughes, Howard, 390–92

  Hughes Aircraft Company, 390

  Huguenots, 29–30, 82

  human sacrifice, 24

  Hunt, Frances, 314–15

  hunting, 74, 355–56, 411. See also fur trade

  Huntington, Collis P., 223–24, 234–36, 237, 244–45

  Huntington, Henry E., 324

  Hurons, 45–46, 52–53, 69–70

  Hyde, Anne F., 159

  hydroelectric projects, 378–80, 390, 392, 432

  IBM, 393

  Ickes, Harold, 376, 381

  Idaho: acquisition and statehood, 200, 358; Chinese miners in, 233–34; mining in, 228, 232; minority population (map), 425; unplanned growth, 427. See also Preston, Idaho

  Ide, William B., 196

  illegal immigration, 421, 423–24

  Illinois (state): acquisition and statehood, 166, 200; Alton, 313; and Black Hawk’s resistance, 183; minority population (map), 425; Mormons in, 205–6. See also Chicago

  Illinois Country (French), 48–50, 69, 80, 109

  Illinois Indians, 48–50, 180, 183

  immigrants: in Chicago, 317; churches of, 291, 294; deportation of, 333–35; European, 291–95; “foreign miners” taxes, 229–30, 232, 233–34; illegal immigration, 421, 423; immigration wave (1965–present), 423–24; legal rights denied to, 233; restrictions on, 297, 298, 301, 336; urban demographics, 327–28. See also specific groups

  Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), 421

  Immigration Restriction Act (1924), 301, 336

  Imperial Texas (economic region), 395

  imperialism, American, 137–38, 341–42. See also manifest destiny

  Incas, 20–21, 29

  indentured servants, 59, 80, 254

  Independence Hall, Philadelphia, 111

  Indian Bureau. See Bureau of Indian Affairs

  Indian Citizen Act (1924), 385

  Indian Country (British designation), 94–95, 110, 122

  Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (1988), 412

  Indian Intercourse Act (1790), 122–24, 284

  Indian policy, federal: assimilation policy, 285–87, 380; and Indian sovereignty, 122–23, 181, 284–85, 384, 406–9, 411–12; removal, 179–84, 207, 282–83; reservation p
olicy, 215, 217, 283–88, 380–86 (see also reservations); return of tribal lands, 124, 411; self-determination, 409; Termination program, 406–9; tribal claims settled, 406–8

  Indian Removal Act (1830), 180. See also removal of Indians

  Indian Reorganization Act (1934), 381–82, 384

  Indian Self-Determination and Educational Assistance Act (1975), 409

  Indian social structures: gender roles, 34, 42–43, 143–44 (see also women); leadership, 7–8, 42, 384–85; matrilineal societies, 34, 42

  Indian Territory: during the Civil War, 212, 213; Exodusters in, 280; forced relocation to, 180, 282. See also Oklahoma; removal of Indians

  Indiana, 166, 200, 425

  Indians (Native Americans): agricultural practices, 6; alcohol abuse among, 88–89, 124; artists’ portrayals of, 148–53, 348; Boone and, 137; and British sovereignty, 92–94; cachet of (late 20th century), 405; and the California Gold Rush, 248–49; culture areas (map), 5; and disease, 20, 26–27; diversity, 40; earliest European encounters with, 6–9, 39–40; and European trade goods, 88; in fiction and film, 445, 448, 451–54; and horses, 81–82, 143–45, 166; land and property rights among, 8, 183, 287–88; land cessions (map), 284; as metaphor, 447–48; names of tribes, 3; and the national parks, 356; and the Ohio country, 89–90; origin traditions, 4; pan-Indian movements, 121–22, 128–30, 409–11 (see also Iroquois Confederacy); population decline, 26–27; population growth (1950–2010), 405; religion(s) of, 8, 285, 288–89, 382 (see also Ghost Dancers); removal of, 179–84, 207, 282–83; return of lands to, 124, 411; sovereignty of, 122–23, 181, 284–85, 384, 406–9, 411–12; Spanish resisted, 15, 32; Spanish treatment of, 12–15, 23–26; term origin, 3; trading by, 43–44 (see also fur trade); tribal governments, 384–85; U.S. treaties with (generally), 123; water rights, 371; and white travel across the Plains, 207–9; women as intermediaries, 142–43; during World War II, 405–6; writers, 449–50, 451–54. See also reservations; specific tribes; and headings beginning with Indian

  industrial capitalism: and class lines, 296–97; impact of, 223–25; and migration, 297–98; and racial/ethnic tensions, 258–59; scale of, 241; U.S. government and, 209. See also cities; industrialization of the West; and specific cities and industries

  industrialization of the West, 378–80, 389–93. See also and specific companies and locations; high-tech industry; petrochemical industries

  infant mortality, 79

  information revolution (internet), 431–34, 450

  Interior Department. See Department of the Interior

  Interior West (economic region), 395, 396

  International Brotherhood of Boilermakers, 414

  Inuit, 54

  Iowa, 236, 425

 

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