The American West

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The American West Page 58

by Robert V Hine


  Oglala Sioux, 260–65, 412. See also Pine Ridge Reservation; Sioux

  Ohio (state), 166, 200, 205, 425. See also Cincinnati, Ohio

  Ohio Associates, 116–17

  Ohio Company, 90, 95

  Ohio country, 89–91, 92–96, 114, 124–26

  Ohio Indians: and the American Revolution, 109, 110, 111; and British sovereignty, 92–94; composition of, 90, 121; and the French and Indian War, 90–91; land ceded to U.S., 126; Tecumseh and, 129–31; uprising, 94; U.S. battles against, 124–26

  Ohio Indians meet with the British in 1764 (West engraving), 93

  oil, 320, 331, 351. See also petrochemical industries

  Ojibwas, 145, 380

  Oklahoma, 200, 374, 380, 395, 425. See also Dust Bowl

  Old Faithful geyser, 435

  Old Jules (Sandoz), 326

  Olmsted, Frederick Law, 313, 357

  Omaha, Nebraska, 327, 395

  Oñate, Juan de, 31–33

  Oneida utopian community, 206

  Oneidas, 45, 69, 107, 111. See also Iroquois Confederacy; Iroquois peoples

  Onondagas, 45, 69, 70, 72, 107–9. See also Iroquois Confederacy; Iroquois peoples; Otreouti (Onondaga leader)

  Opechancanough, 59, 60

  Orange County, California, 397–99. See also California; Los Angeles

  Oregon (state): Constitution, 171; logging in, 361–62; minority population (map), 425; racial diversity, 171, 302. See also Oregon Country; Pacific Northwest

  Oregon Country, 175; American dreams for, 155–59; claimed by U.S., 147, 192–93, 200; and the fur trade, 155–56; Oregon fever, 169–70. See also Pacific Northwest; and specific states

  Oregon Trail, 170, 171, 173–74

  Osage nation, 84, 162, 175, 180

  Osceola (Seminole war leader), 183

  O’Sullivan, John L., 177, 178, 192, 199

  Otreouti (Onondaga leader), 72, 86–87

  otter, 153. See also sea otter

  outdoor gear and apparel companies, 440–42

  outdoor recreation, 434–42. See also national parks

  Overland Trails, 175, 207–8, 271, 276, 445. See also Oregon Trail

  Owens River aqueduct, 323, 338, 371

  Owl Woman (Cheyenne), 165

  Pacific Electric interurban rail system, 324

  Pacific Northwest: as economic region, 395; expeditions to, 154, 155–56 (see also Lewis and Clark expedition); Indian hunting and fishing rights, 411; U.S. dreams for, 155–59. See also Oregon Country; and specific states, locations, tribes, and individuals

  Panic of 1837, 169

  Panic of 1873, 340

  Parker, Ely S., 284–85

  Parkman, Francis, 160

  Parks, Gordon, 281–82

  Partido Raza Unida, El, 421–23

  Passamaquoddys, 111

  Passel, Jeffrey, 405

  passenger pigeons, 348, 349, 355

  Patagonia (outdoor gear company), 440–42

  Patuxet (Algonquian village), 62. See also Squanto

  Paul, Rodman, 321

  Pawnees, 148, 149, 180

  Paxton Boys, 102–3, 104

  Pea Ridge, battle of, 212–13

  Peale, Titian Ramsey, 148

  Penn, William, 76–77, 79, 87

  Pennsylvania: English colonial population growth, 78–79; German settlers in, 79; minority population (map), 425; Paxton Boys, 102; Penn’s treaty with Delawares, 76–77, 87; settlement of western portion, 95; statehood, 200

  Pennsylvania Dutch, 79

  Penobscots, 111

  People v. Hall (Cal., 1854), 233

  Pequots, 64–65, 412

  Pesca, Mike, 453–54

  Peshtigo fire (Wisconsin), 350

  Peter the Great, Tsar, 96

  petrochemical industries, 392, 393

  petroleum, 320, 331, 351

  Phelan, James D., 300, 301

  Philippines, 341

  Phoenix, 395, 417

  pidgin languages, 48, 76

  Pike, Zebulon, 147

  Pike’s Peak, 147

  Pilgrims, 61–63

  Pimas, 4, 31

  Pinchot, Gifford, 363–66, 382

  Pine Ridge Reservation, 290, 385, 410–11, 412. See also Wounded Knee

  Pioneers, The (Cooper), 159–60, 348

  Pitt, Leonard and Dale, 424

  Pitt, William, 90–91

  Pittsburgh, 91

  Pizarro, Francisco, 20, 29

  Plains Indians: and bison, 81, 143–44, 165–66, 252–53; social structure and way of life, 143–45; Sun Dance outlawed, 285. See also specific tribes

  planters, 185–86

  pluralism, 381, 382

  Plymouth settlement, 61–62

  Pocahontas, 58, 59

  police brutality, 426

  Polk, James K., 191, 192–95, 198–200, 226

  polygamy, 205–6, 278–79

  Ponce de León, Juan, 21, 28

  Pontiac (Ottawa leader), 94

  Popé (Pueblo leader), 36–37

  popular culture: 19th-century depictions of the West, 159–61, 170; 21st-century depictions of the West, 450–54; frontier life in, 342–48; hip-hop music and culture, ix, x–xi, 454–55; outdoor gear and apparel, 440–42; popularity of western styles, 388, 400–401 (see also Levi’s; Stetson hats); Western art, 346–48, 351–54; Western brand, 388; Western movies and television, 442–49. See also fictional depictions of the West

  popular sovereignty, 210

  population growth: 1776–1850, 166; colonial era, 78–79, 80, 82; emerging majority minorities, 425; Latino/a immigration and (1965–present), 423–24; Native American (1950–2010), 405; urban (20th century), 394–96, 413

  pork-packing industry, 311–12

  Portland, Oregon, 327, 395, 399, 413

  Portolá, Gaspar de, 98

  Postman Always Rings Twice, The (Cain), 324

  postmodern westerns, 449

  Pottawatomies, 121, 180

  Powhatan (Wahunsenecawh), 57–59

  powwows, 409

  Pratt, Richard Henry, 285

  Presbyterians, 157–58, 273–74

  presidents, western, 401–5. See also specific presidents

  Preston, Idaho, 450–51. See also Napoleon Dynamite

  Price, Jenny, 429–30

  property rights, native vs. European traditions of, 8, 123, 183. See also allotment of reservation lands

  property taxes, 403

  Proposition 187 (Cal.), 423–24

  prostitution, 47–48, 232

  Protestant missionaries, 157–59, 273–75

  public lands. See land policy, federal; national forests; national parks

  Pueblo peoples: architecture, 31, 33; culture, 33–35; name origin, 3; Navajo and Apache raids on, 216, 217; Pueblo Revolt, 36–37, 81; religion, 34–37, 285; resistance by, 194, 381; Spanish conquest and colonization, 31–37. See also Hopis; Taos tribe; Zunis

  Puerto Rico, 15

  Pulaski, Edward, 367

  Puritans, 63–65, 67. See also Massachusetts Bay Colony; New England

  Quakers. See Society of Friends

  Quantrill, William, 213

  Quebec City, 44, 45, 47, 91

  Queen Anne’s War, 85

  Quincy, Washington, 432–34

  racism: among the French, 49; in the armed services, 414–15; class solidarity eroded, 259–60; in Kansas, 281–82; racialization of politics, 121–22; vs. Western ideas of individual rights, 303–4. See also Indian policy, federal; segregation; slavery; and specific racial and ethnic groups

  railroads: Apache territory encircled, 266; and bison’s disappearance, 252; and bonanza farming, 247; federal land subsidies, 240; graft, 236–37; labor unrest, 257–60; map, 224; and the national parks, 357, 359, 360; transcontinental, 209, 211, 224, 234–37, 241–45; and urban development, 315–19, 322

  Rakim (rapper), 454

  Raleigh, Sir Walter, 54, 56. See also Roanoke colony

  Ralston, William, 245

  ranch houses, 400–401

&
nbsp; ranching, 169, 237–38, 256–57, 383–84, 393–94. See also cattle

  range lands, public, 376

  rangers, 366–69, 431. See also Los Angeles Urban Rangers; National Forest Service; National Park Service; Texas Rangers

  rap music, x–xi, 454–55. See also Eminem

  Rayburn, Sam, 378–80

  Reagan, Ronald, 388, 402–5, 421

  real estate booms, 322, 324, 396–400

  Reclamation Act (1902), 370–73

  recreation, 327, 434–42

  Red Cloud (Oglala Sioux chief), 260, 261, 262

  Red Jacket (Seneca leader), 111, 126, 127

  Regulators, 103–4, 106, 431

  Reisner, Marc, 323

  religion: Aztec, 17, 20, 24; camp meetings, 275; Indian religious beliefs, 94, 128–29, 285, 288–89 (see also Ghost Dancers); intolerant religiosity, 297; native vs. European understanding of, 8, 20, 34; Protestant missionaries, 157–59, 273–75; religious conflict, 204; religious freedom for Indians, 382; settler and immigrant churches, 273–76, 280–81, 291, 294. See also Catholic missionaries

  Remington, Frederic, 344, 346–48

  removal of Indians, 179–84, 207, 282–83

  Reno, Marcus, Maj., 264

  Republic of Texas. See Texas

  reservations: allotment of land, 287–88, 380–82; casinos, 411–12; colleges, 412–13; conditions on, 287, 409, 412, 452–53; economic development, 411–13; federal reservation policy, 215, 217, 283–88, 380–86; Indians forced onto, 215–17, 266–68; map, 407; migration to cities from, 409; water projects and, 371, 376. See also removal of Indians; and specific reservations, tribes, and groups

  restrictive covenants, 332, 397, 417–18

  Revolution, American. See American Revolution

  Rhode Island, 65, 200, 425

  Ribault, Jean, 29–30

  Richelieu, Cardinal, 46

  Riders of the Purple Sage (Grey), 442

  Ridge, Major (Cherokee leader), 131, 132

  right of conquest, 110–12, 121

  Rio Grande (1950 film), 445, 447

  Rio Grande (river), 168, 371

  Rio Grande valley. See New Mexico (Spanish/Mexican); New Mexico (U.S.); Pueblo peoples

  riots, urban, 418, 419

  rivers: development of, 378–80 (see also dams); French colonists and, 46; and transportation and trade, 311–13, 314, 316

  Roanoke colony, 54–56. See also Virginia

  Roanoke tribe, 54

  Robbins, William, 365

  rock climbing, 438–40

  Rock Springs, Wyoming, anti-Chinese violence in, 258, 259

  Rockefeller, John D., 209, 223–24

  Rocky Flats nuclear production facility, 392–93

  Rocky Mountain Arsenal, 392–93

  Rocky Mountain Fur Company, 163–64

  Rocky Mountains: and the fur trade, 163–65; gold discovered, 212; mining rushes in, 227–28; outdoor recreation industry, 437; paintings of, 351–54; Pike’s Peak, 147. See also specific states, territories, locations, and tribes

  Rocky Mountains, Lander’s Peak, The (Bierstadt, 1863), 352

  Rodríguez, Raymond, 335

  Rodriguez, Richard, 424

  Rogers, Roy, 446

  Rolfe, John, 59

  Rølvaag, Ole, 294–95

  Romney, Mitt, 402

  Roosevelt, Franklin D., 239, 341, 373, 376–77, 378

  Roosevelt, Theodore: and the environment, 363–67; frontier ideology, 344–45, 356; imperialism of, 341; Japanese immigration halted, 300; life in the West, 237, 344–45; and Remington, 347; and the Spanish-American War, 342, 345; and water projects, 370, 372

  Rose, Axl, 387

  Ross, John (Cherokee leader), 131, 181, 184, 212

  Rouensa, Marie, 49

  Rowlandson, Mary, 67–68

  Royal Proclamation (1763), 94–95

  Roybal, Edward, 333, 414–15

  rum, 88–89

  rural decline, 325

  Rural Electrification Act (1936), 378–80

  rural life. See farming; small town life

  Russian America (Alaska), 96–98, 155

  Russian-American Company, 97–98, 155

  Sacagawea, 142–43

  Sacramento, California, 259–60, 327, 395

  Sacramento River dam, 378, 380

  Sadekanaktie (Onondaga leader), 72

  Saint Augustine, Florida, 30–31, 85

  Saint Lawrence river valley, 41–42. See also New France

  Saint Louis, 162–65, 313, 314–16

  Salish Indians, 159

  Salt Lake City: copper mine, 245; demographics, 327, 395; founding of, 207, 276; growth of, 318–19; and the Overland Trails, 175. See also Mormons; Utah

  San Antonio: first Mexican-American Representative, 416; and “Imperial Texas,” 395; under Mexican control, 187; under Spanish control, 98, 167, 168. See also Alamo, the

  San Carlos Apache tribe and reservation, 266–67, 383–84

  San Diego, California, 101, 395

  San Diego insurrection (Texas), 304–5

  San Francisco: African American population (WWII), 413; Chinatown, 258, 328–30; earthquake and fire (1906), 328; ethnic diversity, 328, 423; founding of, 100; and the Gold Rush, 225, 320; labor unrest, 257–58; population (1990), 395; rise of metropolis, 320–22; and the timber industry, 240; water supply, 371–72

  San Francisco Bay, 100, 350–51. See also Alcatraz Island

  San Jacinto, battle of, 188–89

  San Juan Bautista mission, 100

  Sanchez, George, 333, 335

  Sand County Almanac (Leopold), 436

  Sand Creek Massacre, 217–20

  Sandoz, Mari, 326

  Sandwiess, Martha, 152–53

  Santa Anna, Antonio López de, 188–89, 194

  Santa Fe, 33, 36–37, 175, 212

  Santa Fe Trail, 209

  Sargent Rutledge (1960 film), 448

  Sauk people, 183

  Scandinavian settlers, 73–75

  schools: Indian, 285–87, 381–82; segregation of, 281, 329–30, 416–17; in settler communities, 273, 274

  Schwarz, Jordan, 380

  Scots-Irish settlers, 79–80

  Scott, Randolph, 446

  Scott, Winfield, Gen., 181, 194, 196–97

  sea otter, 96, 155

  Seale, Bobby, 418

  Searchers, The (1956 film), 448

  Seattle, xii, 392, 395, 413

  segregation: of African Americans, 281, 328, 331–33, 413–14; of Chinese Americans, 328–30; of Mexican Americans, 416–17; residential, 328–29, 331, 332–33, 397, 417–18; of schools, 281, 329–30, 416–17, 418

  Seguín, Juan, 188, 189, 190

  Seminole War, 183

  Seminoles, 85, 179–80, 183, 212, 411

  Senecas: alcohol abuse among, 88; and the American Revolution, 107–9, 111; Hurons attacked, 69–70; and the Indian Removal Act, 180; and the Iroquois Confederacy, 45, 69; religion of, 126. See also Iroquois Confederacy; Iroquois peoples

  Sequoyah (Cherokee scholar), 132

  Serra, Fr. Junípero, 100

  Seventh Cavalry, 263–65, 289–91

  Seymour, Samuel, 148

  Shakers, 206

  Shane (1953 film), 445–46

  Shawnee Prophet, 128–29

  Shawnees, 94, 109, 121, 180

  Shays, Daniel, and Shays’ Rebellion, 116

  She Wore a Yellow Ribbon (1949 film), 445

  sheep, 34

  Shenandoah River valley, 79–80

  Sherman, William Tecumseh, 251

  Shifflett, James, 417

  shipbuilding, 390

  Shipps, Jan, 205

  Shoshones, 145. See also Comanches; Sacagawea

  Shreve, Henry M., 311

  Silicon Valley, 393

  Silko, Leslie Marmon, 449–50

  Singleton, Benjamin, 279

  Sioux: Black Hills resistance, 260–66; and Buffalo Bill’s Wild West show, 342; Eastern Sioux reservation and uprising, 215, 216; at Fort Laramie conferenc
e, 208; Ghost Dancers, 288–91; lands lost through allotment, 380; migration, 145; name origin, 145; strength of, 145, 175; war with the U.S. (1865), 220; Wounded Knee massacre, 290–91

  Sioux City, Iowa, 296

  Sitting Bull (Sioux leader), 260, 262–63, 264–66, 288–89, 342, 343. See also Battle of Little Bighorn

  Six Nations. See Iroquois Confederacy

  skiing, 437–38

  slavery: abolished, 251; among Indians, 143, 144; California’s Indian protection law and, 251; in the Caribbean, 27; as driver of expansion and economic growth, 178–79; fugitive slave law, 210; harsh treatment of slaves, 185; native peoples enslaved, 12–13, 23, 32, 85; political conflict over, 118–19, 178, 191, 210–11; in southern colonies, 80–81, 185; Spanish enslaved by natives, 22; and Texan independence, 186–87, 189. See also Civil War

  Slidell, John, 193

  Sloat, John D, Commodore, 196

  small town life, 295–97

  Smalley, Eugene Virgil, 272

  smallpox, 20, 21, 26–27, 52–53, 64, 94, 100

  Smelting Works at Denver (Moran, 1892), 354–55, 355

  Smith, Erastus (“Deaf”), 187

  Smith, Hyrum, 206

  Smith, John, Capt., 57

  Smith, Joseph, 204–5, 277–78

  Smithsonian Institution, 172

  Smoke Signals (1998 film), 449

  Snake Indian girl swinging (Miller, 1837), 150, 151

  Society of Friends (Quakers), 76, 102, 126, 128

  Soil Conservation Service, 376

  Sonoma, California, 195–96

  South America, 20–21, 23, 28, 29. See also Spanish empire

  South Carolina, 80, 103–4, 106, 112–13, 200, 425

  South Dakota, 200, 374, 425. See also Dakota Territory

  southern California. See California

  Southern colonies/states, 80–81, 113, 211. See also Civil War; slavery; and specific states

  Southern Pacific Railroad, 357, 359

  Southwest Territory, slavery in, 118–19

  Sovereignty and Goodness of God, The (Rowlandson), 67–68

  sovereignty of Indian peoples, 122–23, 181, 284–85, 384, 406–9, 411–12

  Spain, 26, 53–54, 91–92, 169. See also conquistadors, Spanish; Spanish empire; and specific individuals

  Spalding, Henry and Eliza, 158

  Spanish empire: and the American Revolution, 109; California, 98–102; encomienda system, 14–15, 23, 35; Florida, 21–22, 28, 29–31, 50, 85, 109, 110, 122; missions, 31, 33–37, 98–102 (see also Catholic missionaries); and native peoples’ names, 3; in North America (maps), 50, 99; organization and governance, 28–29; Texas, 22, 50, 98, 166–67, 168; treatment of natives in, 12–15, 23–26, 99–102; and U.S. southern expansion, 122. See also conquistadors, Spanish; New Mexico (Spanish/Mexican)

 

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