To intermix with our white brothers : Indian mixed bloods in the United States from earliest times to the Indian removals /
The Native Americans of mixed ancestry in 1830 and why Andrew Jackson implemented a law to remove them.
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Format: | Licensed eBooks |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Albuquerque :
University of New Mexico Press,
©2005.
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Series: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Online Access: | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=407073 |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: John or Teyoninhokarawen?
- Policies to limit race mixture in early North America from earliest times to 1776
- Becoming sons and daughters of the forest : racial mixture in the American colonies and revolutionary states from earliest times to the 1830s
- "Dark-eyed Houris of the Metiff blood" : mixed bloods as "halfbreed" outcasts
- Mixed bloods and a "middle ground" of acculturation
- Mixed bloods and the rise of racial formalism : from Jefferson to Jackson
- Defenders of the homeland and racial pluralists, or, "A pascle of designing speculating individuals?" : mixed-blood leaders, racial formalism, and federal removal policy
- Epilogue: Mixed bloods after the era of the removals.